NOW THAT IT is done, finally and triumphantly done, and the Chicago Cubs and
their fans need not wait any longer for next year or next century, Joe Maddon
and the World Series champions can be viewed without the nervousness of the
expectant loser but through the proper lens: as the best team in baseball all
season.
Christian McCaffrey Panthers Jersey .The Cubs
ended up precisely where they expected to be following the final out of the 2015
National League Championship Series, when they were ambushed unceremoniously in
a four-game sweep by the Mets. If not for the cigar-heavy whiff of the
supernatural (the curse, the curse, the curse, the curse), the season on the
North Side would have been seen as the ruthless redemption march it was: 103
wins, a potential Most Valuable Player award for the frighteningly good Kris
Bryant, and the way the Cubs, in all three postseason series, responded to
imminent catastrophe by playing their best, most fearless baseball of the year.
In what has been for the past 71 years the foreign space of high-altitude
October baseball, theirs all along was a champions response.The historical place
of this years World Series can be bandied about over wings and beers as the best
ever, because, yes, it really was that good. In the league championship era,
which began in 1969, the 1975 Red Sox-Reds classic has been the standard. Two
epics -- Royals-Cardinals in 1985?and Twins-Braves in 1991 -- did their decades
proud. The 2001 Yankees-Diamondbacks series could not be beaten for endgame
dramas, and the steroid-tainted 2002 Giants-Angels clash will always be
underrated. In 2011, the one strike away not once but twice Rangers-Cardinals
battle replaced the 1986 one strike away Red Sox-Mets moment for pure
question-your-existence heartbreak.Superlatives in todays world of noise have
virtually no value, for if everything is potentially the best ever, then nothing
really ever is. But Cubs-Indians was remarkable baseball, from the two western
Pennsylvania-raised managers, Maddon and Terry Francona, to the grim, resolute
and finally exhausted professionalism of Corey Kluber to the frothy youthfulness
of Francisco Lindor to the collective inevitable to doubt then back to
inevitable February to November march of the Cubs, the 2016 season ended with
the kind of reaffirmation and fireworks baseball sorely needed. It was a sport
that wobbled rudderless, enduring an awkward closure and a proud farewell,
consistently unable to address the serious issues roiling its surface while it
heads into an uncertain winter of labor.The game hauls in nearly $10 billion in
annual revenue, and yet in the postseason, baseball made its fans work extra to
simply find its product, as the games rotated from MLB Network to ESPN to TBS to
FOX to FS1. The money spends well enough, and this short-term complete surrender
to television has made owners rich, but the game cannot say its product is not
damaged when it is not available in bars and hotels and homes across America
because the biggest major league games are being broadcast on, at least for
baseball, minor league stations. When viewers finally did locate the right
channel, they were deserving of a classic, and the Cubs and Indians gave them
one.IN EVERY ELIMINATION game of the postseason, whether attempting to finish
off the Giants and Dodgers or trying to first stay alive in Games 5 and 6 and
then beat the Indians in Game 7, Aroldis Chapman stood on the mound for the
Cubs. Although never articulated in such terms during the season, Chapman was
quite probably the most impactful player in baseball this year, affecting the
immediate present and long-term future of three franchises in the span of four
months. Against the Dodgers, Chapman was the winning pitcher in the opener and
finished two others, his 103 mph fastball informing how the opposition managed,
shortening the game, withering hope in the other dugout.That Chapman was
instrumental in extinguishing the Dodgers was noteworthy because many moons ago,
last December, it was the Dodgers who rescinded their acquisition of him after
Chapman was detained?after a domestic dispute with his girlfriend that included
him firing off several rounds from a handgun into parts of their house,
according to a police report. Commissioner Rob Manfred suspended Chapman 30
games. The Dodgers broke off the deal with Cincinnati, who then traded Chapman
to the Yankees, who then at the trade deadline dealt him to the Cubs for a host
of prospects the Yankees believe will help return them to their place atop the
American League within a couple of seasons.While Chapman was leading the Cubs
through October, the New York Giants released Josh Brown, the kicker whose
abusive relationship with his wife was revealed. Brown is currently out of the
NFL, unlikely to return. After two years, Ray Rice is still hoping for a
distant, long-shot chance to return. Chapman, meanwhile, hoists a World Series
trophy.There is no right answer. For its part, baseball suspended Chapman, whose
legal battle ended when charges were dropped not because he was found innocent
of wrongdoing but because his girlfriend and family chose not to cooperate.
