History
Cubs Retro Recap: August 7, 2001
After having a terrible 2000 season, the Cubs got off to a good start in 2001 and by late May were in first place. This run to the top was highlighted by a 12-game winning streak from May 19 through June 2; that still stands as the team's longest winning streak since their last pennant. In fact, the Cubs have won 10 or more in a row only four times since 1945 -- 10 straight in 1953 and 1998, 11 in a row in 1970 and the 2001 12-game streak.
They extended the lead to as many as six games in June, and after a 16-10 July had a 4½ game lead in the NL Central going into August. Hopes were high for another unexpected playoff spot.
On August 7, the Cubs began a homestand with a Tuesday night matchup with the Colorado Rockies. (For amusement, check out who led off for the Rockies that night.)
They won the game. But that wasn't the biggest story of the night.
Cubs Retro Recap: September 29, 1995
The 1995 season started late, due to the lateness of the settlement after the 1994 labor stoppage. MLB set a 144-game schedule, the shortest in the expansion era.
The Cubs, who had been pretty bad in 1994, were a little better in 1995. After a good start had them in first place in early June at 22-13, they went 16-30 and were five games under .500 at what would be the midpoint of a normal season, 38-43. A 23-16 run put them back over the .500 mark in early September at 61-59, but that didn't seem as if it would be enough...
... until the last week of the season, when they started winning. And winning. And winning. They won seven in a row and needed some help, but went into the season's final weekend with a shot at the first-ever wild card. The fourth win in the streak was this game against the Cardinals that was a near no-hitter by Frank Castillo, broken up with two out in the ninth by a triple by Bernard Gilkey.
And then they went for that eighth straight win.
Cubs Retro Recap: September 9, 1989
Despite the Cubs' loss in the NLCS to the Giants, you probably (if you're old enough) remember the 1989 season fondly. Greg Maddux exploded on the scene with a huge year at age 23; Mark Grace established himself as one of the better first basemen in the league; the Cubs had two other solid starting pitchers in Rick Sutcliffe and Mike Bielecki, and Ryne Sandberg hit 30 home runs for the first time in his career.
Combine that with the "pitching like his hair is on fire" closer Mitch Williams, and the Cubs surprised everyone by playing consistently early, then taking over first place on August 5 with a win at Pittsburgh.
The context of the game in this recap is important. Though the Cubs were still in first place entering this day, it was by a thread; a lead that had been 2½ games just a week earlier had slipped to just half a game over the Cardinals after the Cubs blew a 7-1 lead entering the fifth inning the day before, September 8, and it wasn't even clear they'd play on the 9th, as it had been raining most of the morning.
What followed was one of the most memorable games of that season.
Cubs Retro Recap: September 12, 1998
The 1998 season was remarkable for many reasons -- not the least of which was the Cubs' first playoff season in nine years, and the first (and so far, only) wild card postseason spot won by the Cubs.
For the last 45 days of the season, no more than one game separated the first- and second-place teams in the NL wild card race -- the Cubs, Mets, and in the final week, the Giants, who the Cubs wound up playing in the memorable tiebreaker game at Wrigley Field.
This game was part of an amazing weekend series with the Brewers, who were in their first year as a NL team. The Cubs won two of three, but both teams scored 10 or more runs in all three games. Orlando Merced, pictured here, played a key role in this game. Why is this photo of him in a Twins uniform?
Primarily because Merced's Cubs career was very brief. The Twins sent him to the Red Sox in a July 31 deadline deal that year (along with Greg Swindell), but Boston released him on September 1. Four days later he was a Cub; he played in just 12 games and had only 10 at-bats. One of them was particularly important.
Cubs Retro Recap: May 2, 1917
Let's set the BCB Wayback Machine even farther back than yesterday.
1917 wasn't a great year for the Cubs; in fact, it was their third straight losing season, after having been dominant in the National League with four pennants, two World Series titles and 12 winning years in a row from 1903-1914.
