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To: Cactus Jack who wrote (29551)10/4/2003 8:10:21 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
All Prior'd up, Cubs take 2-1 lead

chicago.cubs.mlb.com

Karros: Playoff fever hotter here, bar none

suntimes.com



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (29551)10/5/2003 1:32:57 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
The Cubs will have to play better on Sunday night to win this round of the play-offs...

_______________________________________________

Braves push Cubs to Game 5

BY NANCY ARMOUR ASSOCIATED PRESS

October 4, 2003


Turns out Chipper Jones and the Atlanta Braves still had some big hits left.

And Sammy Sosa didn't have quite enough.

With Wrigley Field fans on edge and the streets of Chicago rocking in anticipation of the Cubs winning their first postseason series since 1908, the Braves sent this NL playoff back to Atlanta for a decisive Game 5.

Jones ended his playoff slump with a two-run homer from each side of the plate, and Russ Ortiz pitched well on three days' rest as the Braves defeated the Cubs 6-4 Saturday.

It went down to the final swing. With a run already in and a runner on second, Sosa came up with two outs for a tense matchup against star closer John Smoltz.

On a full-count pitch, Sosa took a hopeful hop as his bid for a tying, two-run homer left the bat.

"I think the roofs might have come off this place if he had," Chipper Jones said.

But center fielder Andruw Jones calmly caught the ball on the edge of the warning track for the last out.

Smoltz, who appeared to be grimacing in pain during the at-bat, bent over and put his hands on his knees after holding on for a save.

Jones, who was 1-for-11 coming into the game, was 2-for-3 with two walks. Eric Karros hit two homers for the Cubs, but both were solo shots.

So the series now goes back to Atlanta on Sunday night. Mike Hampton will try to duplicate Ortiz's effort, facing Kerry Wood on three days' rest.

The winner will host Florida in the opener of the NLCS on Tuesday.

The Braves led the NL in every major hitting category this season: batting average (.284), homers (a franchise-record 235) and runs (907, another club mark). But those big bats were nowhere to be found once the postseason began.

Atlanta hit just .191 in the first three games of the series, and had only three extra-base hits. The struggles of Jones, Andruw Jones and Gary Sheffield were the most glaring, with the 3-4-5 hitters combining for three hits through the first three games.

But with Sheffield on the bench-- his left hand was still sore and swollen from being hit by Mark Prior's pitch Friday night-- and the Braves on the verge of yet another postseason disappointment, Chipper Jones came through when they needed him most.

With the game tied at 1 in the fifth inning, Marcus Giles reached on a fielder's choice. Jones, batting left-handed, sent a 1-0 pitch from Matt Clement arching toward left-center for a 3-1 lead.

The crowd of 39,983 knew the ball was gone even before it landed in the seats, falling so silent a goat could have been heard bleating.

And Jones wasn't done. Batting right-handed in the eighth inning against Mark Guthrie, he put a 3-2 pitch into almost the exact same spot in left-center.

The rest of the offense fed off Jones. Every Atlanta starter reached base at least once, and Andruw Jones and Darren Bragg were the only ones without hits. But Bragg, starting in place of Sheffield, had a broken-bat fielder's choice in the fifth to score Atlanta's first run and tie it at 1.

Even 40-something Julio Franco, who started for a struggling Robert Fick, was an offensive juggernaut. Franco went 3-for-4 with a walk and a run scored.

The Cubs, meanwhile, left eight on base, including a runner in scoring position in each of the first five innings. And in a play that's sure to add some spice to Game 5, Fick hit Karros with a forearm worthy of all-star wrestling, knocking the ball and Karros' glove free.

Karros grimaced in pain as plate umpire Larry Young came up the line to call Fick out. Karros stayed in the game and homered in the eighth inning. But reliever Kyle Farnsworth, who slipped and hit the grass as he fielded the grounder, was hurt and had to leave the game.

It all added up to disappointment for Cubs fans, who were giddy at the prospect of their beloved team finally ending their frustration. Chicago hasn't won a postseason series since the 1908 World Series, going 0-for-10 since then.

But with a 2-1 lead going into Saturday's game, Cubs fans were ready. Someone even brought a brought a goat onto the field before the game.

According to local legend, the owner of a Chicago bar put a curse on the Cubs when he and his goat were turned away from the 1945 World Series game between the Cubs and the Detroit Tigers. The Cubs have endured 50 years of futility since then.

But give Ortiz some credit for spoiling the fun, too. The 21-game winner struggled in his Game 1 loss last Tuesday, giving up four runs and three walks in 5 2-3 innings. Though Atlanta manager Bobby Cox considered starting rookie Horacio Ramirez, he decided instead to go with Ortiz on three days' rest for the second time in his career.

The gamble worked.

Ortiz wasn't dazzling, giving up two runs, seven hits and four walks in five innings. But he was efficient, getting outs when he needed them.

The only damage the Cubs did against him was an RBI double by Moises Alou in the third inning and a solo homer by Karros in the sixth.

Notes:

Bernie Williams was the first player to homer from both sides in a postseason game, doing it for the Yankees in 1995 against Seattle. ... Karros' two homers ties the Cubs record for most homers in a postseason game. Gary Matthews also had two in 1984 against San Diego. ... Hall of Famer Billy Williams threw out the first pitch.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved.