Chapman did not appear to be particularly contrite during the season, possibly
because of the language barrier with reporters, and he also went through the
legal process and fulfilled the disciplinary demands of his sport. Therefore, he
went on, as people throughout society are usually allowed to do after
wrongdoing, to make a living.Yet in the ruthless world of sports competition,
where the talent is literally irreplaceable, the Dodgers succumbed to public
pressure and escaped from the Chapman deal. There is no one in baseball like
Chapman, and while the Dodgers decision to distance themselves from him might
have won them a few plaudits, it very well might have also cost them the
pennant. Dodgers closer?Kenley Jansen?saved 47 games with a 1.83 ERA, giving up
35 hits in 68 2/3 innings. Chapman pitched 58 innings, gave up 32 hits and
posted a 1.55 ERA with 36 saves. The combination, in Dodger Stadium no less, of
Chapman and Jansen would have been formidable, the best duo in the league, and
probably would have altered two games in the NLCS -- Games 1 and 5 -- in which
the Dodgers gave up five runs in the eighth inning in each, and lost both.As the
Cubs inched closer to their eventual title, many female Cubs fans blanched at
the conflict of having to root for their team when Chapman was on the mound. The
Cubs might have hesitated on acquiring Chapman, but ultimately they made the
deal the Dodgers were not willing to make. Chapman was devastatingly good, the
missing piece, and the conflict is real: It was probably inappropriate to
suggest that Chapman never be allowed to earn a living playing baseball, and it
is true that the Cubs likely do not win the World Series without him. Nothing is
clean.IN NEW YORK, Chapman brought the Yankees into the future by being traded
to the Cubs for top prospect Gleyber Torres, Rashad Crawford, Billy McKinney and
Adam Warren, and almost immediately following his departure, the Yankees said
goodbye to the past, releasing Alex Rodriguez on Aug. 13, the day after a
bizarre evening that served as a reminder of just how much of the past hasnt
been reconciled.There is no one place to start with the famed A-Rod, released
with 696 home runs, 2,021 runs, 2,086 RBIs, 3,115 hits, three MVP trophies, 14
All-Star selections at two positions and an estimated $441.3 million in salary
alone. All of the figures are staggering, as much as that day in 1998, when
Oakland As assistant GM Billy Beane told me that Rodriguez, then 22 and just
starting his third full season, was already the greatest shortstop in the
history of the game. Better than Banks. Better than Wagner. Better than Ripken,
who at the time was still active. Better than them all. Rodriguez was as
towering a figure as there was in the game, the true national superstar the game
today knows it lacks -- and yet in the greatest indictment of the years of
inflated home run numbers and lost confidence in the sport, the Yankees and
baseball could not wait to get rid of him.Rodriguez left the game meekly, and
the Yankees took off, making an unexpected playoff push that finally fizzled in
late September. He joined Sammy Sosa and to a lesser extent Barry Bonds and Mark
McGwire as legends without countries. The Yankees offered A-Rod a job. Needing
to belong, he accepted, and he went away.The World Series was excellent for the
desperation of two cities and two franchises that have waited a long time for a
parade. It was excellent for the bottomless reservoir of on-field drama, but it
was also excellent because this past World Series was the first in which the
taint of steroids seemed, for the moment, to recede. From McGwire-Sosa in 1998
to BALCO in 2003 to the Mitchell report following 2007 to Biogenesis and
Rodriguezs full-year suspension announced in 2013, drugs have been the biggest
story in baseball since Brady Andersons 50-homer season in 1996. Rodriguez is
gone, but the postseason lingered on with the ostracized Rodriguez thriving in
the broadcast booth for the playoffs, alongside the exiled Pete Rose. Bonds,
rehabilitated, was back in the dugout as the hitting coach for the Miami Marlins
and fired after one season. The price has been an expensive one and is not fully
