They Don't Come Much Tougher Than That
It feels kind of empty, doesn't it? You sit and watch, or listen, for three-plus hours, and the Cubs come oh-so-close with an almost-ninth inning rally, and yet, all we wind up with is another loss, 5-4 to the Diamondbacks, a game that should have been won after the Cubs staked Jason Marquis to a 3-0 lead in the top of the first inning.
Marquis didn't waste too much time giving that lead back, as Chris Young homered leading off the bottom of the first inning, and then homered again, this time a three-run job, in the bottom of the second, giving the D'backs a 5-3 lead.
Think the White Sox are regretting trading Young to Arizona for Javier Vazquez now? I'm not gloating here, but this weekend the White Sox got swept in a four-game series by the Red Sox, and got outscored 46-7. That's awfully embarrassing, and Vazquez got hit pretty hard today in the fourth game of the series.
Like I said, I'm not gloating, but wow, that's bad. Even last year's horrendous Cub team never gave up ten runs four consecutive times. (Full disclosure: they did allow ten runs in three of four games from August 27-30, 2006, all losses.)
OK, back to today's bad news, but first some excitement. Derrek Lee cut a run off that lead in the third by hitting a ball about as far as you possibly can in Bank Holding Company Ballpark without hitting it OUT of said park; it took a crazy bounce off a center-field fence railing just to the left of where it would have been above a yellow line and been an out-of-the-park HR, rolling away from two Arizona outfielders. D-Lee chugged (he doesn't really have the speed he once did) all the way around the bases for the Cubs' first inside-the-park job since October 6, 2001 by Sammy Sosa at Wrigley Field. It was the second of Lee's career -- the first one was on April 12, 2003.
Irony time. Guess who Lee hit that inside-the-park HR off of?
Jason Marquis.
Marquis has had this problem before, a lapse or two in an otherwise decent outing; unfortunately, today it was enough to cost the Cubs the game. Carlos Marmol and Bob Howry kept the game close until the 9th inning, when the Cubs got a couple of runners on base. Jason Kendall was unable to lay down a bunt and wound up striking out, unusual enough, but what made it worse was Mike Fontenot's attempted steal of third -- he was thrown out easily. Ryan Theriot kept the rally going by drawing a walk, and then Jacque Jones hit a sharp grounder that the 6-foot-8 Tony Clark, in the game primarily for defense, smothered and flipped to first to Jose Valverde to end the game.
And will someone calm Valverde down? He acted like the D'backs had just won the World Series when he recorded that last out. The Diamondbacks are a potential first-round playoff opponent for the Cubs, and you can bet they won't forget those antics.
So, where do we stand? The Cubs had a decent 3-3 road trip, but as was mentioned on the broadcast, that's not decent when you were 3-1 on the trip. Fortunately, the Brewers lost 5-4 to the Giants, getting swept and dropping to .500 -- amazing for all of those who thought that after a 24-10 start, Milwaukee would never see .500 again. They've gone 41-55 since then. The Cubs thus maintain their 1.5 game division lead. Unfortunately, the Cardinals beat the Braves and now rest only two games out. Even worse, the Reds, who have the best record in the NL since they changed managers, also won today, sweeping the Marlins, and are now, wackily enough, sneaking back into the division race with a record ten games under .500, only 6.5 games out. The Cubs face all these teams again, starting with the Brewers on Tuesday night, so they can take care of business on the field. It'd be nice if they'd start doing that, like, rightfreakingnow!
Help, fortunately, is on the way. Alfonso Soriano, who I saw running in the outfield during BP in San Francisco with no apparent trouble, will be activated for Tuesday night's game and will (unfortunately, I think) be re-installed in the leadoff spot, with Ryan Theriot hitting 2nd. If it were up to me I think I'd leave Theriot leading off (he has hit .321 with a .364 OBA in Soriano's absence). It is, however, not up to me. If nothing else, Soriano will provide a power threat that's badly needed. I also think Aramis Ramirez could use a day off, so maybe with Soriano back, Mark DeRosa could start at 3B in one of the Milwaukee games.
