Wednesday, November 2, 2016

From 1908 until now: Cubs' run of heartache finally ends

Sam Sianis, owner of the Billy Goat Tavern in Chicago, acknowledges the crowd along with his goat before a playoff game between the Padres and Cubs in 1984. Sianis was attempting to lift the curse supposedly placed on the Cubs by his uncle in 1945. AP Photo/File
We want to say this all began in 1945 because a colorful tavern owner tried to drag a smelly goat named Murphy with him to a World Series game. We then employ what Joe Maddon likes to call "outcome bias" as proof of this alleged curse, bringing up such hobgoblins as the black cat in 1969, Leon Durham's glove in 1984 and Steve Bartman's eager hands in 2003.
In reality, this began long before any of that. It started with a poor soul named Fred Merkle, in the year 1908 -- the last time the Chicago Cubs won a World Series. On Wednesday night, the 2016 Cubs put an end date on that cursed year by winning the franchise's first World Series in 108 years, beating the Cleveland Indians in extra innings of Game 7, 8-7.
The reasons the Cubs didn't win it all for so long aren't easy to distill in a work less than book length. There are a few wide-umbrella factors that one can easily point to. With the 2016 World Series over after a stunning comeback from Chicago's North Siders, there's a good reason to revisit those factors. A very good reason in fact: They no longer exist.
HOW IT STARTED
There is an old book called "Baseball's Amazing Teams" by a writer named Dave Wolf. The book chronicles the most interesting team from each decade of the 20th century. Well, through the 1960s -- it's an old book.
The first chapter is about the 1908 Cubs. For the first decade of the modern era of baseball, beginning in 1901, the Cubs ran neck and neck with Honus Wagner's Pittsburgh Pirates as the most successful team in the majors, particularly during the second half of the decade when they won 69 percent of their games, took four pennants and won the only two World Series crowns in Cubs history.
The Cubs' first championship came in 1907 and they were favored to win again the following year. They ended up chasing the New York Giants of the John McGraw/Christy Matthewson vintage for most of the summer, but were always within shouting distance of the lead.
Eventually, it all boiled down to the last few weeks of the season.
The Cubs were a team full of future Hall of Famers, including the almost mythical infield of Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers and Frank Chance -- the player-manager -- and ace pitcher Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown, who won 29 games in 1908. The most interesting character of the bunch was Evers, a prototype of his era as a scrappy slap-hitter always quick to mix it up on the field and off. Evers later suffered a nervous breakdown then came back in time to take part in another chapter from Wolf's book, the one about the 1914 "Miracle" Boston Braves.
On Sept. 4, 1908, the Cubs were locked in an extra-inning, scoreless road game with the Pirates. With two outs and the bases loaded, Pittsburgh's Chief Wilson singled, scoring player-manager Fred Clarke from third. Game over. Pirates win. But the Pirates' Warren Gill, the runner on first, stopped in his tracks when Clark touched the plate and took off for the clubhouse, never touching second.
This seems like an overwhelmingly stupid move, but here's the thing:
Everyone did that in those days. The rules have always clearly spelled out the concept of a force play, but the umpires of the time simply didn't enforce it in those walk-off situations. Evers wasn't a native Chicagoan, but he behaved like a denizen of what author Nelson Algren called "the city on the make." He was always looking for an angle.
Evers complained to Hall of Fame umpire Hank O'Day and the Cubs later filed a protest with the league, which was denied. But the Evers and O'Day confrontation would come back into play later. On Sept. 23, the Giants beat the Cubs in the exact same way, though runners were on first and third.
The umpire that day was O'Day. The runner on first was Merkle. A wild melee broke out when the Giants scored and Merkle had broken off between first and second to make a mad dash for the Polo Grounds clubhouse. Eventually, Evers ended up with the ball (or a ball, anyway) and touched second. O'Day called Merkle out and declared the game a tie because fans were all over the field.
This time the Giants protested, but the league sided with Chicago. The Cubs and Giants of course finished with identical records after that, forcing a playoff game which the Cubs won 4-2. That set up Chicago's second, and last, World Series title.
Merkle never lived it down. In fact, he went on to play in six World Series and his teams lost them all. His nickname to history is "Bonehead." And his curse began with the Cubs, and Evers' playing of the angles. There's even a bar in Wrigleyville that bears Merkle's name, which seems a bit cruel.
So maybe it's karma for Merkle that the Cubs haven't won since. It wasn't his fault that Evers strong-armed O'Day, forcing the league to arbitrarily begin enforcing a rule that had been ignored. But of course, it isn't that. Merkle is simply the central character to the Cubs' great origin story, one that is reprised every year the Cubs don't win.
PRE-CURSE
Let's be clear here: The Cubs haven't gone 109 years without a title because of Fred Merkle, any kind of black cat, William Sianis' goat or anything like that. The Cubs have never won because of the lethal combination of bad moves and bad luck. One you can fix, the other should even out on a long enough time line.