paid, with baseball again involved in a limbo, with its great and tainted
players more present, but none in the Hall of Fame.In Boston, another
40-something departed the stage, but unlike Rodriguez, David Americo Ortiz
Arias, he of the 541 home runs, 2,472 hits and dozens of memories that turned
the Red Sox from losers into winners, left with hugs, gifts and goodwill. Ortiz
is suspected in baseballs drug wars after being linked to an anonymous report in
2009 that he tested positive for steroids during 2003 survey testing, but he
does not carry and has never carried the toxicity of Rodriguez, and he exited as
a Boston legend who will be recalled fondly.Ortiz, more so than Manny Ramirez
and Pedro Martinez, stands at the center of the Boston revival, a three-time
champion monument few in baseball are eager to deconstruct, even though Ramirez
was clearly a steroid user. Through force of an outsized personality and a
Boston Marathon moment that galvanized a wounded town, Ortiz, who turns 41 in a
week, appears to have survived. He spent his final season not being run out of
town but with sore feet, distance from his teammates and having maybe the best
season anyone his age has ever had. He was a dinosaur, and all of his friends --
Johnny Damon and Pedro and Manny and Kevin Millar -- were long gone. Ortiz is 17
years older than Mookie Betts and Xander Bogaerts and 15 years older than Jackie
Bradley Jr. Ortiz was closer in age to his 54-year-old manager, John Farrell,
than to the young stars in the Red Sox lineup. With three weeks left in the
season, Ortiz told me in Oakland, Its time to go.At the beginning of the season,
Ortiz was asked hundreds of times why he was retiring. By the end of the season,
looking worn, ready and resigned, every bit his 40 years, the question was asked
less often, even as his numbers appeared steady. There is no player in the
history of Boston baseball who did for the city what Ortiz?did. He changed the
attitude of the franchise, epitomized Bostons sudden acquisition of confidence
against the Yankees and, as a player of color in an often hostile town, found a
way to succeed without playing the stereotype of the Happy Latin to make white
fans comfortable. At Game 2 of the World Series, he stood at the podium with the
great Hank Aaron accepting his second Hank Aaron Award, telling stories of
running into Aaron in the Bahamas. Unlike Rodriguez, Ortiz looked like a made
man. In five years, when his name appears on the ballot for Cooperstown, he will
find out whether he is one.ROB MANFRED, THE commissioner of baseball, has
degrees from Cornell University and Harvard Law School.The GM layer of baseball
management boasts Ivy League elite, the best minds from the best universities
the country has to offer. Theres Sandy Alderson (Dartmouth, Harvard Law), Rick
Hahn (Harvard Law), Jeff Bridich (Harvard), Theo Epstein (Yale), Jon Daniels
(Cornell), A.J. Preller (Cornell), Mike Hazen (Princeton), Matt Klentak
(Dartmouth), David Stearns (Harvard), Matt Silverman (Harvard) and Jeff Luhnow
(Penn). Among the non-Ivies, theres no dropoff of pedigree with Farhan Zaidi
(MIT), Jed Hoyer (Amherst), Derek Falvey (Trinity) and Chris Antonetti
(Georgetown).Yet with such formidable brainpower in its employ, the culture of
the sport having been co-opted by smarts, baseball apparently needs to be told
right from wrong, as a kindergartner would be about calling people names. One
ubiquitous image ran throughout the Series, and it wasnt the video feed from
some North Side tavern of delirious Cubs fans sloshing beer on one another after
the eventual winners scored yet another run. It was the red face of Chief Wahoo
emblazoned on the sleeves of the Indians uniforms and on the front of their
baseball caps, the caricature of big teeth and the untrustworthy smile preceding
deception.Manfred has said, completely unconvincingly, that there is no place
for racism in the game of baseball. He is wrong, of course. There is a place for
it in baseball, and that place is on the jerseys and caps of Clevelands baseball
club, the blankets, T-shirts and foam fingers it sells, along with virtually
