Indians face great expectations, Cubs seek repeat
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[October 04, 2017]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - The Cleveland Indians are
done marveling at their record-setting season, focused instead on
avenging their dramatic extra innings Game Seven loss in last year's
World Series and snapping Major League Baseball's longest title
drought.
There are big expectations on Cleveland in a post-season where the
Chicago Cubs will chase a second consecutive World Series and the
Washington Nationals look to finally win a division series.
The Indians, who were beaten by the Cubs in last year's World
Series, are favored to celebrate their first championship since
1948.
Cleveland open their best-of-five games American League Division
Series on Thursday against big-hitting rookie Aaron Judge and the
New York Yankees
"It's time to get to work," Indians pitcher Josh Tomlin said.
"Everybody is looking forward to that. This is when the fun begins."
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The Indians have all the tools necessary to make another deep
post-season run given a lineup featuring plenty of power from the
likes of Jose Ramirez and Edwin Encarnacion, a shutdown rotation and
bullpen that can make quick work of most teams.
Cleveland used a torrid second half of the season, which included an
AL-record 22 consecutive victories between August and September, to
finish two wins short of the National League's Los Angeles Dodgers
for the best record in the majors.
"For whatever reason, it took us a while to get -- whether it's your
rhythm, whether it's your footing," Indians manager Terry Francona
said. "But once they did, it's like they never took their foot off
the gas."
As a result, the Indians are brimming with confidence and should
they eliminate the Yankees will face either the AL East champion
Boston Red Sox or a Houston Astros team that won the AL West by a
21-game margin.
The Astros had the AL's best record on Aug. 31 when they added
Justin Verlander to a rotation that already featured fellow Cy Young
Award winner Dallas Keuchel.
The addition of Verlander, who has been brilliant since joining his
new club, tilts the series in the Astros favor but they face a
Boston rotation anchored by Chris Sale in the best-of-five series.
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Cleveland Indians catcher Yan Gomes (7) celebrates with center
fielder Jason Kipnis (22) after scoring during the fifth inning
against the Chicago White Sox at Progressive Field, Cleveland, OH,
USA, September 30, 2017. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-USA TODAY
Sports
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DODGERS CONCERN
The Los Angeles Dodgers finished with the best record in the majors
but a recent 11-game skid has raised some concern about whether the
National League West champions can make a run.
The Dodgers will face the winner of Wednesday's NL Wild Card
showdown between the Colorado Rockies and Arizona Diamondbacks in a
best-of-five series starting on Friday in Los Angeles.
The Cubs will face the Nationals in what looks to be a competitive
series.
Washington have never advanced beyond a division series but the
return of right fielder Bryce Harper from a knee injury along with
improved play from the bullpen make them a legitimate threat.
The Nationals' two-headed pitching monster of Max Scherzer and
Stephen Strasburg could trouble the Cubs hitters as long as the
former shows no ill effects from a tweaked hamstring he suffered
last Saturday.
But the Cubs, who last year snapped a 108-year title drought, have
gained plenty of playoff experience over the last two seasons, have
a deep lineup and need no motivation.
"There's nothing I can say that's going to be stirring,
motivational, substantive in a sense that it's going to change their
minds about anything," said Cubs manager Joe Maddon.
"I just want our guys to go out and do what they've been doing since
the All-Star break. No different.
"Go out and play. Play unencumbered. Go out and play mentally freely
and play the game we've learned to play over the last couple years."
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(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Greg Stutchbury)
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