If you had walked up to a Cubs fan in 1946 and told him his team was cursed, he would have laughed in your face. From 1909 to 1945, only the Giants won more games in the National League. Chicago won pennants in 1910, 1918, 1929, 1932, 1935, 1938 and 1945 -- once every five years or so. The Cubs, Giants and Cardinals owned the National League. This was during the first 37 years of the title drought.
But the New York Yankees owned baseball during that era by forming the longest-running dynasty in baseball history, a run of excellence that didn't end until the 1960s. That they were able to do so illustrated a lot about the structures of the game that kept the haves as haves and the others as have-nots.
Still, the Cubs could certainly have won a few of those World Series, though the American League was generally the stronger circuit in those days because of the Yankees. That they didn't was just plain bad luck, really, based on what we now know about the randomness of postseason play.
After 1945, however, self-induced factors came into play, leading to what became known as the dark ages of Cubs baseball.
THE DARK AGES
There were a lot of reasons why the Cubs struggled so badly in the decades between 1945 and their next postseason berth in 1984. And as with any team in sports, the common denominator is always ownership.
P.K. Wrigley, who inherited the Cubs from his father, was a largely absentee owner. Once when he attended two days in a row, a sportswriter called it "a Wrigley family record."
The Cubs were simply a franchise that lagged behind the progressive baseball executives of the era. They were slow to establish a minor league system, long after Branch Rickey proved the value of doing so with the Cardinals. They were slow to sign black players even after Jackie Robinson broke the color line. They eventually signed Gene Baker but kept him in the minors until Ernie Banks broke in with the Cubs in 1953. Decades later, they were among the last teams to get on the sabermetric bandwagon.
The Cubs finally developed a good group of prospects that included Banks, Billy Williams and Ron Santo. But it turned out to be a blip.
Chicago turned out few quality prospects over the years. When they did manage to field a competitive team, it was with lightening-in-the-bottle rosters comprised largely of free agents and trade acquisitions. Nothing was sustained.
After 1984, the Cubs would rise into contention from time to time.
There were playoff berths in 1989, 1998, 2003, 2007 and 2008. The core of the team were always outside acquisitions, with the exception of the 2003 team with homegrown pitchers Mark Prior, Kerry Wood, Carlos Zambrano and Matt Clement. But after Prior and Wood began to battle arm problems, the lack of depth in the Cubs' minor league system again reared its head.
As the title-less years dragged on, theories abounded, and they weren't all about curses. They couldn't win because all the day games wore them out, or left their players at leisure to go tavern hopping at night. The irregular wind patterns at Wrigley made it impossible to field an elite pitching staff.
Then in the years after the Wrigley family sold the team to the Chicago Tribune, and the Cubs became national darlings because of Harry Carey and WGN, pundits decided that the Cubs didn't win because they didn't have to. The ballpark would attract the fans (which it does) and team management didn't worry about truly competing.
Whether or not there is any truth to those rumors, it all ended in 2009, when the Ricketts family bought the Cubs.
AND HERE WE ARE
With Tom Ricketts as the face of the family ownership group, the Cubs focused on the organizational infrastructure during their early years.
They had to navigate the morass of Chicago politics to kick off a renovation of Wrigley Field, even threatening to move to the suburbs if they couldn't pull it off. They focused on maximizing revenue streams, often in ways that were unpopular.
On the field, the Cubs floundered. But after the 2011 season, the Ricketts era kicked into high-gear with the hiring of Theo Epstein.
This is all recent history. Epstein did what virtually no Cubs executive had ever tried to do, or even was allowed to do: He tore down everything and, from scratch, built a state-of-the-art baseball operation from rookie league to the majors. He implemented a rigorous set of procedures in, well, everything that has become known as the Cubs way. He modernized operations in every area, dragging with him a franchise long stuck in the days of radio and typewriters.
And that's why as disappointing as it is for Cubs fans to come up short this season, there is every reason to believe the Cubs aren't going anywhere. They are a young, complete team and an organization that is still churning out prospects. They won 103 games without Kyle Schwarber. They won without a dominant bullpen. They won with the fifth-youngest group of position players in the majors.
It's fair to look at the Cubs' World Series victory as the final chapter in what we thought was a never-ending book of misery. None of the old history matters to these current Cubs because, as Addison Russell and Kris Bryant have both said, they are all about writing their own history. There are plenty more upbeat chapters to come.
Still, all of these old events inform the way we view this Cubs championship, the way their fans from Naperville to Uptown experienced this playoff run. This is a group of fans who not only waited their entire lives to see the Cubs win the World Series, but they been told time and again that it couldn’t happen, that their team was banned by fate from ever doing so. It began with Merkle, and the etching of 1908 on one part of the epitath. Now the second part is in place: 1908-2016.
Merkle, the goat, the black cat -- they are no longer with us. Make no mistake, the Cubs are in perfect position to go on an extended run as glorious as so much of their past was inglorious. For the first time in so long, the Cubs have gone about it the right way. They are built to last.