Earlier in the day I was at the luncheon party for Jenna's Bat Mitzvah. Now, normally you probably wouldn't care about this, and I probably wouldn't write about it, but it was held at the Wrigley Field Stadium Club, and I thought many of you might want to hear a bit about what that's about. The venue is spacious, though it has no view of the field (the windows you see on Sheffield just before the bleachers begin are the windows in the club). It holds about 150-175 people comfortably; there are plasma screens throughout. The food was quite good, not ballpark fare, but what might be a typical buffet for an event like this (carved meats, some brunch foods, and desserts). The usual DJ/party events went on, and they also gave a tour of the ballpark to all the kids (or "young adults" as the MC called them). One thing that's become tradition for some Bar and Bat Mitzvah kids is to make a photo/video montage, sort of a "This Is Your Life So Far"... and to finish off Jenna's (in fact, using a video camera loaned to her family by me), there were video greetings and congratulations to her from Ryan Dempster, Scott Eyre, Jason Marquis (the only Cub to have been Bar Mitzvahed himself), Lou Piniella, and all four radio/TV broadcasters, a very cool souvenir of the event.
Incidentally, I too did a doubletake driving by the ballpark and seeing the old car wash on Waveland demolished, as first described by BCB reader lapetino in this diary. The area is fenced off, and makes the entire area west of the ballpark look far more "open". What's to be done with that area, whether the proposed building that the Cubs put on the back burner earlier this year will ever be built, is still to be determined.
In the meantime, time to build a division winner. Enjoy the off day. I think we all need it, maybe as much as the players do.
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Comments
Geovany Soto for Blanco
(Too cheap to pay for mlbtv... watched game on gameday, ugh)
by evillecubman on Aug 26, 2007 7:37 PM CDT 0 recs
i'm sorry
by cubsluver22 on Aug 26, 2007 7:37 PM CDT 0 recs
A bat mitzvah at the Stadium?
by sanantonecub on Aug 26, 2007 7:38 PM CDT 0 recs
Way cooler than mine was, too.
by Al on
Aug 26, 2007 8:20 PM CDT
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And what about the BCB bash
;)
by sanantonecub on
Aug 26, 2007 8:23 PM CDT
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LOL
;)
by Al on
Aug 26, 2007 8:31 PM CDT
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Perhaps...
- Al will appear in the next Batman movie, being filmed in Chicago.
- Al will be one of the next "Walgreen's batkids".
- Al won the Powerball Lottery and put up a bid to buy the Cubs.
by Fraggin Judge on
Aug 26, 2007 8:32 PM CDT
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LOL
But please, speculate away.
by Al on
Aug 26, 2007 8:39 PM CDT
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Al, can anyone book an event there or...
by ballhawk on
Aug 26, 2007 8:50 PM CDT
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I'm sure anyone can book an event
773.404.4100
by sanantonecub on
Aug 26, 2007 8:56 PM CDT
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Thanks much - very cool and very helpful
To quote Col. Hannibal Smith from the A-Team - "I love it when a plan comes together"
by ballhawk on
Aug 26, 2007 9:13 PM CDT
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Tough loss
Here is the bottom line; they are 1.5 games up with about 35 to go, and they have gotten everything you could expect out of the starting pitching, pen, Theriot, DeRosa and even Jones the last 6 weeks. If this team does not win this mediocre division, it will be because Zambrano, Lee, Ramirez and Soriano don't play up to their expectations in September. If they do, they will win the division by 5+ games, if they don't, they are in trouble.
It's time for their best players, to be their best players.
by MPH73 on Aug 26, 2007 7:47 PM CDT 0 recs
Agree, agree, agree
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 26, 2007 8:01 PM CDT
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I couldn't agree more
by mgfabc on Aug 26, 2007 8:01 PM CDT 0 recs
the Brewers are at .500
by Chanman25 on Aug 26, 2007 8:07 PM CDT 0 recs
I wrote earlier today about the
by LAcarl519 on
Aug 26, 2007 9:52 PM CDT
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A problem with the "good" teams
The D-Backs are purely a better team. The Cubs just do not match up with them, or many of the other teams above .500 in the NL - look at 'em:
Mets, Phillies, Braves (.500 this year), D-Backs, Pads, Dodgers...
It will remain to be seen if the team can crank it up this month against the Brew, Cards, and Reds - or as the above member said, just simply shrink and go away. The "Roses and Rainbow" people here choose optimism, while I'm like Harry Truman: "Show Me."
