$$$, Free tshirt, hat and tickets available to bloggers! Help make Cubs Diamond become the largest Cubs site on the web!!!
Apply here!


Cubs middle relief lay an egg in game one vs RedBirds

I hate to say I told you so…..but I did. http://cubsdiamond.com/this-site/odds-ends-season-opener-monday/

Our middle relief sucks. I can’t really say it any better. You knew going into the game today that Sean Marshall wasn’t going to pitch deep in the game. You could only hope that we had a big enough lead to hold off the Cardnals. Unfortunately that wasn’t meant to be as Aaron Heilman and now the human white flag Neal Cotts come in and give up runs and the once short lived Cubs 4-3 lead after Fukudome hit a three run bomb turned into a 7-4 Cubs loss.

Milton Bradley made his home debut with style yesterday as well, coming up with the bases loaded in the 6th inning of a tie game and never taking the bat off his shoulders. He worked a 3-0 count to a 3-2 count and then proceeded to strike out looking. Granted….it wasn’t a strike. No Cubbie Kool-Aid there….that pitch was 6 inches inside. But Milton being Milton, he exploded, said some magic words and got tossed. Welcome to Wrigley, Milton.

Today Biz Z goes to the mound to face rookie pitcher PJ Walters. I would hope that the Cubs tie this series up as the pitching matchup favors the Cubs big time. Game time 2:20 EST on WGN.

By: jpligon75 on Apr 17th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

7 games in 11 days verses the rival cardnals

Don’t know if this schedule quirk is good now in April or in June or July in the summer, but the Cubs are playing a ton of division opponents here in the first couple weeks of April. St Louis for four at home, then Cincinatti for three and then back to playing the Red Birds for three more again.

Yesterday was not a great day for the Cubbies as they got shut down by of all people Jason Marquis 5-2. Cubs had their chances, but could not capitalize when needed, and Rich Harden just didn’t have his best stuff despite striking out 8 Rockies in three innings.

I’m excited about the weekend series with the Cardnals. I hope that our injury bug gets better cause between Albert and Chris Duncan we have our hands full with the Cards!!

By: jpligon75 on Apr 16th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

Home opener a success Cubs win 4-0

Behind another bases loaded walk, and some good ole atem ball pitching from Ted Lilly, the Cubs beat the Rockies in the home opener yesterday 4-0.

It wasn’t pretty, it wasn’t warm. In fact I’m betting Rockies manager Clint Hurdle got ejected cause he was so uncomfortable, but the Cubs did what they needed to do to get another win in the books and keep pace with the St Louis Cardnals.

Ted Lilly gave up one hit thru 6 2/3 innings throwing what I like to call the “atem ball”. The wind was blowing in hard from right field and there wasn’t gonna be any home runs. So instead of being all specific with where to pitch, Lilly just threw it over the plate and let his fielders do the work. Now credit where credit is due, Lilly had a nice curve ball going but when he had to make a pitch, the fast ball was thrown right over the middle and a fly ball generally ensued. Sometimes that’s what you gotta do, at least Lilly didn’t walk people.

The good obviously Lilly, and it was nice to see Derrick Lee get a few hits and raise his average to a stellar .143. God I can’t wait till Pinella wakes up and gets him out of that 3 spot. My grandma is a better #3 hitter then Lee. The bullpen came in and did the job with Guzman, Heilman and Gregg preserving the one hit shutout. Gregg did walk another batter but also struck out the side.
The bad? The cubs left a small city on the base paths between Mike Fontenot and Aaron Miles. They each left 6 on base. And shame on WGN for going to commercial not more then 30 seconds after GO CUBS GO started playing after the win. Some of us cubs fans waiting a long time to here that again and then WGN goes commerical. Come on!!!

Injury news….Bradley will be out till at least the weekend, Soto should be back tomorrow, and Rameriez should be back tomorrow as well.

Game time tomorrow 2:20 Est with Rich Harden facing former Cub Jason Marquis who got boo’d loudly during pre game ceremonies yesterday. I’m sorry that made me laugh out loud. Marquis seemed to get a kick out of it as well.

By: jpligon75 on Apr 14th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

Five games in….what do we know?

After last night’s come from behind win 6-5 win over the Brewers last night at Wrigley North, the Cubs sit at 3-2 for the young season, with a chance tonight on ESPN to win both road series before going home opener. Now Lou will be just fine with a 4-2 record heading home, as his chant all along is just to keep winning every series. But what do we know about this young team so far this year?