Cubs outlast Indians in Game 7, win first World Series since 1908

CLEVELAND -- The wait 'til next year is finally over. The Chicago Cubs are World Series champions.
Ending more than a century of flops, futility and frustration, the Cubs won their first title since 1908, outlasting the Cleveland Indians 8-7 in 10 innings of a Game 7 thriller late Wednesday.
"It happened. It happened. Chicago, it happened," first baseman Anthony Rizzo said. "We did it. We're world champions. I tell ya, we're world champions. I can't believe it."
Lovable losers for generations, the Cubs nearly let this one get away too. All-Star closer Aroldis Chapman blew a three-run lead with two outs in the eighth when Rajai Davis hit a tying home run.
But the Cubs, after tormenting their fans one more time, came right back after a 17-minute rain delay before the top of the 10th.
Ben Zobrist hit an RBI double and Miguel Montero singled home a run to make it 8-6. Davis then delivered an RBI single with two outs in the bottom half of the 10th, but Mike Montgomery closed it out -- and the celebration was on.
Blue-clad Cubs fans who traveled from Wrigley Field nearly filled the entire lower deck behind the Chicago dugout at Progressive Field, singing "Go! Cubs! Go!"
Manager Joe Maddon's team halted the longest title drought in baseball, becoming the first club to overcome a 3-1 Series deficit since the 1985 Kansas City Royals.
Cleveland was trying to win its first crown since 1948, but manager Terry Francona's club lost the last two games of the Series at home.
World Series favorites since spring training, Chicago led the majors with 103 wins this season.
The Cubs then ended more than a century of misery for their loyal fans -- barely. Third baseman Kris Bryant, one of Chicago's young stars, began smiling even before fielding a grounder by Michael Martinez and throwing it across to Rizzo for the final out.
Zobrist was chosen as the World Series MVP, a year after he helped the Royals win the championship.
Zobrist was among the players brought to the Cubs by Theo Epstein, the baseball guru added another crown to his collection. He also assembled the Red Sox team that broke Boston's 86-year drought with the 2004 championship.
From Curse of the Bambino to the Billy Goat Curse, he ended another jinx.
The Indians, meanwhile, added more heartbreak. In their previous World Series appearance, they were a double-play grounder from winning the title before losing Game 7 in 11 innings to the Marlins.
"It's going to hurt. It hurts because we care, but they need to walk with their head held high because they left nothing on the field," Francona said.
After defeating San Francisco and the Los Angeles Dodgers in the playoffs, Chicago became the first team to earn a title by winning Games 6 and 7 on the road since the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates.
While Cubs fans hugged with delight, there was only despair for the Indians, who now have gone longer than anyone without a crown.
Dexter Fowler homered on Corey Kluber's fourth pitch of the game, 23-year-old Javier Baez and 39-year-old David Ross also went deep for the Cubs, who led 5-1 in the fifth inning and 6-3 in the eighth.
Chapman wound up with the win and Montgomery got one out for his first save in the majors.
Bryan Shaw, who gave up a leadoff single to Kyle Schwarber in the 10th, took the loss.
It was just the fourth time that a Game 7 went to extra innings, and the rain delayed play until 12:11 a.m. in a still-packed ballpark.
Albert Almora Jr., pinch-running for Schwarber, alertly took second on Bryant's long fly to center. Rizzo was intentionally walked and Zobrist slapped an opposite-field double past a diving third baseman Jose Ramirez. Montero singled to make it a two-run lead.
Then in the bottom half, Carl Edwards Jr. struck out Mike Napoli, Ramirez grounded out, Brandon Guyer walked and Davis hit an RBI single. Montgomery took over, and helped set off a wild celebration on Chicago's North Side.
Cubs jumped on each other between the mound and second base, and their fans in the stands kept cheering.
Twenty-one other teams had won the World Series since Cubs last were champions. They reached the top again on the 39,466th day after Orval Overall's three-hit shutout won the 1908 finale at Detroit in a game that took 1:24. At the time, Theodore Roosevelt was president, New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska and Hawaii were not yet states, and the first Ford Model T car was two weeks old.
The Cubs were last champions when Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers and Frank Chance won consecutive titles in 1907-08, until now the only ones in team history. The Cubbies had not even reached the Series since 1945.
This one was for Ernie Banks, Ferguson Jenkins, Ron Santo and Billy Williams, who never reached the postseason.
For Gabby Hartnett, Ryne Sandberg and Greg Maddux, whose October runs fell short.
For Lee Elia and the "nickle-dime people" who spent so many wind-swept afternoons in the Friendly Confines watching loss after loss.
For Bill Veeck, who planted ivy vines against Wrigley Field's outfield walls.
For William Sianis, the Billy Goat Tavern owner said to have proclaimed when he was asked to leave Wrigley with his pet during the `45 Series: "Them Cubs, they ain't gonna win no more."
For Steve Bartman, whose life was upended when he tried to catch a foul ball as the Cubs came apart in the 2003 playoffs.
And for Harry Caray, who promised viewers after the 1991 finale that "sure as God made green apples, someday the Chicago Cubs are going to be in the World Series."
Maddon, hired before the 2015 season, won his first Series title after establishing a loose clubhouse that featured at times Warren the pink flamingo, Simon the magician and the motto: "Try not to suck."
Thousands of blue-clad Cubs fans found a way to get tickets and appeared to number nearly half the crowd of 38,104 at Progressive Field. They rocked the joint when Fowler put Chicago ahead with the first leadoff home run in a decisive Game 7.
PEN PALS
This was the first World Series in which no starting pitcher got at least one out in the seventh inning, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The only other in which no starter finished at least seven innings was in 2002, when San Francisco's Russ Ortiz threw 6 1/3 innings in Game 6.
UP NEXT
Cleveland's spring training opener is scheduled for Feb. 26 against the Cubs in Mesa, Arizona.