In any case - we ALL want the same thing and at LEAST we are all still talking about playoff possibilities and its almost September!
No matter what happens, its been a fun ride in 2007. Man - I hopeIhopeIhopeIhope that Soriano freakin' finally turns it on and shows us what he can REALLY do.
by TheEman on Aug 26, 2007 8:09 PM CDT 0 recs
Well said
by qccub on
Aug 26, 2007 8:19 PM CDT
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I agree with all of that....
Sooner or later that's going to come back and bite them in the butt.
by Al on
Aug 26, 2007 8:22 PM CDT
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I wish
by qccub on
Aug 26, 2007 8:24 PM CDT
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Word.
by Al on
Aug 26, 2007 8:32 PM CDT
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Oh - I actually meant
by TheEman on
Aug 26, 2007 8:31 PM CDT
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It really isn't that mysterious
The Cubs, OTOH, have for significant stretches this year, been just the opposite. They will lose a couple of close games and then win a blow out.
This is just another example where sabremetrics is a bunch of numeric masturbation. Pythagorean win projections are for geeks and has nothing to do with how baseball is really played.
by jazzman56 on
Aug 26, 2007 8:56 PM CDT
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Run differential
As far as Papa Grande's "antics," if the Cubs don't like it, beat him. He acts no differently than The Mad Hungarian, Al Hrabosky, did 30 years ago. I like it when players stop acting like robots and show some emotion, win or lose.
When he played, didn't Ron Santo click his heals like a ballet dancer after a Cubs win?
by davewillie on
Aug 26, 2007 9:51 PM CDT
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One reason
But that is something that should have been plainly obvious. I've seen Arizona play a handful of games and could have told you that. A guy hits .237 for a reason.
by krummy12 on
Aug 27, 2007 9:36 AM CDT
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I mentioned this before
by MPH73 on
Aug 27, 2007 10:47 AM CDT
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From a head-to-head............
And with six games remaining against the Reds, who they also seem to give games to, it will be interesting.
by tville on
Aug 26, 2007 8:51 PM CDT
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Time to bury Milwaukee
by CubFaninCA on Aug 26, 2007 8:10 PM CDT 0 recs
The Cardinals sure are lucky....
by FriendlyCardFan on
Aug 27, 2007 9:05 AM CDT
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Well..............
And while it's likely most teams have some form of drunks and druggies, the Cards involved in such activities were exposed this year. That's not bad luck, but perhaps dumb luck.
If Cards fans wanted to blame anyone for their results they need look no further than management. After printing money last year in a new stadium and full post-season run, they respond by throwing essentially ZERO DOLLARS back into their on-the-field product. An apprehensible move, I believe.
by tville on
Aug 27, 2007 1:52 PM CDT
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And I don't think any Cub fan
by Peoria Matt on Aug 26, 2007 8:10 PM CDT 0 recs
very, very true -
by ilovepie on
Aug 26, 2007 8:14 PM CDT
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Heileman...M'waukee?
by no on
Aug 27, 2007 12:34 AM CDT
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Agreed
The Cubs had many chances to win this one. I grow increasingly concerned that once we have Soriano back, we will have two hitters in ultra critical positions who are not appropriate: Soriano is no lead off hitter and Lee is in a major funk and should be moved out of the #3 spot. His great inside the park home run was more an anomaly given his recent performance than an indication of possible future performance IMHO.
by t9mike on
Aug 26, 2007 8:21 PM CDT
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This one's on Lou.
First, I should come out and say that yes, Marquis wasn't lights out but pitched relatively well. It was basically one hitter who gave him problems for only two innings. Unfortunately, those few mistakes counted for too many runs, enough to lose today.
Second, I cannot talk about lack of offense after scoring four runs in two innings and threatening all day long with runners on base. Unfortunately, I have to admit that the team didn't show any clutch hitting in the latter part of the game, as usual, thus causing another one run loss.
I was all over Lee and Ramírez for not hustling Saturday. I'm glad to point out, to be fair, that they did hustle today. I watched the Cubs broadcast today, but I understand that Grace was all over Ramírez today, again. He's wrong. The guy ran to first on the pop-up, he just wasn't going full speed ahead, and he was right in not doing so. Apparently Grace doesn't know the difference beweeen hustling and being stupid.
