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Kurt's special Cubs roster scenarios post

Samardzija, Cubs await redemption

Samardzija stands by Weis

Teahen deal could be in works

Chicago Cubs Acquire Jake Peavy from the San Diego Padres

The Cubs Might Be the First Team to Play at "The House That Ruth (Didn't) Built"

Pie could be piece that solves many of Cubs' suddenly burgeoning puzzles

Cubs Pick Up Option on Piniella

Marquis Madness: Cubs 9, Mets 5

Soto knocks in 7 runs as Cubs rally

Cubs Notes: Soto candidate for NL MVP Award?

Chicago Cubs pitcher Jeff Samardzija & Oakland A's pitcher Brad Ziegler are the latest Topps Red Hot Rookie baseball cards

Chavez, 51s top River Cats

Triple-A baseball: McGehee's errors lead to 14-8 loss

Samardzija enjoying life back in the Midwest

Samardzija earns first ever win at Triple A level

Former ND star Samardzija one step closer to the majors

Bullpen can't save Smokies from Lookouts

Soriano anticipates reunion with Torre

Prospect Samardzija won't second-guess his diamond decision

Samardzija Leads Smokies Over Lookouts

Safety Zbikowski Puts Boxing On Back Burnert

Sam Young Named To 2008 Outland Trophy Watch List

Samardzija may not be gone long

Zambrano strong with glove, bat

RHP Chad Fox agrees to minor league contract with Chicago Cubs

Looking like a high price for Roberts

Cubs go from worst to first in 2007

Hottest tickets in town

CUBS ANNOUNCE 2008 SPRING BROADCAST SCHEDULE

Hendry, Cubs' deep pockets just too much for Sox to overcome

Reds, Rangers join Padres in Prior derby

Notes: Samardzija itching to return

Cubs looking to upgrade offense

Cubs staying the course

Cubs prospects paying dividends

Mailbag: Who's in center field?

Irish closing in on worst season ever

Irish's Laws can't do it all

Notes: Renovations begin at Wrigley

Samardzija scores big with uniform donation

Pete Carroll Press Conference Notes

The State Of The Franchise: Chicago Cubs

Jeff Samardzija Reflects on Big Changes

Samardzija comes through roller coaster season healthy

Farm and Fleita

Notre Dame FB: Weis Not So Wise Anymore

Irish start 0-4, Clausen fails to live up to hype

Teams at a loss for explanation

Panic in Ann Arbor & South Bend

Baseball wins this skirmish

Stars Pitching No Hits Tennessee

Baseball is Samardzija's first love

Smokies beginning to see Stars

Smokies Drop Series Against Chattanooga

Weis hopes third time is a charm at ND

Lou on Soriano: Back Labor Day, bat leadoff

Notes: Ward's slam aided by Maddux?

Samardzija gains ground

Samardzija wins again, Smokies win third straight

Jeff Samardzija to start Sunday

Samardzija brings the heat to Double-A Cubs

Samardzija scheduled to start Monday

Wood's progress has Piniella rethinking bullpen

What Dixon learns at plate benefits Ducks

Reds, Cubs Postponed Due to Rain and High Winds

Shark Tales

Is It Possible to Upgrade from Kevin Walter?

Wood expected to throw off mound tonight

Cubs Clobber Cards In 11-2 Win

Jeff Samardzija Should've Stuck With Football

Frustrations boil for Cubs in 20-5 loss

Samardzija still winless for Daytona Cubs

Cubs' Samardzija gets lit up in A ball

Rain Forces Cancellation Of 12th Annual Baseball Bash Game Between Notre Dame And Michigan

Mackowiak off to rough start

Wide receiver position up in the air for Irish

Cubs return tonight

Jeff Samardzija Set to Make Daytona Home Debut

Samardzija works well in opener

Parris like Shark on the prowl

Now away from football for good, he concentrates on his fastball, change-up

Wood, Miller show stuff

Who would have guessed?

Camp week

Notre Dame Receiver Samardzija Takes His Game to Cubs' Diamond

Following His Heart, Samardzija Cuts Off Route to N.F.L.