Final in 10
Playoff Series: Game 7 of 7









8:00PM,EDT,November 2,2016
Progressive Field, Cleveland, Ohio 

12345678910 R H E
CHC 1002210002 8 13 3
CLE 0010200301 7 11 1
W: A. Chapman (1-0)
L: B. Shaw (0-1)
S: M. Montgomery (1)







View: Play-By-Play | Pitch-By-PitchInning: All | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10
Chicago - Top of 1stSCORE
Corey Kluber pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Fowler homered to center (410 feet).10
Schwarber reached on infield single to shortstop.10
Bryant flied out to right.10
Rizzo flied out to center.10
Schwarber stole second.10
Zobrist flied out to right.10
1 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 1stSCORE
Kyle Hendricks pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Santana lined out to right.10
Kipnis struck out swinging.10
Lindor safe at first on throwing error by second baseman Báez.10
Napoli grounded into fielder's choice to shortstop, Lindor out at second.10
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 1 Errors
Chicago - Top of 2ndSCORE
Corey Kluber pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Russell popped out to shortstop.10
Contreras fouled out to right.10
Heyward popped out to shortstop.10
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 2ndSCORE
Kyle Hendricks pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Ramírez reached on infield single to shortstop.10
Ramírez picked off first.10
Chisenhall singled to shallow left.10
Davis grounded into double play, third to second to first, Chisenhall out at second.10
0 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 3rdSCORE
Corey Kluber pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Báez flied out to left.10
Fowler lined out to right.10
Schwarber singled to right, Schwarber out stretching at second.10
0 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 3rdSCORE
Kyle Hendricks pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Crisp doubled to left.10
Pérez sacrificed to first, Crisp to third.10
Santana singled to right, Crisp scored.11
Kipnis grounded into fielder's choice to shortstop, Santana safe at second on missed catch error by second baseman Báez.11
Lindor lined out to left.11
Napoli lined out to third.11
1 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 4thSCORE
Corey Kluber pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Bryant singled to left.11
Rizzo hit by pitch, Bryant to second.11
Zobrist grounded into fielder's choice to first, Rizzo out at second, Bryant to third.11
Russell hit sacrifice fly to center, Bryant scored, Zobrist to second.21
Contreras doubled to deep center, Zobrist scored.31
Heyward popped out to shortstop.31
2 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 4thSCORE
Kyle Hendricks pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Ramírez grounded out to first.31
Chisenhall flied out to left.31
Davis lined out to right.31
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 1 Errors
Chicago - Top of 5thSCORE
Corey Kluber pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Báez homered to right center (408 feet).41
Miller relieved Kluber.41
Fowler singled to left.41
Schwarber grounded into double play, shortstop to second to first, Fowler out at second.41
Bryant walked.41
Rizzo singled to right, Bryant scored, Rizzo to second advancing on throw.51
Zobrist lined out to center.51
2 Runs, 3 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 5thSCORE
Kyle Hendricks pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Crisp grounded out to second.51
Pérez struck out looking.51
Santana walked.51
Ross catching.51
Lester relieved Hendricks.51
Kipnis reached on infield single to catcher, Santana to second, Santana to third, Kipnis to second on throwing error by catcher Ross.51
Kipnis and Santana scored on Lester's wild pitch.53
Lindor struck out swinging.53
2 Runs, 1 Hits, 1 Errors
Chicago - Top of 6thSCORE
Andrew Miller pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Russell fouled out to first.53
Ross homered to center (406 feet).63
Heyward grounded out to first.63
Báez struck out swinging.63
1 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 6thSCORE
Jon Lester pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Napoli struck out swinging.63
