The Rundown: Off Day Musings, Pitch to Goldschmidt at Own Risk, Reflecting on ‘Kid K’

Yesterday’s obligatory off day and an extra glass of birthday wine has left me in a wandering state of mind that’s borderline ADD, so proceed with caution.

I am not a fan of the day off after Opening Day, especially when a team opens the season in a warm, dry climate like Texas. Three days off in the first two weeks of the season gives Joe Maddon too much time to think about how he’ll tweak his lineup. Maybe he watched Paul Goldschmidt go off in Milwaukee last night while reading the two or three times I’ve advised the Cubs to pitch around the slugging first baseman when they face the Cardinals.

Do you think Rangers fans ever stop to think about having a rotation that includes Kyle Hendricks, Yu Darvish, and a rejuvenated Cole Hamels?

If this isn’t the hottest of all hot takes I have no idea what could possibly top it. The part about Jose Abreu being statistically better is accurate. But basing this theory on the spring training numbers of both players is juvenile at best. Child please.

I’d rather not spend my morning writing or thinking about the dysfunction in another’s family. In fact, I would be happy if we could just leave the tabloid aspect of reporting news out of my favorite sport. I’m nearly positive that every family has a skeleton or two lurking in its closet, so what’s the point?

I take no enjoyment from that type of insight. Social media, real time news, and the quest for click-driven dollars makes for a lot of wasted time. The old man called it rag journalism back in the day and I’d say that remains an apt description. To each his own, however.

Is it just me, or does it still feel like spring training because the Cubs are starting the season with nine straight road games, including their first three against an American League opponent? I suppose I’ll make it to the Cubs-Brewers game this Friday if I can get out of work early enough, but an afternoon at Wrigley Field still seems light years away.

Maybe I’ll go to the Cardinals-Brewers game today. Speaking of which, why isn’t Craig Counsell pitching around Goldschmidt? Wouldn’t you rather force Paul DeJong to beat you instead of going head-to-head with a perennial MVP candidate? I really do hope Maddon watched last night, especially if Mike Shildt continues batting DeJong third while Harrison Bader, the one guy besides Goldschmidt who maybe scares you a little, languishes in the eight-hole. The Cubs and St. Louis meet for the first time May 3-5.

Cubs News & Notes

How About That!

Opinion: Mike Trout has always been a reluctant superstar but he needs to step up to the plate to help save baseball.

How about some surprisingly (and refreshingly) out-on-a-limb predictions for this season?

From Bradford Doolittle of ESPN: Through Thursday, 89 of the 151 runs scored this season have come on home runs. That’s 59 percent. Last year’s full-season number was 40 percent

Brewers reliever Corey Knebel announced that he will undergo Tommy John surgery on Wednesday in Los Angeles.

Angels outfielder Justin Upton is hurt too. He’ll miss 8-12 weeks recovering from turf toe.

It took the Giants 17 innings to score their first run of the season. They still lost to the Padres, ending the game on a called third strike. Can you name any of the Giants’ starting outfielders off the top of your head? Didn’t think so.

Mitch Moreland hit a dramatic pinch-hit three-run homer in the 9th inning yesterday to lead the Red Sox over the white-hot Mariners, 7-6.

Friday’s Three Stars

  1. Goldschmidt – The new Cardinals first baseman went 4-for-5 with three home runs and five RBI in a 9-5 win over the Brewers Friday night.
  2. Domingo Santana – The former Brewer has established himself as a force in the middle of the Mariners lineup. The slugging left fielder hit his third tater of the young season last night and is slashing .625/.700/1.500 through four games.
  3. Matt Shoemaker – Shoemaker will probably not make this list again, but he pitched like an ace last night, shutting out a hapless Blue Jays offense with seven strikeouts against just two hits.

Extra Innings

Want to know how I enjoyed yesterday’s day off? How about a video recap of the history behind Kerry Wood’s 20K game against the Astros on May 6, 1998? I still say that it was a no-hitter. The official scorer really blew that grounder by Ricky Gutierrez to Kevin Orie in the 3rd inning. Nevertheless, it was the most dominating pitching performance in the history of baseball.

They Said It

  • “I don’t care one bit about legacy. I care about winning. Every year you have an opportunity to win, you want to take full advantage of it. We have a special group of players. This is a special era of Cubs baseball. Each year we want to make sure we leave nothing undone in our pursuit to make the most of it and win.” – Theo Epstein
  • “I don’t like to have guys sit too long, coming off spring training when they’re playing regularly. You need to get them out there to get that feeling going. Furthermore, I like buy-in. I like the fact that guys get a part of ownership. When they don’t play for a long period of time, they lose that feel of ownership of owning it now. We have some young players that need to be developed. It’s still a juggling (act) with all of that. But it’s important early to make sure everyone plays.” – Joe Maddon
  • “The first day of Spring Training [after Guttierez joined the Cubs in 2000], when we met, he looked at me, I looked at him. I said, “I know you remember me, right?” He said, “Get out of here. I don’t know what you’re talking about.” We hit it off from Day 1. I love him to death. Once I became his teammate, I bothered him darned near every day about [the hit]. I told him he should have never thrown me an 0-2 curveball. I threw daggers at him, and he would chase me around the clubhouse. I said, “You’ll never forget my name for the rest of your life.” – Ricky Guttierez

Saturday Walk Up Song

Tessie by Dropkick Murphys. Closing March with one of my favorite baseball songs (and stories) of all time. I think I dig it even more because a lot of White Sox fans hate it.

Back to top button