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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Gordon Wittenmyer

Cubs: ‘We definitely have a chip on our shoulder’

“You look at it on paper, you’ve got a bunch of guys in here that are studs, from the [starting pitching] staff to the position players to the bullpen, the coaching staff, the front office, the owners, everything like that,” the Cubs’ Kyle Schwarber said. | Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

MESA, Ariz. — The Cubs didn’t show up for their first workout day of the spring Wednesday with a shiny new free agent starting pitcher or with any new big-ticket relievers.

But if you think the manager is the biggest thing that’s new to this team this spring, he’ll tell you the biggest addition is the chip on the team’s collective shoulder.

“I think they’ve enjoyed people kind of counting them out or having a little bit of the ‘what-if’ vibe,” manager David Ross said. “I think they’re out to prove something in what I see in their eyes and their comments.”

Counting them out? The Cubs got bounced in the wild-card game in 2018, then missed the playoffs during an 84-win 2019 season, and their only major-league acquisitions since last year were one-year fliers on bounce-back candidates Steven Souza Jr. and Jeremy Jeffress.

No wonder nobody outside of Chicago or beyond a half-mile radius around Sloan Park in Arizona seems to believe these guys are legitimate threats to win the National League Central.

“We definitely have a chip on our shoulder,” said left fielder Kyle Schwarber, who strongly objected to the suggestion this core of Cubs peaked long ago. “I know we all expect a lot more of ourselves than what’s happened the last couple years. … I don’t think it’s a secret we’ve got to do things better.

“You look at it on paper, you’ve got a bunch of guys in here that are studs, from the [starting pitching] staff to the position players to the bullpen, the coaching staff, the front office, the owners, everything like that.”

pic.twitter.com/4oS63HM5aK

— Gordon Wittenmyer (@GDubCub) February 12, 2020

If Schwarber thinks it’s just about refocusing and letting the talent take over with a new season of renewed purpose, veteran first baseman Anthony Rizzo cautions against assuming anything.

“I think we’re a confident group. We’re also a very humbled group right now,” said Rizzo who admits this team has a lot to prove after disappointing ends to the last two seasons — which, in large part, cost the last manager his job.

“Chip on our shoulder? I don’t see why we even deserve a chip on our shoulder,” Rizzo said. “We didn’t make the playoffs [last] year. We’ve got to go out and earn it. I think it’s on us to be the best team this year. We’ve got the talent.”

That’s the other theme running through the clubhouse, that the entire core returned despite a winter of trade rumors involving several players — a core that won a World Series in most cases as rookies and second-year players.

“If you look around, our team’s really talented,” said Tyler Chatwood, who might have a major say in how well the team performs this year if he retakes the fifth spot in the rotation as planned and performs well. “Nobody liked how last year ended – the last two years, honestly. I think everybody’s hungry and ready to get going and prove everybody wrong.”

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