Think about that for a while. Our hope is that new management can lead the Cubs to something like that over the next 12 seasons.
Anyway, the somewhat surprising pennant of 1918 was still a year away, and Cubs fans were still getting used to new ownership under Lucky Charlie Weeghman and the ballpark he purchased from the defunct Federal League Chicago Whales and named it after himself. It was still a few years away from being dubbed "Cubs Park" after Weeghman was forced out and it wouldn't be called "Wrigley Field" until 1926. Nevertheless, in the photo above you can clearly see at least one building that still stands on Sheffield Avenue today, almost 95 years after this photo was taken.
And on May 2, 1917, something happened there that had never happened in baseball before -- and hasn't since.
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Cubs Retro Recap: August 31, 1932
Hazen "Kiki" Cuyler is one of the lesser known Hall of Famers. The nickname is a play on the first syllable of his last name (pronounced "Cuy-cuy", not "kee-kee"). Acquired by the Cubs in a lopsided deal after the 1927 deal from the Pirates (largely because he and his manager Donie Bush did not get along), he dominated the National League through 1932, until injuries curtailed his production from 1933 and on. He was on only one All-Star team, but that's because there wasn't an All-Star Game until 1933; he'd certainly have made several before then, and might have won MVP awards in the late 1920s if there had been any.
His .321 lifetime batting average is 51st all-time, and his .325 mark as a Cub ranks sixth among all Cubs who have had at least 1500 at-bats in a Cubs uniform.
Before Gabby Hartnett's "Homer in the Gloamin'" in 1938, this game was widely considered the greatest game in Cubs history. Today, it's been all but forgotten, so I've decided to bring it back to modern memory with this retro recap. You'll see why after the jump.
Non-Random Cubs Recap: September 21, 1966
The 1966 season, like the 1962 season, was among the worst in team history. Both teams lost 103 games, still the club record and still the only 100-loss years in Cubs history.
And yet, toward the end of the 1966 season, if you looked very closely, you could see signs of the renaissance to come. Fergie Jenkins was installed in the rotation to stay at the end of August and made nine starts; the team went 6-3 in those games and Fergie posted a 2.13 ERA and 0.916 WHIP. Ken Holtzman, just 20 years old, spent the entire season in the rotation and pitched credibly, giving hope for the future.
This game is one that Holtzman started and won. I chose it, though, for another reason...
Non-Random Cubs Recap: September 30, 1962
At the suggestion of a BCB reader in the comments to yesterday's random recap, I'm going to recap the last game of the first 100-loss season in Cubs history.
The 1962 season was notable for a number of things; it was the second of the comical "College of Coaches", which led to a combined 123-193 record under five different "head coaches" -- Vedie Himsl, Harry Craft, El Tappe, Lou Klein and Charlie Metro. None of them was any good at it, though Craft later managed the Houston Colt 45s for their first three seasons. The rotating system confused both players and coaches. Metro wound up as "head coach" for the final 112 games of 1962 and hoped to be retained, but P.K. Wrigley and his "athletic director" Robert Whitlow replaced him with Bob Kennedy. The "head coach" system technically stuck around until Leo Durocher declared, "I'm the manager!" at his introductory news conference in October 1965, but the rotating system ended after 1962.
1962 was also an expansion year in the National League, with the Houston squad and the New York Mets added. Both teams were bad, but the Cubs managed to be worse than Houston, allowing them to finish eighth while the Cubs were ninth.
And for the final three days of the 1962 season, a unique thing in major league history occurred -- it has not been repeated. The three games between the Cubs and Mets were the only time that two teams that lost 100 games in a season met after both had already lost 100 games. The series began with the Cubs at 57-102 and the Mets at 39-118.
The photo above was taken on Sept. 14, 1962, about two weeks before the game I'm recapping here, during a Cubs/Dodgers game. Attendance that day was 5,356, only about 1,400 more than showed up for the 1962 season finale between the Cubs and Mets.
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