Cubs Ace Zambrano Wants Big Bucks

Hanging with the big guys

Irish recruiting is just fine

Cubs open checkbook, raise expectations

Can the Cubs break the curse?

Cubs dump Rusch

Where have you gone, Jackie?

Samardzija hopes he'll catch on

Tim Wilken on Jeff Samardzija

Samardzija Walks Away From Football, Signs with Cubs

Samardzija gives up football

Miscalculation

Samardzija pursuing his dreams

Chicago native to run defense at Notre Dame

Indiana's best visits IU

ND to replace Minter as defensive coordinator with Corwin

Power teams return

After subpar bowl, Samardzija now waits

Out with a bang for LSU's Fisher?

Tough choices ahead

Which way, Jeff? For now, football

Coveted QB? Quinn has company

Bowl Picks: Expect UT to take frustrations out on Iowa

LSU baseball coach torn between old, new team

LSU baseball coach expects bittersweet Sugar Bowl

Which holes will Thompson plug in draft?

Saints-Giants showdown will be significant

Best of the Year

Weis tweaks routine for bowl

Quinn accepts Senior Bowl invite

Meachem’s ’05 struggles well behind him

Speedy receiver, lineman commit to Notre Dame

Game’s best say the darnedest things

BEST QUARTER-BECK IN THE NATION

Saban Rejects 'Bama; Rodriguez Gets Offer

Samardzija & Zbikowski Named Walter Camp Football Foundation Second Team All-Americans

Cajun cats to pounce on pitifully slow Irish

Man with the golden arm

Awaiting opponent, Weis revamps bowl prep

Carlson Is First Team Academic All-America

Davis, UCLA to face USC on Saturday

Updated: Football: Dillard's quick ascension to one of the country's top receivers lets Rice Owls soar

Pete Carroll and the emerging USC dynasty

Missed Opportunities Dooms Notre Dame Against USC

Irish return to glory remains on hold

Demotion puzzles USC defender

McKnight assessing his legacy

Notre Dame team preview

Most Irish players admit USC is a big game

Walker tops 1,000-yard mark in win over Army

Big game gets big no from Weis

Short on ammo, Army comes to South Bend

Preview: Army at No. 5 Notre Dame

Worn-out defense lifts Notre Dame

Notre Dame-Air Force Preview

ND's Gatewood's record about to be caught

Unique name, unique talent

Samardzija catches, passes scoring mark Irish receiver sets TD record against Tar Heels

Grimes, Carlson get their share of attention for Irish

Notre Dame Game Guide
All the details you need for Carolina's historic trip to South Bend


Samardzija sparks Irish resurgence

Samardzija agrees with Cubs, will play for Irish in fall



 
     
     
     
     
     
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Marquis Madness: Cubs 9, Mets 5


 



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It's kind of weird, this week's worth of "meaningless" games. For one thing, they're not completely meaningless -- the Cubs are facing teams they could possibly face in October, so this gives them a chance for firsthand scouting, in addition to showing they can still beat the Mets and Brewers.

The weirdness is compounded by the fact that by beating the Mets, the Cubs could knock them out of the playoffs entirely -- and the Mets appear to be the team with whom they match up the best. Obviously, they won't lay down, and of course we all want the Cubs to win every day. For one thing, there's still a chance to win 100 games -- a 5-1 mark would do it. Yesterday's 9-5 win over the Mets clinched the best record in the National League, and thus home field for the first two rounds of postseason play.

Jason Marquis -- clearly the best fifth starter in the majors this year -- threw into the 7th inning again, the sixteenth time he has done that in his 28 starts, and was yanked only when he ran out of gas and gave up a homer to David Wright in the 7th. No shame there, as Wright is one of the best power hitters in the game, having 33 homers. Marquis had already one-upped that, hitting his first career grand slam (and second HR of the season) in a six-run Cubs fourth inning that put the game out of reach. It was the first grand slam by a Cubs pitcher since Kevin Tapani connected in Atlanta on July 20, 1998. Derrek Lee also homered, his 20th; the Cubs have five 20-homer men for only the second time (1958 and 2004 were the others) and if Jim Edmonds can hit two more, that'd make six for the first time in club history (Edmonds has 19 HR, but one was with San Diego).

