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Cubs Win World Series In Epic Game 7

  

Category:  Sports

Via:  john-russell  •  8 years ago  •  18 comments

Cubs Win World Series In Epic Game 7


Believe it: Cubs win first World Series since 1908 in epic Game 7


 













Russell's grand slam



Russell's grand slam

MLB.com




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CLEVELAND – The Chicago Cubs won the World Series on Wednesday night. They won it in epic, incredible, unbelievable fashion. They won it with an extra-innings rally that followed an improbable home run that chased a grinding comeback that all melded together in a delicious soup of baseball madness that broke the heart of the Cleveland Indians. Game 7 – and the 112th World Series – will go down among the best ever.

One hundred eight years of misery – of billy goats and black cats and Bartman, of bleacher bums and broken dreams, of a curse that wasn’t ever real but always felt like it – was vanquished Wednesday.  The Cubs beat the Indians, 8-7 , in the 10th inning of a gave-you-everything Game 7. The City of Chicago celebrated like it hasn’t before. The City of Cleveland mourned perhaps its most heartbreaking loss yet, a dagger every bit as sharp as The Shot, The Drive and The Fumble.

This was billed as the biggest baseball game in as long as anyone could remember, a matchup packing more gravitas than Game 7 of the 2004 ALCS, Game 7 of the 2001 World Series, the first game back after 9/11, Game 7 of the 1986 World Series – one ripe with historical implications not just because of the Cubs’ century without a championship but the Indians’ streak of ignominy, 68 years now going on 69.

[Championship gear:  Get Chicago Cubs World Series merchandise ]

It exceeded any and all expectations, and not just because it was the first extra-innings Game 7 since Cleveland lost to Miami in 1997. The Cubs went ahead when pinch runner Albert Almora scored on a Ben Zobrist double. A Miguel Montero single drove in Anthony Rizzo for another run. The deluge came after a 17-minute rain delay, which followed one of the biggest home runs in World Series history. Cleveland tied the game 6-6 in the eighth inning when Rajai Davis, the center fielder with 55 career home runs in more than 1,200 games, took a fastball from Cubs closer Aroldis Chapman 369 feet over the 19-foot-high wall in left field, a two-run homer that sent the crowd of 38,104 into utter hysterics.


The Cubs celebrate after getting the final out to win the World Series. (USA Today)


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The Cubs celebrate after getting the final out to win the World Series. (USA Today)

It almost happened again in the bottom of the 10th. The Indians scored a run off rookie Carl Edwards Jr. when Davis drove in Brandon Guyer. Mike Montgomery, the other left-hander acquired midseason by the Cubs, induced Michael Martinez into hitting a groundball to Kris Bryant. He threw it to Anthony Rizzo, the final out was recorded and history was made.

It set off madness in Chicago and started the Cubs’ swan dive into an offseason – and a lifetime – of feting from the adoring national fan base that stuck with them throughout all the years of losing, most of them not exactly lovable, and the years in which they won but couldn’t win it all. The 2016 Cubs seemed destined to tread the same path until they rescued themselves from a three-games-to-one deficit that, while towering, never felt insurmountable.

Not with this team assembled by president Theo Epstein and general manager Jed Hoyer, managed by Joe Maddon, led by young stars Bryant and Rizzo, and buoyed by owner Tom Ricketts, whose rebuilding efforts brought in the new brain trust, which beget the loaded team that won 103 games and went into this playoff run favored to win the World Series.

Being favorite and following through are entirely different beasts. The Cubs hadn’t even made a World Series in 71 years. They had lost seven World Series since they last won one, in 1908, with the famous Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance infield and a style of baseball entirely different than the one that dominated the 2016 postseason.


Dexter Fowler was the first player to ever lead off a World Series Game 7 with a home run. (USA Today)


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Dexter Fowler was the first player to ever lead off a World Series Game 7 with a home run. (USA Today)


This was about home runs and pitching, and the Cubs got enough of both Wednesday to finish off Cleveland at Progressive Field, which at times felt more like Wrigley Field East, with Cubs fans streaming in from around the country to bring hints of blue and extra-loud voices that were heard from nearly the first pitch.

Corey Kluber, the Indians’ ace, threw it at 8:02 p.m. local time. By 8:03, the Cubs led 1-0 on Dexter Fowler’s leadoff home run, the first in the history of a World Series Game 7. Thirty-six Game 7s had been played – and of them, only seven came after a team clawed back after being down 3-1. Five of those times the comeback kids won. Twice they didn’t. After Fowler’s home run, during which he ran backward between first and second while nodding to his dugout, the Cubs showed they were far more intent on being the former than the latter.

Bryant answered a third-inning Cleveland run with a pedal-to-the-medal run and slide on a ball just long enough for a sacrifice fly. The Cubs added another on a Willson Contreras double in the fourth, before the power returned and almost broke the game wide open. Javier Baez, who committed a pair of errors in the first three innings that personified the nerves that permeated the game, homered to lead off the fifth, chasing off Kluber and bringing on super-reliever Andrew Miller, who allowed a nine-pitch walk against Bryant to turn into a run when he was running on the pitch and sped home on a Rizzo single.

Maddon yanked his starter, Kyle Hendricks, with a runner on after 4 2/3 innings, handing the ball to ace Jon Lester, who allowed an infield hit that his personal catcher, David Ross, threw away to put runners on second and third. Lester then bounced a curveball that got past Ross and allowed both runners, Carlos Santana and Jason Kipnis, to score. The blowout was on hold.

