Cubs'
Bryant breaks out in win over Mets
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[September 13, 2017]
CHICAGO -- Kris Bryant picked
the right time to rediscover his long-ball swing.
With Chicago's first-place lead in the National League Central
dwindling, the Cubs couldn't afford to wait much longer.
Bryant snapped out of a slump with a three-run homer and four RBIs,
and Kyle Schwarber and Ian Happ added solo shots to power the Cubs
past the New York Mets 8-3 on Tuesday night.
Bryant and Schwarber both went deep for the 26th time, and Happ hit
his 22nd home run.
"We had some opportunities even early in this game, and KB's homer
really turned the tide," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said of Bryant's
shot, which put Chicago ahead 4-1 in the fourth. "We were looking
for that one big hit. It happened to be a home run."
The long balls backed a solid seven-inning effort by Jose Quintana
(10-11 overall, 6-3 with the Cubs) and helped first-place Chicago
maintain a two-game lead over the St. Louis Cardinals in the
division. The Milwaukee Brewers, who also won, are 2 1/2 games back.
Bryant hadn't homered or posted an RBI in his last 10 games and
entered hitting .176 (6-for-34) in that span. The reigning NL MVP
last went deep and drove in a run on Aug. 31 vs. the Atlanta Braves.
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During that span, the Cubs' offense was sputtering. Heading into
Tuesday, Chicago had scored only 16 runs in eight games -- and eight
of those came in one game at Pittsburgh last week.
"I didn't even know there was any negativity around," Bryant said.
"I just don't pay attention. Nobody is talking about it here.
"Everybody had good at-bats tonight. Just good signs all around."
Quintana allowed two runs and six hits while striking out seven and
walking one. The left-hander helped his cause by driving in
Chicago's first run with a squeeze bunt.
"All my stuff was really good," Quintana said. "This win was really
important for us."
Ben Zobrist also had an RBI for the Cubs, whose division lead was
five games last Thursday before Milwaukee swept a three-game series
at Wrigley Field.
Mets starter Robert Gsellman (6-7) lasted four innings, allowing
four runs, five hits and five walks. Wildness elevated the
right-hander's pitch count to 93.
"It's all about command, and tonight his command is certainly not
what we know he can do," manager Terry Collins said
Gsellman agreed.
"Today I had too many walks, too many stressful innings," Gsellman
said. "All those walks are going to lead to runs."
New York's Asdrubal Cabrera had three hits, including a double.
Travis Taijeron, Travis d'Arnaud and Nori Aoki each had an RBI.
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Cubs center fielder Ian Happ (8) runs the bases on his home run
during the seventh inning against the New York Mets at Wrigley
Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-USA TODAY Sports
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The Mets pushed across a run on Taijeron's groundout
in the fourth to take a 1-0 lead.
The Cubs looked as if they would settle for a small-ball reply in
the bottom of the inning, but Bryant's three-run shot put them ahead
4-1 after Chicago first tied it 1-all on the squeeze by Quintana.
With one out and runners and first and third, Quintana bunted
perfectly down the first base line on the first pitch. Schwarber
raced home, sliding under Dominic Smith's throw while Quintana
reached first.
One out later, Bryant belted a Gsellman pitch for a high drive to
right-center, capping the rally.
New York got a run back in the fifth on d'Arnaud's sac fly, but
Schwarber lofted his homer to right center with two outs off Tommy
Milone to make it 5-2.
Zobrist singled in a run in the sixth, and Happ homered to left in
the seventh to make it 7-2.
Bryant's sac fly to the center field warning track in the eighth
drove in Javier Baez to extend it to 8-2. Aoki drove in the final
run with groundout in the ninth.
NOTES: Cubs C Willson Contreras made his first start since being
activated from the disabled list on Sunday and went 0-for-1 with
three walks hitting in the cleanup spot. Manager Joe Maddon wants to
ease Contreras back into action this week and pulled him after seven
innings. Contreras went on the DL on Aug. 11 due to a right
hamstring strain. ... Chicago RHP Jake Arrieta, strained his right
hamstring on Sept. 4, played catch in the outfield before Tuesday's
game. Maddon said Arrieta still isn't ready for a bullpen session,
and a return date for the right-hander hasn't been set. Arrieta
could pitch next week versus Tampa Bay. ... The Mets recalled C
Tomas Nido from Double-A Binghamton. The 23-year-old hit .232 with
eight homers and 60 RBIs in 102 games with Binghamton. ... New York
also acquired minor league RHP Eric Hanhold from Milwaukee as the
player to be named in a deal that sent INF Neil Walker to the
Brewers on Aug. 12. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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