Jeff Samardzija threw well in another possible audition for a playoff spot. But please tell me Gordon Wittenmyer is joking about this:

Outfielder Felix Pie, who made last year's postseason roster for bench speed and late-inning defense, and the Cubs' minor-league player of the year, first baseman/outfielder Micah Hoffpauir, seem to be the front-runners for that opening. Infielder Casey McGehee also is in the mix.

Hoffpauir and McGehee? Those guys shouldn't get into a playoff game without a ticket. To me, it's a no-brainer; Pie appears to have changed his hitting approach during his time at Iowa this year, he can play all three OF positions, and runs the bases well. Neither of the other two have that sort of versatility (or ability, if you ask me).

So the Cubs continue, and if they somehow can run the table and win all six remaining games, they'll have considerable influence on the Mets/Brewers wild card race.

I've spent most of this year trying to avoid the mass media's obsession with the "hundred years" thing. But today is a significant date and worth remembering: it was 100 years ago today, September 23, 1908, that the famous "Merkle Game" took place between the Cubs and Giants. Here's how it happened, as I wrote it in the top 100 profile of Johnny Evers last year:

Evers himself played an important role in the famous September 23 "Merkle's Boner" game that helped win the Cubs the 1908 pennant. From the Evers website:
The Giants apparently beat the Cubs 2-1 in the bottom of the ninth. Fred Merkle, who was on first base, trotted off the field toward his dugout when Evers realized he never tagged second. Evers got the ball and touched second, Merkle was called out and the game was tied up. The Cubs would eventually end up winning that game. Evers was aware of the rule that stated a runner on first still must tag second even on the winning run for the play to be over. Merkle failed to do this and was called out.

The website doesn't do full justice to this play, or Evers. This single play shows all of Evers' competitiveness, abrasiveness, knowledge, and leadership, all produced at the most critical moment. There was, in fact, at the time, some dispute about whether the ball that Evers had used in the play was the actual ball, or was another one that had been thrown to him from the Cubs' dugout.

There had been another play exactly like it earlier that same month -- in the SABR BioProject biography of NL umpire Hank O'Day, it's explained:
In a [September 4] game involving the Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates, a Pirate runner [Warren Gill, who, oddly enough, never played again after the 1908 season] failed to touch second on a game-winning hit. When Evers tried to inform O'Day of the decision, O'Day said he did not see the play and could not do anything. However, the play remained in O'Day's mind.

It's further elaborated upon in the SABR BioProject biography of Evers:
Evers, standing on second, called for the ball and demanded that umpire Hank O'Day rule the play a forceout, which would nullify the run and send the game into extra innings. Gill's maneuver was customary in those days, and O'Day refused to make the call that Evers was seeking. "That night O'Day came to look me up, which was an unusual thing in itself," Evers recalled many years later. "Sitting in a corner in the lobby, he told me that he wanted to discuss the play. O'Day then agreed that my play was legal and that under the circumstances, a runner coming down from first and not touching second on the final base hit was out." Evers' account may not be trustworthy, especially given O'Day's exceptionally reclusive nature and the lengthy period between the event and the retelling, but the incident undoubtedly had a pronounced effect on the umpire, as was demonstrated by subsequent events.

O'Day thought he was mollifying Evers by saying if it happened again, he'd give it to him. Well, guess what, and guess who was the umpire. The play not only wound up helping the Cubs win the pennant and World Series in 1908 (since the September 23 game was ruled a tie, it had to be replayed at season's end, and the Cubs won the replay 4-2), but it resulted in an official rule change, requiring the umpire(s) to make certain that all players touch their required bases on game-ending plays. It is arguably the single most significant play in Cubs history.

Until this postseason, when perhaps another play will top it.


See more at www.bleedcubbieblue.com

 


 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 


 
 
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