I got a chance to watch the Cubs in person last night and about the only thing I can say towards the game itself, was it was a typical Cubs loss. Let's go inning by inning.
Brewers 1stJJ Hardy pops up behind first behind which Lee and Walker both can't get to/ are afraid of running into each other. I thought it was Walker's ball and it was okay that they couldn't get to it. But at least Walker could have thrown a strike to Neifi at second to get Clark, who was obviously tagging. Nope, Walker three bounces and Clark scores a batter later on a sacrifice fly by Carlos Lee.
Brewers 5thClark lines a pitch to right, to which Jeromy Burnitz looks like he catches cleanly. The ball pops out of his glove, I think as he tried to stand up. Tim Maclellan (a great umpire) I think ruled that since he wasn't taking the ball out of his glove, it doesn't count as a catch. So the Brewers got an extra out there. Then with Clark on third, Lee again flies to centerfield. Corey Patterson waits under it and fires a one-hopper to home plate, to which Michael Barrett cannot field cleanly and Clark scores. Two defensive miscues cost the Cubs a run in that inning.
Cubs 7thThis was probably the worst/weirdest inning for the Cubs in a long time. Patterson led off with a double, after he tried to bunt his way on. Barrett walked. Dusty brought in Ryan Theriot to pinch hit/ bunt. He tried to bunt but failed to twice. But he did something that the veteran players on the Cubs never do. He came back and actually walked as well, I think from 0-2. When else has that happened this season? Neifi comes up with bases loaded and predictably swings at the first pitch and fouls it off. The last two guys had walked and Neifi hacks at the first pitch. Neifi grounds out, which I thought at the time was a poor play by Bill Hall. He had a chance to get two outs and let in a run and he also guranteed that Derrek Lee would bat that inning, unless a double play. But predictably Todd Walker popped out and then Lee struck out for the fourth time to end the inning.
Brewers 7thMichael Wuertz came in and got the first two outs with Overbay up. Ohman was warming up, I'm not for sure he was warm or not, but Overbay hit a home run, putting the game out of reach. After Wuertz got Lee to end the 7th, Ohman came in for ONE batter, Jenkins, who struck out. If there is one guy you bring the LOOGY for, it's the number 3 batter, not the number 5 batter. I don't know their splits, but that makes more sense to me.
Cubs 9thBarrett led off and struck out. Ben Grieve WAS on deck, until Dusty brought him down for who else, Jose Macias and his sub .300 on base percentage. Again, predictably Macias struck out on 3 pitches.
Brewers 5- Cubs 3. 1 for 8 with runners in scoring position. I'm convinced that managerial decisions mean a heck of lot more in late inning situations and the Brewers clearly have a better manager. I was watching the White Sox situation closely this week. They reminded me of the 2004 Cubs, a team supposed to roll into the playoffs and suddenly sputtering in September. The White Sox had to come back from leads both nights and won last night. Their manager is not afraid to put pitchers back into situations that they failed in the night before, like Jenks last night. And that's why they will be in the playoffs this season and the Cubs didn't make it last year: the leadership of the manager.