Ramírez grounded out to shortstop.63
Guyer hit for Chisenhall.63
Guyer singled to left.63
Davis grounded out to second.63
0 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 7thSCORE
Andrew Miller pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Guyer in right field.63
Fowler singled to right.63
Schwarber lined out to left.63
Allen relieved Miller.63
Bryant struck out swinging. Fowler caught stealing second, catcher to second.63
0 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 7thSCORE
Jon Lester pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Crisp flied out to left.63
Pérez walked.63
Naquin ran for Pérez.63
Santana grounded out to pitcher, Naquin to second.63
Kipnis struck out swinging.63
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 8thSCORE
Cody Allen pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Gomes catching.63
Rizzo struck out swinging.63
Zobrist grounded out to first.63
Russell popped out to first.63
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 8thSCORE
Jon Lester pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Lindor grounded out to shortstop.63
Napoli struck out looking.63
Ramírez reached on infield single to second.63
Chapman relieved Lester.63
Guyer doubled to right center, Ramírez scored.64
Davis homered to left (364 feet), Guyer scored.66
Crisp singled to left.66
Gomes struck out swinging.66
3 Runs, 4 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 9thSCORE
Cody Allen pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Ross walked.66
Coghlan ran for Ross.66
Heyward grounded into fielder's choice to second, Coghlan out at second.66
Shaw relieved Allen.66
Heyward stole second, Heyward safe at third on throwing error by catcher Gomes.66
Guyer in left field.66
Martínez in right field.66
Báez struck out bunting foul.66
Fowler grounded out to shortstop.66
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 1 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 9thSCORE
Aroldis Chapman pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Montero catching.66
Santana flied out to left.66
Kipnis struck out swinging.66
Lindor flied out to right.66
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 10thSCORE
Bryan Shaw pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Schwarber singled to right.66
Almora Jr. ran for Schwarber.66
Bryant flied out to center, Almora Jr. to second.66
Rizzo intentionally walked.66
Zobrist doubled to left, Almora Jr. scored, Rizzo to third.76
Russell intentionally walked.76
Montero singled to left, Rizzo scored, Zobrist to third, Russell to second.86
Bauer relieved Shaw.86
Heyward struck out swinging.86
Báez flied out to center.86
2 Runs, 3 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 10thSCORE
Carl Edwards pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Edwards Jr. relieved Chapman.86
Napoli struck out swinging.86
Ramírez grounded out to shortstop.86
Guyer walked.86
Guyer to second on fielder's indifference.86
Davis singled to center, Guyer scored.87
Montgomery relieved Edwards Jr..87
Martínez grounded out to third.87
1 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors




Chicago Cubs

HittersABRHRBIBBSO#PAVGOBPSLG
Fowler CF51310014.233.258.467
Schwarber DH50300014.412.500.471
Almora Jr. PR-DH
0100000.000.000.000
Bryant 3B42101134.269.387.500
Rizzo 1B31111117.360.484.600
Zobrist LF51110015.357.419.500
Russell SS30011018.222.267.370
Contreras C2011007.105.227.211
Ross C
1111109.400.4291.000
0000000.000.000.000
1011003.250.250.250
Heyward RF50000121.150.150.150
Báez 2B51110219.167.167.267
Totals39813845171   
BATTING
2B: Contreras (2, Kluber); Zobrist (2, Shaw)
HR: Fowler (2, 1st inning off Kluber 0 on, 0 Out); Báez (1, 5th inning off Kluber 0 on, 0 Out); Ross (1, 6th inning off Miller 0 on, 1 Out)
RBI: Fowler (2), Russell (9), Contreras (1), Báez (1), Rizzo (5), Ross (2), Zobrist (2), Montero (1)
SF: Russell
2-out RBI: Contreras, Rizzo
GIDP: Schwarber
Cubs RISP: 3-11 (Montero 1-1, Báez 0-2, Fowler 0-1, Zobrist 1-4, Contreras 1-1, Heyward 0-2)
Team LOB: 7
BASERUNNING
SB: Schwarber (1, 2nd base off Kluber/Pérez); Heyward (4, 2nd base off Shaw/Gomes)
CS: Fowler (1, 2nd base by Allen/Pérez)
FIELDING
E: Báez 2 (2, catch, throw); Ross (1, throw)
DP: 1 (Bryant-Báez-Rizzo).