everything for sale in the team gift shop. Before Game 2, sitting next to Aaron
and Ortiz, Manfred did the worst thing a white man in his position could do: He
attempted to turn an obvious issue of simple decency into one of the great,
complex and wrenching issues of our time. He said he and Indians owner Paul
Dolan would revisit the issue of Chief Wahoo, as if an image borne from one of
the most racist periods in American history required further review, discussion,
caucus or, worse, some form of canvassing of an indigenous tribe to ask if its
offended by the use of the logo, as if the commissioner of a multibillion-dollar
industry has no common sense of his own.A month earlier, Baltimore Orioles
center fielder Adam Jones called baseball a white mans sport, referring to the
daily culture and power structure of the sport, of who makes decisions, who
plays the game and why baseball would never see a Colin Kaepernick-style protest
of social issues. A day before Manfred spoke, some umpires were frustrated that
only one minority umpire -- Alfonso Marquez, who is Mexican -- has worked a
World Series game in nearly a decade. An African-American umpire, Kerwin Danley,
last worked a World Series game in 2008, and the 2016 season, for all its talk
of progress, diversity and the legacies of Jackie Robinson and Roberto Clemente,
nearly started without a black manager in the game. African-Americans Dave
Roberts and Dusty Baker, who filled the last two slots, wound up meeting when
the Dodgers played the Nationals in the NL Division Series, while the Cubs, who
hadnt reached the World Series since before integration, had never fielded a
black player in the World Series before this years run.Manfred took the question
of Chief Wahoo with a head shake and a flash of temper, as if he were the one
being inconvenienced by baseballs willful racism. There is a difference between
difficult and complicated, and the issue of Native Americans as caricatures for
sports teams might be difficult because the white men in charge have no interest
in the courage it would take to retire top-selling images or confront the
appearance of succumbing to public pressure, of being told what to do and to
alienate the overwhelmingly white season-ticket base. But it is not complicated.
If his degrees have any meaning, Manfred knows this, too: The mascot must
go.MIKE NAPOLI POPPED up to the catcher to end the fourth inning of Game 5. It
was the last time the Cleveland Indians had a lead in the 2016 season and marked
the start of the Cubs marathoners kick to their long-awaited championship. For
the next two and a half games across two cities and two time zones, baseball
would bear witness to the type of separation from the rest the Cubs had mastered
throughout the summer, and it was these little bursts of acceleration that kept
doubt from reaching a critical point.Eventually, the better team won, whether
the jolt came from Kyle Schwarber, the whiz who hadnt played all season after
knee surgery yet came out of rehab and hit .412 during the Series; or Bryant,
who homered in two of the final three games; or David Ross, the grizzled
retiring catcher who homered off Andrew Miller; or Dexter Fowler, who struggled
the entire series as the first African-American player to step on the field for
the Cubs in a World Series game. Fowler started Game 7 with a home run, and a
black pitcher, Carl Edwards, nearly finished the job in the bottom of the 10th,
before nerves devoured him and Mike Montgomery forced a Michael Martinez
grounder to Bryant that sent the Billy Goat out to pasture and Cubs fans, after
108 years, into the streets.The Cleveland Indians, meanwhile, lost the World
Series. They lost the World Series after being up three games to one, something
that hadnt happened since 1985, when the Cardinals melted down against the
Royals. They lost the World Series with the final two games at home, something
else that hadnt happened in a seven-game series since the 1979 Orioles lost to
the Pirates. The Cleveland Indians did all these things. They have entered the
Boston space of tearful baseball pain, having lost the 1995 World Series 1-0 in
Game 6 to Atlanta and the 1997 Series with a ninth-inning lead in Game 7.