First and foremost, I think we see the difference between spring and regular season for some. Closer for now Kevin Gregg is struggling big time, and for now Pinella is backing him, but that’s almost the kiss of death. The bullpen is walking far too many hitters so far this season and it’s causing Pinella to have to re-think his back end rotation. Carlos Marmol came in the 9th inning last night instead of Gregg and shut down the Brewers striking out Ryan Braun and Prince Fielder to end the game. THAT’S the kind of closer we want in there, not one trying to pitch around hitters. Gregg will have to find his way soon, or he’ll soon find his way as the 7th or 8th inning set up man.

The cajun connection is off and rolling. Aaron Miles might have some trouble getting some playing time if former LSU teammates Ryan Theriot and Mike Fontenot keep htting the way they are. Theriot is hitting a very impressive .563, and Fontenot at .389. That kind of production is huge both at the top of the lineup where Theriot is as well as down toward the bottom where Fontenot is.

On the other end of the spectrum, Derrick Lee and Milton Bradley are struggling right now, not even hitting over .10o at this point. It’s nice to see the cubs still winning with the putrid production in the middle of the lineup, but that can’t last much longer.

Touched on the pitching end already, but all in all the four starters for the Cubs have done quite well. Zambrano is the only one with two starts under his belt, and other then having to pitch to Princess Fielder, he’s done quite well so far with an ERA at 3.00. Would really like to see David Patton get some more innings in. I understand he’s a rookie and Pinella wants to ease him in…but give the kid a chance. He came in the other day in Houston, gave up a leadoff home run to Hunter Pence, and then settled down and retired six batters in a row. If he was good enough to make the club over Gaudin, then give him the ball. There is only so much of Neal Cotts I’m willing to take.

By: jpligon75 on Apr 12th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

Cubs 4 Astros 2 — Game 1 review

It didn’t take long to get the season underway the right way.
Alfonso Soriano led off the game with a home run and Carlos Zambrano pitched a strong 6 innings to lead the Cubs to an opening night 4-2 win.

The Good:

- Soriano looked solid at the plate. He did leave 5 runners on base, but he hit the ball hard just about every time.

- Zambrano was very strong after getting out of a few jams early in the game. He struck out 6 Astros batters with fastballs. He was for the most part calm and collected and pitched the way an ace of the staff should.

- Mike Fontenot aka “Pocket Rocket” went 3-4 with a double.

- Micah Hoffpauir pinch hit in the 9th and gave the Cubs a much needed insurance run with a 2 out single to drive in Fontenot.

- Aaron Heilman and Neil Cotts got out of a 7th inning jam with minimal damage and kept the cubs in the lead.

The bad –

Koske Fukudome, Derrick Lee, Milton Bradley — Cubs 2-3-4 hitters combined to go 0-11 with 2 strike outs. We all know Fukudome is on a short leash. Reed Johnson, Joey Gathright, and Hoffpauir are all chomping at the bit to get some playing time, so Fukudome better figure it out quick. Lee, I fear is going to be on my crap list all year long. I was ready for a change in the off season and I’m not gonna stand down from it. Bradley was a bit of a surprise. He hit the ball hard twice, but didn’t play defense all that well dropping a fly ball, and then almost breaking his ankle rounding 1st base on a fly out. Jitters? Maybe. I’ll give him the beneift of the doubt.

The verdit: This is what the cubs want day in and day out. They hit for power a bit with home runs by Soriano and Ramierez. They moved runners along with sacrfices by both Soto and Theriot to score runs afterwards. Pitching was very very good with Heilman and Cotts doing the job in the 7th and Marmol and Gregg shutting the door in the 8th and 9th.All in all it’s exactly what Pinella and Jim Hendry look for.

Tonight same two teams with Ryan Dempster going for the Cubbies vs Wandy Rodriguez for the Astros. Game time is 8pm est.

By: jpligon75 on Apr 7th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

Opening Day!! Cubs vs Astros preview

Well it’s finally here. Opening day. Why am I so calm? I really can’t understand it. There is a different feeling this year then there has been in years past regarding the opening of the season and the fate of our cubbies. It’s kind of scary. And then I read what Cubs manager Lou Pinella said the other day, and it makes sense.

“We’ve built nice expectations here, changed the culture here a heck of a lot,” Piniella said. “Now we have to figure out how we go further.”

It’s really the truth. No more loveable losers label, the Chicago Cubs are odds on favorite to not only win the NL Central for the 3rd consecutive year, but also to win the pennant. And quite honestly, anything less then that is a disaster for the Cubs. When was the last time you really could say that without chuckling?