Game Notes

The game was delayed by rain for 17 minutes between the 9th and 10th inning.

Game Information

StadiumProgressive Field, Cleveland, OH
Attendance38,104 (103.4% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time4:28
Weather69 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind7 mph
UmpiresHome Plate - Sam Holbrook, First Base - Chris Guccione, Second Base - John Hirschbeck, Third Base - Marvin Hudson, Left Field - Tony Randazzo, Right Field - Joe West





MLB Postseason Scoreboard for Game 7 of the 2016 World Series on November 2,2016 from ESPN.GO.COM

Final/10 R H E

Cubs

(103-58, 46-34 away)
8 13 3

Indians

(94-67, 53-28 Home)
7 11 1
Play
Cubs close out Indians to win first Series since 1908
World Series - GAME 7, CHC wins series 4-3
Recap Box Score Game Details

Cubs rout Indians, send World Series to deciding Game 7

CLEVELAND -- One more game. For everything.
Either a 108-year World Series championship drought will come to an end, or another that's lasted 68 years.
Hysteria for one fan base, more heartbreak for the other.
Cubs vs. Indians in a winner-take-all Game 7.
As it should be.
"It's just correct and apt that we'd go seven games," Chicago manager Joe Maddon said.
Addison Russell hit a grand slam and tied a Series record with six RBI, and Chicago took advantage of a huge early misplay in Cleveland's outfield as the Cubs, their offense finally revving, throttled the Indians 9-3 on Tuesday night in Game 6 to push this tense tug-of-war between baseball's two longest title drought holders to the limit.
The biggest, most nerve-wracking day lies ahead.
"This is kind of fitting for these two franchises. This is storybook," Cubs catcher David Ross said. "They'll make movies about this one day."
Indians ace Corey Kluber, dominant while winning Games 1 and 4, starts again on short rest Wednesday night at home against big league ERA leader Kyle Hendricks.
Cleveland's hopes will rest with their best pitcher, the one guy they've been able to count on all season.
"We knew it wasn't going to be easy," said Jason Kipnis, who homered and had three hits. "We knew they've got a great ballclub over there. They were lined up with their three-headed monster of a pitching staff. We're still very confident."
Kris Bryant homered to spark a three-run first inning, Russell hit the first Series slam in 11 years and Jake Arrieta worked into the sixth as the Cubs, down 3-1 back at Wrigley Field, are now rolling. One more win at Progressive Field would bring their first championship since 1908.
The Indians, trying for their first title since 1948, missed a second shot at closing out the Cubs. Cleveland is now forced to play another Game 7 after losing in 11 innings to the Florida Marlins in 1997 in its last trip to the Series.
Not wanting to take any chances despite a comfortable late lead, Maddon used atomic-armed Aroldis Chapman for one out in the seventh, the eighth and one batter in the ninth. The lefty, who got the final eight outs in Game 5, threw just 20 pitches and will be on call for the season's final game when both managers won't hesitate to use any arm they've got.
The Cubbies, shut out twice earlier in this Series, brought their clubbies to Cleveland. Bryant had four hits and Anthony Rizzo added three, including a two-run homer.
They hammered Josh Tomlin, who couldn't get out of the third inning and didn't get any help from his outfield in the first. The right-hander, who was so effective in Game 3 at Wrigley Field, pitched on short rest for the second time in his career but wasn't the problem as much as his location.
Everything seemed to be lined up for a massive downtown street party in Cleveland.
On a 71-degree November night, fans came hoping to witness the first championship win at home by a Cleveland team since the Browns took the NFL title in 1964 by shutting out the Baltimore Colts.