Finally, admitting all of that, I have to point out sadly that Lou cost us some opportunities to score today. I don't know if we would have scored after all, but the manager is there to maximize those chances if he can.
Two situations were badly managed by Lou. First, letting Marquis hit (bunt) instead of bringing a pinch hitter (I believe it was the top of the 6th). I understand that Lou didn't want to go to the bullpen early with the big series against the Brewers coming up, but Marquis was done. He didn't last 6 full innings. Opportunity lost.
Ninth inning: another missed chance. It was cute to send the runners with no outs as a surprise. It wasn't good strategy when the other team was expecting it. Lou should have called the play off. He could have kept two on base unless Kendall hit for a DP. And even then, the inning was still alive. Yes, Kendall failed in that at bat but that K should not have led to a DP. That changed the outcome of the inning. No wonder Valverde was celebrating; he had nothing and still got the save.
Also, credit the defense for grabbing Jones's hard grounder. That's usually a single.
That's my take on the game. As for the week, I'm sorry but a .500 road trip is not good enough for a contender. Let's hope that the home stand will be better for the team, with Soriano back. I just hope he's ready and is not being rushed back.
by Fraggin Judge on Aug 26, 2007 8:18 PM CDT 0 recs
The three run bomb
by MPH73 on
Aug 26, 2007 8:23 PM CDT
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Particularly after
The Cubs' postseason fate remains in the balance. Regardless of what happens, however, I echo what's been said earlier. This has been a fun season and one that has rekindled my hopes in this franchise.
Not to steal anyone's thunder or give some people too much credit, but I do believe it's true: It's gonna happen. It's just a matter of when.
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 26, 2007 8:29 PM CDT
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Agreed.
But they are not Brandon Webb.
by TheEman on
Aug 26, 2007 8:30 PM CDT
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Kendall is a contact hitter
Too bad Soto wasn't available. He had another 4 RBIs today and hit another HR. Perhaps we'll see him behind the plate soon.
by tharr on
Aug 26, 2007 8:41 PM CDT
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Exactly.
by Fraggin Judge on
Aug 26, 2007 8:54 PM CDT
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Suddenly..............
And with Soriano returning, the patience level is not likely to improve.
Aside from getting more runners on board with walks, "taking a few" runs up of the opposing pitcher's count, an important factor at this time of year. Jeez, even Doug Davis, a guy averaging more than THREE WALKS per start, was only able to "ball four" one Cub Saturday night. Terrible.
If they don't start exercising some restraint at the plate, I fear they won't be able to succeed in making the post-season.
by tville on
Aug 26, 2007 9:02 PM CDT
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I really don't think that was an issue
Davis was all over the strike zone in his start. There wasn't much swinging from the heels in that game. If someone throws something over the heart of the plate, you better swing at it.
By and large, I think their plate discipline was fine this weekend, given what they had to work with.
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 26, 2007 9:07 PM CDT
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Gotta disagree.
Yesterday, 9 of 35 times a Cubs hitter offered at the first pitch. In one case, the batter reached on a single, but in three other cases a one-pitch out was recorded.
Meanwhile, Davis goes 7 full with 104 pitches in his start, and after Petit was yanked today, the Cubs only saw 76 pitches over the last 5 innings.
They need to take more pitches and draw more walks. Only two teams in the NL receive fewer free passes, so it's an area to be improved for sure.
by tville on
Aug 26, 2007 10:21 PM CDT
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It also depends on what the pitcher gives you
In general, however, more patience would be a virtue.
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 26, 2007 11:09 PM CDT
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The problem in Davis's game
by LAcarl519 on
Aug 26, 2007 10:44 PM CDT
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I agree totally.
I really do hope we meet you again in the Post Season.
by az ice cold mo on
Aug 26, 2007 11:03 PM CDT
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That would be fun
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 26, 2007 11:07 PM CDT
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I disagree on letting Marquis bat
on the bench. He blew it but this was not a situation to use up
a potentially valuable bench player. I still find inexcusable that
the Cubs at least appear to not practice bunting. It is a crucial
skill and they are very poor at it.
by jessica on
Aug 27, 2007 8:32 AM CDT
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Grace
by krummy12 on
Aug 27, 2007 9:38 AM CDT
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Lou has done everything
He is wonderful, but does do some head scratchers where I just can't understand things where his decisions blow up.