Just not the Cubs’ lead. In the top of the sixth, Ross, the 39-year-old playing in his last major league game, launched a solo home run to center, the Cubs’ third of the night. Miller, unhittable for so long, proved fallible at the worst imaginable time. Chicago relished its 6-3 advantage, which it held with closer Aroldis Chapman, the trade-deadline acquisition whom Epstein and Hoyer thought the final piece to round out their super-team, securing the final six outs.


Rajai Davis rounds the bases after his dramatic two-run homer tied Game 7. (USA Today)


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Rajai Davis rounds the bases after his dramatic two-run homer tied Game 7. (USA Today)

The Cubs had done it. They had delivered the karmic retribution to Cleveland, which so loudly mocked the Golden State Warriors blowing a 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals against the Cavs. They had proven their hope was not false bravado. The flame of what could be never was extinguished, not in the Cubs’ clubhouse – where before Game 5 “Rocky” and its sequels played on all the televisions – and not in Wrigleyville, where fans wrote messages on Wrigley Field’s brick façade saying they still believed.

The ancient stadium hosted the middle three games of the series, fans taking to the streets, holding signs that said “It’s Gonna Happen” and wearing shirts that referenced the end of the Curse of the Billy Goat, purportedly placed on the franchise by a local bar owner angered by the team refusing to let his hooved pet into the stadium. The fervor relented following losses in Games 3 and 4 but regenerated following a narrow victory in the fifth game and carried over to Cleveland.

While cinching the World Series outside of the North Side took away a hint of the sweetness, the entire scene in Cleveland, in Chicago, in Cubs-fan outposts around the country, was plenty saccharine. Tears were shed, friends were hugged, family was called. Twitter was a party. Facebook was abuzz. Instagram was dyed Cubbie blue. Phones recorded people signing “Go Cubs Go” and struggling to believe this really was happening.

It was over. No more curse. No more wait. No more agita. Just seven words of pure, unadulterated bliss.

The Chicago Cubs won the World Series

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/believe-it-cubs-win-first-world-series-since-1908-in-epic-game-7-044802379.html



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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
link   seeder  JohnRussell    8 years ago

Time will show this to be one of the greatest World Series games of all time. Maybe not in purity of skill, but in drama. Rain delay after the ninth inning of a tied game? After an impromptu players only meeting during the rain delay, the Cubs come out and win the game in the 10th. Incredible. 

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   Buzz of the Orient  replied to  JohnRussell   8 years ago

I don't think anyone's going to ask you, John, "what's your point". What I would like to know, perhaps just for a vicarious experience, is how did you or are you going to celebrate this great event?

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
link   seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Buzz of the Orient   8 years ago

I celebrated during and right after the game.

I might go down to the big parade, don't know when it's going to be yet.

I live on the far southwest side of Chicago where 95% of the people are White Sox fans. Last night I watched the game at the only Cubs bar in the neighborhood, with about 60 other local Cubs fans. It was a lot of fun and a very nervous time.

 
 
 
Spikegary
Junior Quiet
link   Spikegary    8 years ago

Wow, best article you've ever posted.  And this one is factual also.  Keep up the good work.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     8 years ago

A brilliant comeback, winning the last 3 games...Well done Cubs in dramatic fashion.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Kavika   8 years ago

This was only the sixth time in baseball history that such a comeback has happened.

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
link   Perrie Halpern R.A.  replied to  Buzz of the Orient   8 years ago

I do believe that the Mets were one of the other times Buzz.. being a Mets fan. 

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A.   8 years ago

Are you sure?

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
link   seeder  JohnRussell    8 years ago

Alex Rodriguez (who was a studio analyst)  said on tv this morning that this was the biggest and most memorable game that he has ever seen or played in. 

I thought before it started that the score would be 3-2 or 4-3. I wasn't expecting 8-7.   It was a do or die game and both teams played that way. 

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
link   Sean Treacy    8 years ago

Joe Maddon is lucky his team bailed him out. That was a terribly managed game. 

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
link   Perrie Halpern R.A.  replied to  Sean Treacy   8 years ago

I have to agree with you Sean. But the team seems to be better than managment. 

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
link   Perrie Halpern R.A.    8 years ago

Amazing Game!! I haven't had this much fun watching a ball game in a long time. 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
link   seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A.   8 years ago

I heard a story about Game 7  on an ESPN show this morning.

A guy from North Carolina drove to his boyhood home of Indianapolis so he could go his dad's graveside and sit there and listen to the game on the radio with his father. When he was young his dad would always talk about the two of them one day seeing the Cubs in the World Series.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
link   seeder  JohnRussell    8 years ago

Cub fans celebration procession through north side neighborhood

 
 
 
Larry Hampton
Professor Participates
link   Larry Hampton    8 years ago

Congrats Cubbies,,,,Well deserved.

What a game, best 7th I've ever seen. Ross is my pick for hero of the game. Oldest dude out there, gets ROCKED right in the melon, and a few minutes later hits a homer. What a player!

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   Nona62    8 years ago

I watched the game in Tenn. while visiting my sister!    I can't remember seeing so many people attending a game, and quite a few celebrities there watching the game.   GO CUBS!!

 
 

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