The culture has sure changed big time. You can also thank newly acquired free agent Milton Bradley for some of that attitude as well.

“I’m a winner,” he said. “When I went to the Dodgers [in 2004], after they hadn’t been to the postseason since ‘88, they went to the postseason. I went to the A’s in 2006. We weren’t supposed to do anything, and we went to the ALCS. I was with San Diego [in '07]. We were one win away from making the postseason, and I got hurt. Everywhere I go, people win. It’s not a surprise.”

I’ll be honest…when I first read that comment a couple weeks ago, I cringed. I wasn’t sure I liked what I read. And then I kept re-reading it. It was bold. It was cocky. It was…..true. Maybe it’s time for that kind of cockiness in the dugout, rather then the quiet “golly gee wiz I sure hope this ends well” attitude. Maybe we need the “it’s world series or bust” kind of attitude that hasn’t been in this clubhouse in over 100 years. Ok Milton….I’m with you. Now I sure hope you and the rest of the clubhouse can back it up.

As stated before, the cubs are much deeper, much more balanced on the offensive side. They could have up to 6 left handed hitters in the lineup at any given time. That’s impressive considering they had only 2 last year. On the pitching side, the rotation 1-4 is as good as it gets in the National League. The back end of the bullpen is defintely in the top three, with maybe only the Mets and Phillies having a better 8th-9th inning combo. Middle and short relief might be a struggle, but hopefully not too bad.

Tonight Big Z, Carlos Zambrano makes his 5th stright opening day start for the Cubs vs the Astros ace Roy Oswalt.

Lets hope we have a lot of CUBS WIN! posts in the next 6 months or so.

By: jpligon75 on Apr 6th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

Odds and ends before season opener Monday

Well spring training is finally over, and the Cubs are on the way to Houston to open up versus the Astros on Monday night. A few random thoughts to get us to opening day.

Pinella made the right choice in Gregg –As much as my heart wanted Marmol to start, you could see right away this spring Marmol wasn’t ready. It was crystal clear after blowing the save for the Dominican Republic in the WBC. He’s so young, and he’s emotional. I don’t think mentally he was ready to assume the closer role. Meanwhile Kevin Gregg came in and did exactly what he needed to do. In 11 games he was 1-0 with a 0.00 ERA. Yes he was perfect. How do you make any other choice? Pinella made the right move.

The bullpen isn’t as strong as you think it is –  As good as I think Gregg and Marmol can be as a 1-2 punch in the 8th and 9th inning, the middle relief isn’t as strong as you’d like to think. The cornerstones of what we thought was gonna be a stellar middle relief with Samardzija (7.31 ERA), Guzman (7.31 ERA) Gaudin (10.26 ERA), and Vizciano (6.10 ERA) all made Pinella’s decision of who to keep a lot harder. In fact, the final two spots for the bullpen won’t be decided until Sunday. This puts a lot of pressure on the starters and that’s one thing I don’t want Pinella to do is stretch the starters so early in the season.

Micah Hoffpauir has got to play — This was one of the reasons I wanted the Cubs to trade Derrick Lee. Hoffpauir is ready. I know he’s young, but he’s ready, and I’m getting sick and tired of our #3 hitter hitting into more double plays then home runs. As good as Lee is on defense, he’s been a liability on offense for almost two years now. Hoffpauir was second in hits this spring tied for first in home runs and tied for first in runs. This is not a Corey Patterson or Felix Pie situation. Hoffpauir is ready. I hope he can give Lee a lot of breaks and maybe even take his spot.

The offense is a lot deeper then last year — I mean a LOT deeper. The bench reminds me of 2003 but better. Gathright, Hoffpauir, Johnson, Miles can all start for any team. Gathright and Johnson will get a lot of playing time giving rest to Fukudome, Soriano, and Bradley. Hoffpauir and Miles can fill in for Rameriez, Theriot, Fonentot and Lee. It’s a team with a LOT of speed, and less power, something that Pinella has been working on since he got here. They had the highest on base percentage of any team in the National League in the spring. That’s what Pinella wants. they also led the NL in walks too. Both good signs.

The cubs are for the most part healthy, they are deep, and they are prepared. Could this be the year? Only time will tell. I will say this…..the hunger seems to be there.

Tune in Monday for opening night!

By: jpligon75 on Apr 4th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

Marshall named 5th starter

I don’t know…maybe no news is good news this spring. There just has been little to none to talk about let alone get all warm and fuzzy about. I mean we can talk about Micah Hoffpauir and how well he’s hitting the ball again this spring, no doubt will make the team this year….or maybe getting Little Hurcurles Mike Fontenot a pee test cause he’s a whole hell of a lot bigger this year….but other then that, there really isn’t much to talk about.