With Eddie Robinson -- the last living member from that '48 title team -- in attendance, and LeBron James and the NBA champion Cavaliers coming over from Quicken Loans Arena after they beat Houston, Cleveland was poised to have a night to remember like the one just 134 days ago in June when the Cavs ended the city's 52-year championship dry spell.
The Cubs blew through those plans like a wicked wind off Lake Michigan.
Arrieta wasn't dominant, but he didn't have to be. Staked to the early lead, he held the Indians without a hit until the fourth when Kipnis doubled leading off and scored on Mike Napoli's single.
Arrieta worked out of a bases-loaded jam in the fourth, and gave up a homer to Kipnis in the fifth but struck out nine.
Maddon came to get him in the sixth, the right-hander got several pats on the back from Chicago's infielders and Cubs fans saluted him with a standing ovation.
Tomlin was one strike from getting out of the first unscathed when everything fell apart.
He had Bryant down 0-2 when he hung a waist-high curveball that Chicago's third baseman, who came in just 2 for 17 in the Series but had homered in Game 5, cracked nearly halfway up the bleachers in left field, a 433-foot shot that sent a shockwave through standing-room-only Progressive Field.
There was a bigger one to come.
Rizzo and Ben Zobrist followed with singles before Tomlin got Russell to hit what appeared to be a routine out. However, right fielder Lonnie Chisenhall and rookie center fielder Tyler Naquin, unable to hear each other over the roaring crowd, looked at each other and let the ball drop onto the grass for a double.
While they scrambled to recover it, Rizzo scored easily and Zobrist beat a relay throw to the plate, bowling over Indians catcher Roberto Perez as a sizeable contingent of Cubs screamed with delight.
"It was just loud at there," Naquin said. "It was kind of one of those in-betweeners. Lonnie got a good break, I got a break, it's just one of those deals. In the moment, me being the center fielder, I need to take charge on that. That's my mistake."
Although it was early, with Arrieta on the mound, Chicago's lead felt more like 30-0 than 3-0.
Russell, who dressed up like a Ninja turtle on Halloween, then put a fright into Indians fans with his shot to deep left-center.
With two on, Indians reliever Dan Otero placed a 2-0 pitch over the heart of the plate to Russell, who launched it over the wall spent much of his home-run trot howling.
The Cubs were loud all night, and with one more win they'll be champions.
"I hope it's not difficult to sleep. It's every kid's dream. It all comes down to Game 7," Russell said.
FALL CLASSICS
Bryant and Rizzo became the first 3-4 hitters to combine for seven hits in a Series game. ... Kipnis went 3 for 4 with a single, double and home run. He has two in this Series, joining Willie Stargell and Roy Campanella as the only players to accomplish that. ... Cleveland's pitchers have 59 strikeouts, tied for the fourth most in Series history. The 2001 Yankees had 70.
SEVENTH HEAVEN
The Cubs and Indians each have 0-2 records in Game 7. Chicago lost the 1945 World Series to Detroit and the 2003 NLCS to Florida, both at Wrigley. ... Along with the '97 Series loss, the Indians dropped the 2007 ALCS at Boston. . The Series has gone the distance three times in six years. San Francisco defeated Kansas City in the last seven-gamer in 2014. . Home teams are 18-19 all-time in Game 7.
ME AND THE MICK
At 22, Russell became the second-youngest player to hit a grand slam in the World Series. Yankees legend Mickey Mantle was 21 when he hit one on Oct. 4, 1953 against Brooklyn. Russell is the first Cubs to player to connect for a slam in the Series.




