Will the Cubs end their famously long drought? On the other hand, will the Indians end their famously long drought? Surely the Cubs can’t be denied the championship. Going into the World Series, Chicago have the better starting rotation, the better lineup and the better closer. But does any of that matter? Especially when the manager in the other dugout has won two World Series and has been a master of manipulating match-ups throughout the postseason. Cleveland would be in a better position if they still had Carlos Carrasco and Danny Salazar, who had helped carry them to the American League Central title. Instead they must try to tame the Cubs with only two certainties in their rotation: Corey Kluber...
Yes, the NL Championship Series is not over yet, but we know how this ends. Another year, another disappointment – such is the life of a Dodger fanWhat is baseball without superstition? Rally caps, no-hitters that dare not speak their name until the seventh, and, of course, the dreaded postseason curse. For decades, the unholy trinity of baseball curses was the Cubs, Red Sox, and Indians. If you needed a shorthand for comic futility, you couldn’t go wrong with of those three hapless franchises. There’s a reason why Henry Rowengartner played for the Cubs after breaking his arm and magically developing an unhittable fastball in the movie Rookie of the Year; why the Cleveland Indians threatened to move to Miami...
Like a man whistling loudly to keep ghosts from the door, baseball’s Chicago Cubs are making nonchalant noises about their World Series hoodooWrigley Field is not your standard modern American sports facility, even though little could be more American than having your stadium named after a manufacturer of chewing gum. It is America’s Wimbledon, its Lord’s. It is the second oldest of the major league ballparks. There is a pervasive sense of history and a deep yearning that goes back 108 years, to the last time the Chicago Cubs won the World Series.Built on land originally occupied by a Catholic seminary and first named Weeghman Park after the original owner, the stadium was finally renamed in 1927, six years after...
The Cubs had the best record in MLB this year, and enter the NL Championship Series as favorites – but history shows such a record is usually a kiss of deathSurely this is the season the Cubs’ curse ends. This year, the futility of rooting for lovable losers will become a piece of Chicago nostalgia, alongside Ferris Bueller singing Twist and Shout, Siskel and Ebert bickering over movie reviews, and Soldier Field looking like a 20th century building rather than a 22nd century spaceship. Right? Related: José Fernández: a smiling star whose death leaves baseball bereft Continue reading...