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Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
Sport
Paul Sullivan

A wild 11-inning win slows a Chicago Cubs slide that featured jet lag, air pollution, rain delays — and on-field breakdowns

MILWAUKEE — In one of the wildest games of the year, the Chicago Cubs wound up with a 7-6, 11-inning, Fourth of July win Tuesday over the Milwaukee Brewers.

Reliever Daniel Palencia won in his major-league debut, manager David Ross and first-base coach Mike Napoli were ejected, the bullpen blew a four-run lead for Kyle Hendricks and left fielder Ian Happ threw out runners at the plate for double plays to end the 10th and 11th innings.

Otherwise it was a dull day for the 41,133 fans in Milwaukee. The win snapped a three-game losing streak for the Cubs and was the latest chapter in a dizzying post-London stretch that had them on the brink of falling out of the race.

It all began when the Cubs scored four first-inning runs against the St. Louis Cardinals in the second game of the London Series on June 25, looking to get back to .500 for the first time since May 12.

With 11 wins in their previous 13 games and Marcus Stroman on the mound riding a seven-game winning streak, it looked like the Cubs finally had turned a corner in a season that began with so much promise before hitting a wall in late April.

The Cubs were trying to buck history. A 12-26 stretch that began the final weekend of April had left them 10 games under .500 after a sweep by the Los Angeles Angels on June 6-8 in Anaheim. Only two teams in franchise history were able to fight back to .500 after being double digits under the break-even mark.

If the 2023 Cubs were to become the third, it would go down as an inspiring comeback story for a veteran team led by newcomers Dansby Swanson, Cody Bellinger and Trey Mancini — all of whom were brought here in part for their championship experience.

But a few defensive misplays at first by Mancini started the Cubs’ downfall, and the Cardinals stormed back to take the lead in London. Stroman was removed in the fourth with a developing blister on his right index finger and was charged with six runs (three earned) on nine hits in a 7-5 loss that sent the Cubs home with a split.

Despite a missed opportunity, the Cubs were in good spirits when they returned to Wrigley Field two days later for the start of a six-game homestand against the Philadelphia Phillies and Cleveland Guardians. It would be a chance to get back over .500 before a crucial four-game road series against the Milwaukee Brewers in July.

An air quality alert stemming from Canadian wildfires threatened to postpone the first game, with Chicago having the worst air pollution in the world, deemed “very unhealthy” by the EPA. But MLB decided after conversations with the players association that the show must go on.

The Cubs lost 5-1 to the Phillies in a haze, and the postgame discussion in the clubhouse was about how the league decided to play in the first place.

“You smell it, you taste it, but you just go out and play baseball and forget about it when you go out there,” Cubs player rep Ian Happ said.

Happ didn’t know what went into MLB’s decision, but league sources told the Tribune it was made after consulting with multiple medical experts, weather forecasters, the teams and their medical staffs.

The air quality was marginally better the next day, but Drew Smyly allowed season highs of seven runs and nine hits in an 8-5 loss. The Cubs offense was lifeless the following day, as the Phillies won 3-1 to sweep the series.

There was no reason to panic. The Cubs were still only five games back in the National League Central, a division no one seemed eager to win. A 10-1 victory over the Guardians on the final day of June provided hope the worst was behind them. The Cubs finished June with a respectable 14-11 record, a far cry from their 10-18 performance in May.

But July started out poorly.

After a long spring drought, the skies opened Saturday, leading to a nearly three-hour delay of the start of the nationally televised game against the Guardians. Fox Sports reporter Ken Rosenthal said on the broadcast the Cubs would not negotiate an extension for Stroman before the Aug. 1 trade deadline — despite the pitcher’s lobbying on Twitter — leaving the option open to trade their star if they fall out of contention.

Stroman’s blister issues were behind him, but he suffered his second straight loss as the Cubs fell 6 -0 in a game that ended near midnight. Most Cubs fans were sleeping by the end of the game, just like the lineup.

Sunday morning began with a deluge, and the Cubs made an early decision to push back the starting time three hours to 4 p.m. to avoid the worst of the storm. Another two-hour delay ensued, making for another long day at the ballpark.

The Cubs offense was shut down again, entering the ninth trailing 6-2 with only three hits. But Mancini’s single ignited a four-run rally that saw the Cubs come back and tie the game. It was the first time since a 7-6 win over the Cardinals on July 20, 2021, that the Cubs scored four or more runs in the ninth to tie a game or take the lead.

But what could’ve been a momentum-shifting win fell by the wayside when the Guardians scored a pair of runs off closer Adbert Alzolay in the 10th, giving Cleveland an 8-6 victory and ending the homestand at 1-5. The Cubs had lost three games in the division standings since their opening win in London and now trailed the Brewers and Cincinnati Reds by six games.

The sun came out again Monday in Milwaukee, and the Cubs responded with six early runs in the opener of the crucial series against the Brewers.

Smyly issued a one-out walk to the No. 9 hitter, then three straight run-scoring hits as the Brewers cut the deficit to three. A pair of leadoff walks by Smyly led to his early departure in the fourth, and the Cubs bullpen that had paved the way for their June revival frittered away the lead with three walks in a three-run seventh.

The Cubs wound up with an 8-6 loss, their seventh in eight games, falling seven games behind the co-leading Brewers and Reds while also losing Nick Madrigal to a hamstring injury. They hit a combined .238 with a .653 OPS in that eight-game stretch, while Cubs pitchers posted a 4.94 ERA. That’s not going to make them buyers at the trade deadline.

With the long flight to and from London, jet lag, air quality issues and long rain delays, the Cubs seemingly ran into one obstacle after another. Reliever Michael Fulmer called the rest of the Brewers series “must-win” games, while Swanson said the Cubs need to “man up” and own it without looking for excuses.

The Cubs wound up winning the first of those must-win games Tuesday, and it was one they’ll be talking about for years.

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