Final
Playoff Series: Game 6 of 7

8:00PM,EDT,November 1,2016
Progressive Field, Cleveland,Ohio 

123456789 R H E
CHC 304000002 9 13 0
CLE 000110001 3 6 1
W: J. Arrieta (2-0)
L: J. Tomlin (0-1)







View: Play-By-Play | Pitch-By-PitchInning: All | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
Chicago - Top of 1stSCORE
Josh Tomlin pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Fowler lined out to third.00
Schwarber grounded out to second.00
Bryant homered to left (426 feet).10
Rizzo singled to right center.10
Zobrist singled to right center, Rizzo to third.10
Russell doubled to right center, Rizzo and Zobrist scored, Russell to third on throwing error by second baseman Kipnis.30
Contreras flied out to center.30
3 Runs, 4 Hits, 1 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 1stSCORE
Jake Arrieta pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Santana struck out swinging.30
Kipnis grounded out to second.30
Lindor walked.30
Napoli struck out swinging.30
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 2ndSCORE
Josh Tomlin pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Heyward flied out to right.30
Báez grounded out to second.30
Fowler flied out to right.30
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 2ndSCORE
Jake Arrieta pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Ramírez struck out swinging.30
Chisenhall struck out swinging.30
Crisp grounded out to third.30
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 3rdSCORE
Josh Tomlin pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Schwarber walked.30
Bryant flied out to right.30
Rizzo singled to center, Schwarber to second.30
Zobrist singled to right, Schwarber to third, Rizzo to second.30
Otero relieved Tomlin.30
Russell homered to center (435 feet), Schwarber, Rizzo and Zobrist scored.70
Contreras grounded out to shortstop.70
Heyward popped out to shortstop.70
4 Runs, 3 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 3rdSCORE
Jake Arrieta pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Naquin struck out looking.70
Pérez lined out to center.70
Santana grounded out to first.70
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 4thSCORE
Danny Salazar pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Salazar relieved Otero.70
Báez struck out swinging.70
Fowler struck out swinging.70
Schwarber flied out to left.70
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 4thSCORE
Jake Arrieta pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Kipnis doubled to deep center.70
Lindor struck out swinging.70
Napoli singled to center, Kipnis scored.71
Ramírez lined out to right.71
Chisenhall hit by pitch, Napoli to second.71
Napoli to third, Chisenhall to second on passed ball by Contreras.71
Crisp walked.71
Naquin struck out swinging.71
1 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 5thSCORE
Danny Salazar pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Bryant reached on infield single to shortstop.71
Bryant to second on wild pitch by Salazar.71
Rizzo fouled out to third.71
Zobrist struck out swinging.71
Russell struck out looking.71
0 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 5thSCORE
Jake Arrieta pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Pérez struck out looking.71
Santana popped out to first.71
Kipnis homered to left (385 feet).72
Lindor grounded out to first.72
1 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 6thSCORE
Jeff Manship pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Manship relieved Salazar.72
Contreras struck out swinging.72
Heyward flied out to right.72
Báez reached on infield single to shortstop.72
McAllister relieved Manship.72
Fowler flied out to center.72
0 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 6thSCORE
Jake Arrieta pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Napoli struck out swinging.72
Ramírez lined out to left.72
Chisenhall walked.72
Montgomery relieved Arrieta.72
Guyer hit for Crisp.72
Guyer grounded into fielder's choice to shortstop, Chisenhall out at second.72
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 7thSCORE
Zach McAllister pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Guyer in left field.72
Schwarber singled to left center.72
Bryant singled to left center, Schwarber to second.72
Rizzo flied out to right.72
Zobrist lined out to left.72
Russell grounded into fielder's choice to third, Schwarber out at third, Bryant to second.72
0 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 7thSCORE
Mike Montgomery pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Davis hit for Naquin.72
Davis lined out to center.72
Pérez walked.72
Santana flied out to center.72
Kipnis singled to right, Pérez to second.72
Chapman relieved Montgomery.72
Lindor grounds out, first baseman Rizzo to pitcher Chapman.72
0 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 8thSCORE
Mike Clevinger pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Davis in center field.72
Clevinger relieved McAllister.72
Contreras walked.72
Heyward grounded into double play, third to second to first, Contreras out at second.72
Báez struck out looking.72
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 8thSCORE
Aroldis Chapman pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Napoli struck out swinging.72
Ramírez singled to center.72
Gomes hit for Chisenhall.72
Gomes grounded into double play, shortstop to second to first, Ramírez out at second.72
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors
Chicago - Top of 9thSCORE
Mike Clevinger pitching for ClevelandCHCCLE
Martínez in right field.72
Fowler grounded out to second.72
Schwarber flied out to center.72
Bryant singled to left center.72
Rizzo homered to right (391 feet), Bryant scored.92
Zobrist walked.92
Russell grounded into fielder's choice to shortstop, Zobrist out at second.92
2 Runs, 2 Hits, 0 Errors
Cleveland - Bottom of 9thSCORE
Aroldis Chapman pitching for ChicagoCHCCLE
Guyer walked.92
Strop relieved Chapman.92
Davis flied out to left.92
Guyer to second on wild pitch by Strop.92
Pérez singled to right, Guyer scored advancing on play. Pérez out stretching at second.93
Santana walked.93
Wood relieved Strop.93
Santana to second on fielder's indifference.93
Kipnis fouled out to shortstop.93
1 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors




hicago Cubs

HittersABRHRBIBBSO#PAVGOBPSLG
Fowler CF50000118.160.192.320
Schwarber DH41101014.333.467.417
Bryant 3B52410018.273.385.545
Rizzo 1B53320019.364.462.636
Zobrist LF42201116.391.462.522
Russell SS51260117.250.280.417
Contreras C30001120.059.200.118
Heyward RF40000016.200.200.200
Báez 2B40100215.160.160.160
Totals39913936153   
BATTING
2B: Russell (1, Tomlin)
HR: Bryant (2, 1st inning off Tomlin 0 on, 2 Out); Russell (1, 3rd inning off Otero 3 on, 1 Out); Rizzo (1, 9th inning off Clevinger 1 on, 2 Out)
RBI: Bryant (2), Russell 6 (8), Rizzo 2 (4)
2-out RBI: Bryant, Russell 2, Rizzo 2
GIDP: Heyward
Cubs RISP: 3-10 (Zobrist 1-3, Contreras 0-1, Rizzo 0-2, Russell 2-4)
Team LOB: 6
FIELDING
DP: 1 (Russell-Báez-Rizzo).
PB: Contreras.
Outfield Assist: Heyward (Pérez at 2nd base).

Game Information

StadiumProgressive Field, Cleveland, OH
Attendance38,116 (103.4% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time3:29
Weather71 degrees, clear
Wind9 mph
UmpiresHome Plate - Joe West, First Base - Sam Holbrook, Second Base - Chris Guccione, Third Base - John Hirschbeck, Left Field - Marvin Hudson, Right Field - Tony Randazzo