Cubs'
magic number 1 following win over Cardinals
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[September 26, 2017]
ST. LOUIS -- The numbers don't
lie. This has been the worst of Jon Lester's three years with the
Chicago Cubs.
However, the veteran left-hander pitched his team to the brink of a
second straight National League Central title on Monday night, with
plenty of help from the offense.
Lester fired six solid innings as Chicago routed the St. Louis
Cardinals 10-2 in Busch Stadium, reducing its magic number for the
division championship to one.
Should the Cubs win Tuesday night or the Milwaukee Brewers fall at
home to the Cincinnati Reds, then Chicago would pop the champagne in
its archrival's ballpark. And if Lester's performance in this game
was any indication, the Cubs might feel better about his chances to
make his usual sizable postseason contribution.
Lester (12-8) gave up a run and five hits, walking two and fanning
four. While he threw just 58 of 103 pitches for strikes, Lester
exhibited crisper stuff and better command as the evening
progressed, retiring eight of the last nine batters he faced.
"I felt better," Lester said. "My command could have been a bit
better early, but I was a little sharper today than I have been. It
was good tonight. Overall, it was definitely a positive step."
The only run Lester yielded came when Jedd Gyorko belted a 410-foot
homer in the second inning, a blast that landed in the third deck in
left field. Then again, Chicago already led 5-0 by that point, and
it was 8-1 for the last four innings of Lester's outing.
Simply put, the Cubs (88-68) resembled last year's deep offense in
dismantling rookie right-hander Luke Weaver (7-2), who came into the
game with seven consecutive wins.
Weaver entered the night having allowed eight runs in his past seven
games. Chicago needed just three innings to match that total, as the
Cubs took advantage of a spate of pitches over the plate's heart for
crushing two-out hits.
Addison Russell ripped a three-run double down the right field line
in the first, followed by Jason Heyward's RBI double to
right-center. Kris Bryant drilled a solo homer in the second, and
Javier Baez cracked a three-run shot to left-center an inning later
that essentially ended the game's competitive phase.
Weaver was lit up for eight runs on seven hits and two walks in
three innings. He fanned three.
"He got into some tough counts and had to hit more of the plate,"
St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said of Weaver. "It's a tough game,
and it was a good lineup he was facing."
Cubs manager Joe Maddon sensed Weaver was off his game after Bryant
laced a one-out single in the first.
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Cubs shortstop Addison Russell (27) scores during the eighth inning
against the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit:
Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports
"Looking at it from the side, that seemed to knock him off track,"
Maddon said. "You look at his numbers the last seven starts -- lot
of strikeouts, almost no walks -- and he's been a really good
pitcher. Give our guys credit for playing that kind of game tonight
almost from the first pitch."
Gyorko and Dexter Fowler combined for five of the Cardinals' six
hits. The other was a pinch-hit homer by Luke Voit in the seventh
off reliever Brian Duensing.
Pinch hitter Tommy La Stella and Jon Jay finished Chicago's scoring
with RBI singles in the eighth. All 10 Cubs runs came with two outs.
Adding injury to insult for St. Louis (81-75), All-Star catcher
Yadier Molina left the game in the seventh after taking consecutive
foul balls off the mask. Molina was placed in the concussion
protocol, and the team is hopeful he will be able to play on
Tuesday.
The Cardinals were eliminated from the division race with their
third straight loss. They trail the Colorado Rockies by 2 1/2 games
for the NL's second wild card.
Meanwhile, Chicago is a game away from earning a chance to defend
its World Series title. And the outing from Lester, who still
carries a 4.46 ERA, gives the Cubs more reason for October optimism.
"I just have to get back to being me," Lester said. "I have to put
hitters on the defensive as opposed to pitching from the scouting
report from pitch one."
NOTES: Jose Quintana's shutout Sunday at Milwaukee was the Cubs'
first by a lefty since Rich Hill had one on Sept. 16, 2006, in a 4-0
victory over Cincinnati. ... St. Louis 1B Jose Martinez (thumb)
wasn't in the starting lineup for a third consecutive game, and
there is no timetable for his return. Martinez will take some swings
before the Tuesday night game with hopes of getting back into games
in the final week. ... If the Cubs can clinch a playoff spot, it
would mark their third straight postseason berth, the first time
they would have done so since 1906-08.
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