Posts Tagged ‘Cubs’

Sam Fuld, Your Table is Ready

sam fuld

Happy 4th!  Let’s talk baseball.

Headline news:

Sam Fuld arrives, born from the head of Zeus via Stanford with a name to conjure with, maybe the perfect baseball name.  Despite the two-game career to date, he’s already the best Jewish, diabetic outfielder ever.

And he’s the difference-maker that the Cubbies have needed lo these many months.  Sweet Lou woke up one morning, decided that it was his team, and he said, ‘Self, it’s time to sit Fonzie despite his .220 batting average and Quixotic fielding.  Screw the All Star voting.  Screw Hendry.’

Double down on that pre-season bet.  Watch Los Cubs go from here….

03

07 2009

Los Cubs (II)

cubs-apCarlos and Larry discuss dinner plans (AP photo)

Fun at the ballpark doesn’t get any funner than this weekend.  Sweet Lou Piniella apes his managerial heroes, tells Milton Bradley what he really thinks and suggests that Milton go home.  Not go in the clubhouse, but change into civvies and go home mid-game.  Which he does.

Next day, the Manager apologizes and Milton and Lou share some tearful man-love in a closed-door meeting (somewhere along the way, Lou lost his copy of the Billy Martin playbook).

Milton agrees to meet with the press, claims that he has no friends on the team, especially now that Gerald Perry and Joey Gaithright are gone.  Clearly, someone found Milton a dog-eared copy of the Adolfo Phillips playbook (in a legendary TV moment, Cubby outfielder Phillips cried to Jack Brickhouse and, in broken English, ’splained that Tony Taylor, his only friend on the team, had been traded to Philly).

Left unsaid is that it’s always about Milton, who just happens to be the last guy to arrive for a game, the first one out the door afterwards.  And that, most days, he’s not particularly approachable.

Pitching coach Larry Rothschild, who has become Lou’s Bobo, runs around telling people that it’s his job to find the ‘rat’ in the clubhouse.

Soriano (who misplayed balls all weekend, never fails to get a poor jump, and has now defaulted to playing deep and out of position), stood up for Bradley before the press.  With Fukudome (who doesn’t speak English), the three of them compose the worst $200M no-trade-clause outfield that money can buy.

The beloved, orphaned one, Mark DeRosa, who got a standing O from Cub fans when he returned this year as a Cleveland Indian), was dealt from Cleveland to St. Louis.

Big Z. did a public reading (for the benefit of the press) of pitching coach Don Cooper’s major league record (one win, six losses) from the White Sox media guide, noting that Coop never pitched a no-hitter.  Then the 4-3, self-proclaimed Cy Young-candidate Zambrano went out and had his usual emotional breakdown, threw a wild pitch on a suicide squeeze, hit the next batter, handed the ball to Lou, then looked for something to destroy in the dugout.  He was restrained by the Bobo.

I listened to all of Sunday’s 6-0 fun while stuck in the traffic surrounding Chicago’s Gay Pride parade, which made for what the French call ’son et lumiere.’  Especial thanks to the women on the Vespa wearing matching Catholic-school-cum-grindhouse plaid skirts and knee-high fishnets.

Tags: ,

29

06 2009

Los Cubs

charlie-grimm“Jolly” Charlie Grimm

Last year, I wrote a blog about Kenny Williams and entertainment.  Right or wrong, the GM is always pushing used cars, always dealing, always convinced that, if he can’t beat the odds, the manager or pitching coach or cosmic whimsy will push things his way.  The Kenny pictured by Lewis in Moneyball was all wong.

The truth is, as long as the Cubs are around, Kenny (and Ozzie and A.J. and D.J. and the gang) will be a second-rate act.  Forget the schadenfreude, it’s simply a pleasure to wake up in the morning and read about the soap opera that is the North Side baseball club.  The sale, the park, the superstation.  Lou Piniella can’t wait to get out of the media room and into his next cocktail.  With a mouthful of spittle and poor word choices, Lou free associates about about Little Fontenot and Big Z and the saving grace that is May.

Big Z is injured, then he’s suspended, then he’s moping, then he’s whispering in that conspiratorial way that signals words put in his mouth by others, then he pinch homers in extra innings.  Nothing matters to Soriano, especially his inability to hit curve balls.  De Rosa is traded for budget and psychic spaces necessary to accommodate Milton Bradley and his traveling medicine show.  New father Carlos Marmol appears on MySpace canoodling with a not-so-sweet young thing.  Derek Lee is epic in his candor, his huge, graceful pose, and in his very human fall to earth.

Not to mention the delight of listening to Ron Santo.

And the fans?  In today’s Tribune, Sara Paretsky gets them just right:

Are Cubs fans like tragic literary characters?

No. They’re more like very tired women living with alcoholic men who complain about the drinking but do things that enable the men to continue. They’re not tragic, just depressing.

Tags: ,

03

06 2009