However, I can't think of anyone I'd rather have in this last month other than LaRussa - who although I loathe - can do more with less than anyone in MLB.
My only wish other than obvious play to improve in crunch time, is that Albert Pujols is intentionally walked in every at bat against the Cubs. Let's do the "Hack-a-Shaq" on this guy and make the other guys beat us. Swallow the damn ego and take the chances elsewhere.
Do you think may have learned this after Albert hit 3 HR's against us last series?
by TheEman on Aug 26, 2007 8:28 PM CDT 0 recs
Shades of Popeye?
If that hit and run works, there are a lot of people saying "what a great call."
by Ross on
Aug 26, 2007 8:36 PM CDT
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Decisions
by no on
Aug 27, 2007 12:36 AM CDT
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i totally agree with that.
by buckmulligan on
Aug 26, 2007 11:19 PM CDT
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to quote Lombardi...
What is this garbage about how it's a fun season?
The team spent Yankee-like in the offseason. They'd better damn well have been contenders. According to all that Pythageorean mumbo-jumbo, they are underachieving.
I don't want to hear about all this "fighting the good fight" nonsense.
A good fight is one you win.
Normally, I wouldn't care much about the closer celebrating. But the fact that it came after we got a lecture in etiquette from that Arizona blogger makes me want to throw up.
Blogician, heal thyself!
by lancaster99 on Aug 26, 2007 8:42 PM CDT 0 recs
I never said
by qccub on
Aug 26, 2007 8:51 PM CDT
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You're forgetting how dysfunctional
I think it's been proven it often doesn't matter how much money you spend.
This has been a fun season. I have a feeling it might soon become a lot more fun.
by Not Bruce Froemming on Aug 26, 2007 8:44 PM CDT 0 recs
Oh,and PeoriaMatt is correct ...
Were I Valverde, I think I would have reacted the same way, particularly knowing I didn't have my best stuff.
That's a separate issue from the Arizona blogger, who apparently isn't used to opposing fans in his team's park. (My solution to that, as it is when the Brewers fans complain about Wrigley North, is simple: If your fans buy more tickets, that means there are fewer for Cubs fans. If your fans don't buy them, you have no right to bitch.)
by Not Bruce Froemming on Aug 26, 2007 8:47 PM CDT 0 recs
Or..
by no on
Aug 27, 2007 12:40 AM CDT
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Did the Brewers actually try this?
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 27, 2007 2:10 AM CDT
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The Milwaukee Bucks used to do this...
It also happened in Miami during the 2003 NLCS -- they wouldn't sell to anyone who didn't have a south Florida billing address on their credit card.
Didn't matter in the NLCS -- there were at least 25,000 Cub fans at all three games.
by Al on
Aug 27, 2007 3:41 AM CDT
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I was most galled, NBF
When opposing teams start letting us in for free, then I'll consider myself a guest.
Right now, I'm a customer, same as any D'Back fan.
by lancaster99 on Aug 26, 2007 8:59 PM CDT 0 recs
Precisely
But they didn't.
That's more an indictment of your fan base than anything else. Don't complain to us.
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 26, 2007 9:09 PM CDT
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Again, to clarify
by AZ Snakepit on
Aug 26, 2007 9:17 PM CDT
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I've seen boorish fans all over
Some of this, I think, is because Cubs fans might be more hardcore than D-Backs fans. Or at least there are more of them.
I suspect if thousands of Diamondbacks fans were to find their way into Wrigley Field, you might run into the same situation.
by Not Bruce Froemming on
Aug 26, 2007 9:25 PM CDT
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My one experience at the Chase
- 30 percent of the fans leaving after the Nats went up 7-6 in the 9th. I realize Phoenix fans are a little new to regular season baseball, but we play nine innings in non-spring games.
- Three idiots behind me making fun of Kerry Wood's injuries, after they saw my Cubs hat.
- Some 11-year-old attempting to lead the wave about 3,108 times. I finally screamed for him to give it a rest, and got some appreciative thumbs-up from my fellow customers. (Or guests, as apparently people who pay money to get a seat are now called)
- Vendors -- not just beer, but soda, water, ice cream sandwiches and frozen coffee -- who looked in the se