Cleveland also lost a 3-1 lead to the Red Sox in the 2007 ALCS. They lost
another 3-1 lead in this World Series and now, at 68 years, have replaced the
Cubs as the team with the longest championship drought in baseball.Yet they did
not choke. Francona was brilliant all season, as the Indians won the AL Central
by eight games over Detroit, beating the Tigers 14 of 18 times, and the two-time
defending AL champion Royals by 13 1/2 games, beating them 14 of 19. Franconas
squad eliminated his old team, the Red Sox, in a clean three-game Division
Series sweep, sending Ortiz meekly into retirement, and powered through the Blue
Jays in five surprisingly easy games. They belonged.Francona may be the last
manager for some time to attempt to use a pitcher twice on short rest in a
seven-game series, as he did with Kluber. Miller, the ALCS MVP, was valiant.
Lindor, the 21-year-old shortstop, played fearlessly, making plays and blowing
bubbles as big as his future, while the 35-year-old Rajai Davis, even in defeat,
need not bring his wallet to the bar after his eighth-inning, two-run homer off
Chapman erased what had once been a 5-1 deficit in Game 7 and restored belief
one last time.When it was over, and the Cubs had won 8-7, the comeback complete
and the wait over, Francona spoke of Game 7, not as a losing manager but as the
winner of something more, the exacting pleasure of competition. This game, he
said, was an honor to be a part of.
Donte Jackson Womens Jersey . -- There were
so many positives from the Orlando Magics first victory of the season that it
was hard for coach Jacque Vaughn to stop praising his players.
Ryan Kalil Womens Jersey . There are some
early surprises in the race for the Hart Trophy, but two of the contenders are
the leagues biggest stars over the past decade. There are many more players in
contention for the awards than just the three that Ive named, and a good or bad
week can easily alter the landscape, but through the first 20 or so games of the
NHL season, this is how the awards races look to me.
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. Rinne played two periods in his first game since left hip surgery in early
May. Gabriel Bourque scored 3:07 into the second period and Austin Watson
tallied 5:15 later for Nashville. BOSTON -- Free agent first baseman Mitch
Moreland was already excited about joining the Boston Red Sox when the team made
a move that made it even more appealing.One day after trading for five-time
All-Start left-hander Chris Sale, the Red Sox agreed to terms with Moreland on a
one-year deal to share time with Hanley Ramirez at first base.It just shows you
that were in it and trying to go all out and trying to make that happen,
Moreland told reporters Thursday. Im glad to be a part of it.Manager John
Farrell said Ramirez will get most of his at-bats at designated hitter, filling
the spot that opened up when David Ortiz retired. Moreland will play primarily
at first base, where he won a Gold Glove after committing just two errors in
1,103 total chances last season.Moreland, 31, batted .233 with 22 homers and 21
doubles last year with the Texas Rangers. In 14 games at Fenway Park, he has
a.341 average with four homerrs, two doubles and eight RBI, according to
MassLive.
DJ Moore Jersey. com.Its one of those things
where Im just loose, I feel like Im comfortable (there), Moreland said. It kind
of brings the kid out in you when you get to do it at a place like this. Thats
what makes it fun, and this place is one of the best at it.To make room for
Moreland on the 40-man roster, the Red Sox designated left-hander Williams Jerez
for assignment.The deal finishes off a busy winter meetings for the Red
Sox.Shortly before acquiring Sale from the Chicago White Sox for four minor
leaguers -- including No. 1 prospect Yoan Moncada -- Boston acquired reliever
Tyler Thornburg from the Milwaukee Brewers in exchange for a package that
included infielder Travis Shaw. They also picked up the 2018 option on Farrells
contract.
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