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (29551)10/5/2003 10:02:46 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Chicago, Atlanta headed for decisive Game 5

_______________________________________________

Cubs trip trying to wrap up NLDS
By Carrie Muskat / MLB.com
10/04/2003 8:19 PM ET

chicago.cubs.mlb.com


CHICAGO -- The Chicago Cubs didn't need any extra motivation to beat the Atlanta Braves, but Robert Fick gave them some.

The Cubs had held the National League's top offensive team in check for three games, but on Saturday Chipper Jones hit a pair of two-run homers to power the Braves to a 6-4 victory and force a deciding Game 5 in the NL Division Series.

"As much as we'd all like it to be easy and roll out with a 2-1 advantage and score 10 runs and shut them out, that's not the way it'll be for this team," Cubs reliever Mike Remlinger said. "I hope our fans understand that. We're going to go down there (Sunday) and take care of things."

Eric Karros survived a freak collision with Fick and hit a pair of solo homers for the Cubs, who must fly back to Atlanta to settle this. Kerry Wood (1-0) will start Sunday at Turner Field against Mike Hampton (0-0) to determine who advances to the NL Championship Series against the Florida Marlins. The Wild Card Marlins ousted the San Francisco Giants earlier Saturday.

The Cubs-Braves series marks the 10th time the best-of-five Division Series has gone the distance.

The Karros-Fick mess occurred in the eighth. Fick bunted and Cubs reliever Kyle Farnsworth slipped while fielding the ball, slamming his right knee into the ground. He did make the throw to Karros at first and they got Fick in time. But Fick gave Karros a forearm as he passed first and struck the first baseman on the left arm.

"I think tonight when you sit down and see it on TV -- you don't need a whole lot of extra incentive this time of year but if anyone needs it, that's it," Remlinger said of the play. "That's brutal. I've never seen anything like that in my life. Not on a baseball field. Maybe on a football field.

"For it to even happen is ridiculous," Remlinger said. "Good for us."

"I don't really know what happened," Fick said. "I was trying to beat out the bunt. I don't care if you want to call it a dirty play, call it a dirty play. I don't know what you want me to say. They broke (Gary Sheffield's) hand. I know that's not (Atlanta manager Bobby Cox's) style but this was an elimination game."

"I know there wasn't an attempt to hurt Eric," Cox said, "but that's a good way to hurt somebody probably."

"That was poor judgment," Cubs manager Dusty Baker said.

"It's an interesting running technique and I'll leave it at that," said Karros, who feared that he hyper-extended his left elbow. "If you look at the film, you can make your own judgment."

Karros did stay in the game and belted his second homer with two out in the eighth. Jones connected on his second homer with two out in the Braves eighth off Mark Guthrie, who came in to replace Farnsworth, to open a 6-2 cushion.

The Cubs' resiliency has been tested all season. It'll be tested again.

"It was a tough day at the ballpark," Baker said, "but when the series started, I mean, you know you're playing a quality team that's been there before. Deep down in my heart -- I didn't want to admit this -- but I thought it was going to go to five games. We've got to go to Atlanta."

The Braves were batting .191 in the first three games in large part because of the Cubs starting pitching. Matt Clement (0-1), who was the winner one week ago when the Cubs clinched the Central Division, served up eight hits and walked four over 4 2/3 innings, including Jones' first homer in the fifth.

"It's such a good lineup, it's hard to keep them down," Clement said. "Everything didn't bounce the right way today. They got a lot of their hits with two strikes against me. They did it with their backs against the wall.

"Our team has done its best with its back against the wall," Clement said. "It hasn't been easy for us all year so we might as well go to Atlanta."

The Cubs were vying to win their first postseason series since 1908 when they won the World Series. They can only hope the same rabid fans who followed them for Games 1 and 2 can get tickets.

Game 1 starter Russ Ortiz (1-1), pitching on short rest, gave up two runs on seven hits over five-plus innings, including Karros' leadoff homer in the Cubs sixth which closed the gap to 4-2.

The Cubs got things started on a positive note with two out in the third on Moises Alou's RBI double over Chipper Jones in left. Jones appeared to be a little unsure about where he was in relation to the brick outfield wall.

Atlanta tied the game at 1-1 in the fourth and Jones belted his first homer, a two-run shot in the fifth, to go ahead, 3-1. Vinny Castilla added a two-out RBI single in the inning.

No one in the sellout crowd of 39,983 had left their seats when Randall Simon doubled to lead off the Cubs ninth against John Smoltz and scored on Damian Miller's double. But Smoltz retired the next three batters, and got Sosa to fly out to the warning track in center to end the game.

Early arriving fans saw the goat, which was led into Wrigley Field in right. Legend has it that in the 1945 World Series, tavern owner William Sianis tried to bring a billy goat into Wrigley Field -- he was promoting his establishment -- but was denied entry. He supposedly put a curse on the Cubs and they have not been to the World Series since.

The Cubs will need more than silly pet tricks to advance.

"We're down to a one-game season," Baker said. "We're tied. They don't have the lead and we don't have the lead. Why wouldn't I feel confident?"



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (29551)10/5/2003 11:24:41 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Cubs win first playoff series in 95 years...;-)

suntimes.com

Dusty's Cubs played very well tonight...On Tuesday they start the next round of play-offs against Florida.

-s2

btw, I'm up in Michigan on a big project and am removed from all the crazy celebrating in Chicago.