Well yesterday one of the few mysteries was solved when Lou Pinella named Sean Marshall the 5th starter rounding out a pretty stellar rotation of Zambrano, Harden, Lilly, Dempster and now Marshall. I think it’s a slight surprise considering Marshall has been used to coming out of the bullpen and spot starting where Aaron Heilman was brought in as a starter. I wonder what his psyche is gonna be like this April sitting in the bullpen to start. Of course with the uncertainty of Harden’s health, Heilman should be ready to go at any point. Marshall did come in as the favorite for the 5th starter spot, and Pinella said Marshall did nothing to lose it.

By: jpligon75 on Mar 20th, 2009
Tagged as: This Site

Red, White and Blue through and through (Yahoo sports)

This is not cubs related, but I couldn’t help but post this article from Yahoo sports. Gave me some goosebumps. Glad to see that these athletes get it right once in a while….

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. – The flag traveled around the world and through the deserts of Afghanistan and Iraq. Sgt. Felix Perez brought it from home as a reminder and an amulet. The flag never left his Army backpack.

It accompanied Perez to Dolphin Stadium on Tuesday night. He needed some luck for his team, the United States, in its must-win World Baseball Classic game against Puerto Rico. Perez wore a Team USA hat and a Team USA hoodie, and his little sister, Jessica, draped his flag across her shoulders. The United States’ 6-5 come-from-behind victory in the ninth inning sent them into a frenzy. She danced around. He sat in his motorized wheelchair and roared.

On the way out, the 27-year-old Perez placed the flag in his lap and leaned over to a security guard manning Gate G. He was hoping some players from Team USA might sign it. The security guard led Perez and his sister to the U.S. clubhouse, and the flag went inside.

“The next thing I know,” Perez said, “I’m getting called to come back in there.”

And so began the coolest 30 minutes of Felix Perez’s life. On an evening when he felt especially proud to be an American – when a group of his sporting heroes wearing his country’s name across their chests banded together to win a game they had no business winning – Perez found himself surrounded by them, doused with celebratory Miller Lites, with the American flag that was with him during the worst moment of his life passed around the room and signed by every player on the team.

“Everybody,” Perez said.

Then they handed him a ball filled with signatures.

“Everybody,” Perez said.

The half-hour went too fast. Jimmy Rollins, who scored the winning run, wanted to chat more. David Wright, who drove it in, couldn’t hear enough about how the New York Mets are Perez’s favorite team. Almost half the team surrounded Perez for a photograph, the flag draped around his torso, a smile on every face, and none brighter than his.

“I’m just happy to see him happy,” Jessica said.

It’s been four years since Perez returned from the Middle East, where he spent four years. He enlisted after his 17th birthday and was in Afghanistan by the time he turned 20. He doesn’t like to talk about his injury. Some wounds don’t heal.

Perez played ball growing up in North Bergen, N.J., and still loves watching the sport. He attended Team USA’s first WBC game here, an 11-1 mercy-rule loss to Puerto Rico. When the Americans beat the Netherlands to stay alive, Perez woke up at 9 the next morning, called the box office and bought three tickets.

The stadium, practically empty at first pitch, filled to 13,224 by game’s end. It deserved more eyes. Puerto Rico scored in the sixth inning to break a 3-3 tie and tacked on an insurance run in the ninth for a two-run lead. The Americans, about to get bumped from the second straight WBC before the semifinals, needed something divine. Shane Victorino singled to right field. Brian Roberts singled to center. And then Roberts, who had joined Team USA just two days earlier to replace the injured Dustin Pedroia, stole second base – even though coaches laid down the hold sign. Roberts hadn’t quite learned the signs yet.

A walk to Rollins, and another to Kevin Youkilis, and the U.S. had cut the deficit to one run. Wright laced a 2-1 pitch from Fernando Cabrera down the right-field line, and out charged all of Team USA, from the bench and the bullpen, in a bull rush to home plate, then to greet Wright. His teammates kept pushing Wright, joyous and unbridled shoves, until he fell down and they buried his face in the dirt.

“I never thought that we’d be dog piling in March,” Wright said.

No one did. The malaise that clouded the previous games involving Team USA seemed infectious. For every Felix Perez, there were dozens, sometimes hundreds, of fans rooting for the opposing team. Every WBC game thus far, even the ones in Florida, felt like it was on the road.

Not even that dampened the Americans’ enthusiasm. They play Venezuela on Wednesday to determine seeding in Los Angeles, where they’ll face either Korea or the winner of Wednesday’s Japan-Cuba knockout game – and perhaps with a few more supporters who can appreciate what Team USA accomplished Tuesday.

“That was the greatest game I’ve ever been a part of,” catcher Brian McCann said. “Ever.”

Same went for Perez. He said he would rather Team USA win the WBC than the Mets win a World Series.

“We’re the U.S.,” Perez said. “This is our game. … This is the world. You’re representing your country. What is more honorable than representing your country?”

Team USA’s manager, Davey Johnson, grew up an Army brat, his father a prisoner-of-war in World War II.

“There is nothing more honorable,” he said.

Wright was raised near Naval Station Norfolk, one of the largest military bases in the country.

“When you see those guys and get a chance to see how much it means to them, that makes it extra special,” he said. “They take a lot of pride in that red, white and blue, and to have USA across your chest and have supporters like that – that’s what this tournament means.”

Outside the clubhouse, Perez started moving toward the stadium exit. His dad, Felix, had called. He was wondering where Perez and Jessica had gone. They were headed back to the car, Jessica said. They had a pretty amazing souvenir.

A minute later, Rollins walked by and spotted Perez.

“All right, baby,” he said. “Keep a smile on your face.”

“Hey,” Perez said, “as long as you keep swinging the bat, I’ll be happy.”

Perez lifted his right arm as high as he could to wave goodbye. He wasn’t sure he’d see these guys again. He said he might fly to Los Angeles for the finals. He doesn’t know.

Perez moved his hands onto the flag. It’s a struggle, but he wanted to touch his prize. He plans on hanging it next to his other American flag, the one his friends in the 82nd Airborne sent to him when he was injured.

The old flag’s traveling days are over. Sgt. Felix Perez brought it to his home Tuesday night as a reminder and an amulet. The flag never will leave his heart.

By: jpligon75 on Mar 19th, 2009
Tagged as: Blog

Pirates send Gorzelanny to Minors (MLB.com)

Former staff ace optioned to Triple-A Indianapolis

BRADENTON, Fla. — The Pirates announced two cuts from big league camp early on Wednesday morning, and one comes as a bit of a surprise.Left-handed starter Tom Gorzelanny and outfielder Jose Tabata were optioned on Tuesday, whittling down the total number of players in big league camp to 43. For Tabata, one of the key prospects to come over from the Yankees in the Xavier Nady deal last July, it was inevitable. For Gorzelanny, who first established himself in the Pirates’ rotation in 2006, it must have come as a shock.

The 2003 second-round pick declined to comment after receiving the news he had been optioned to Triple-A Indianapolis. Gorzelanny had been competing for a rotation spot this spring, but had not pitched well. In four starts, he allowed seven earned runs on eight hits and five walks while striking out four.

Gorzelanny established himself in 2006, when he had a 3.79 ERA over 11 starts. In his first full season, the southpaw won 14 games to lead the Pirates, and his 3.88 ERA was 15th in the National League. He made 32 starts in 2007 and topped the 200-inning mark.

He took a step backward in 2008, going 6-9 with a 6.66 ERA over 21 starts and 105 1/3 innings. He was sent to Triple-A in July to work things out, came back in late August, pitched ineffectively, then got shut down in September with a finger injury. Command has been an issue, with 68 walks in 201 2/3 innings in 2007, and 70 free passes in just 105 1/3 last season.

With Gorzelanny gone, that creates a touch more clarity in the competition for rotation spots. Paul Maholm is a lock, with Zach Duke and Ian Snell, who just finished a successful stint in the World Baseball Classic for Puerto Rico, more or less sure things. That leaves the final two spots in the rotation. Ross Ohlendorf has pitched very well this spring and could be the No. 4 starter, with Jeff Karstens and Virgil Vasquez perhaps the two most likely candidates for the fifth spot in the rotation. Vasquez didn’t help his cause with a poor outing against the Yankees on Tuesday night in Tampa.

——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————–

jpligon’s take:

Whoa. I sure hope that there are some GM’s looking to trade for Gorzelanny.  I certainly don’t think he’s as bad as he pitched in spring training. Might be an atmosphere thing with playing for Pittsburgh who has zero chance at post season. Put him on a winning team and watch this kid go.

I wonder if Hendry has his thinking cap on for this…..

By: jpligon75 on Mar 18th, 2009
Tagged as: NL Central News

« Prev - Next »