Tag: Carlos Zambrano

MLB Trade Rumors: Adam Dunn, Carlos Zambrano Could be New Hot Names

Here we are just a few days away from the month of July where the sun isn’t the only thing that will be burning hot.

We’ve talked about a lot of rumors over the last few weeks but there could be a few new names added to the fire. Names that were only a glimmer in the eyes of a few general managers around baseball, but after the last few days, that glimmer could turn into a full blown shine.

There are a few teams that may stand with what they have and ride out the rest of the season, but there also could be a few teams that will shock at the trade deadline.

Last year we saw a few surprise moves; it’s only a matter of time before we see who surprises this time around.

Let’s get it.

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Carlos Zambrano MUST Be Released By Chicago Cubs

On Monday afternoon, Chicago Cubs GM Jim Hendry announced that starting/relief/not-really pitcher Carlos Zambrano would enter some form of treatment program and would be placed on baseball’s “restricted list” until after the All-Star break.

Restricted? Does he have to trade his boxers for briefs for the next three weeks?

My suggestion is that the Cubs treat Zambrano the way he treated his teammates on Saturday, and the way he’s been treating his fans’ hopes for the last four years: open the door, kick, close door, deadbolt.

Zambrano is a wasted roster spot and, even worse, an epic disaster of a contract. While it seemed impossible to give away Milton Bradley last year, his deal was small enough that there might be another albatross out there; Seattle had their own mistake in Carlos Silva, and the Cubs struck a deal.

But Zambrano’s salary is comparable to baseball’s top-ten. There isn’t a team on the planet that wants a guy throwing garbage for $18 million a year.

If Tom Ricketts is sincere in his wanting to build a championship team at Wrigley Field before another 100 years expires, then trading dead contracts for other dead contracts isn’t what that work-in-progress should be. The Cubs got lucky with Silva; lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same place.

Unless, of course, you’re past your prime, a head-case, or bad. Then your agent will get you a $10 million annual salary from Hendry a couple times each November.

If you wouldn’t urinate in your baby’s bottle and hand it to the child, why would Ricketts continue to expose these rookies to Zambrano?

Ricketts needs to separate the emerging new core of his team—Tyler Colvin, Starlin Castro, Andrew Cashner—from the overpaid feces formerly known as an ace. Additionally, sending him to the minors would only subject future generations of potential Cubs to this trash of a baseball player.

Buy him out, and let him go rot somewhere. Enough is enough.

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Carlos Zambrano Put on Restricted List by Chicago Cubs

As a result of Carlos Zambrano’s tirade on Friday, the Chicago Cubs have placed Zambrano on the restricted list. So what exactly does that mean?

The restricted list is a list of players to whom certain teams have contractual obligations, but are currently not a part of the team and may not play in an MLB game. Players on the restricted list do not count towards a team’s 25-man or 40-man roster.

Beginning Tuesday, Zambrano will be paid and has agreed to go through a treatment program that will have him away from the team until at least July 15th. A team does not have to pay a player on the restricted list, but in this case the Cubs will pay Zambrano.

In layman’s terms, the Cubs are buying themselves time until they figure out what to do with Zambrano. By figuring out what to do, I mean releasing or trading him.

I doubt anyone would take Zambrano in a trade unless the Cubs pick up 90 percent of his remaining contract. I wrote yesterday that the Cubs should just release him, and that thought hasn’t changed today.

You can follow The Ghost of Moonlight Graham on Twitter @ theghostofmlg

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Carlos Zambrano On Paid Restricted List Through The All-Star Break

Chicago Cubs general manager Jim Hendry announced on Monday that pitcher Carlos Zambrano was placed on MLB’s restricted list, and will not rejoin the team until the All-Star break is over.

According to Hendry, the negotiations were very amicable, with both Zambrano’s agent Barry Praver and Hendry working with the player’s union to come to a resolution without rancor.

When Zambrano does return, Hendry indicated that it will be up to Cubs manager Lou Piniella and pitching coach Larry Rothschild when and where Big Z will pitch. Hendry did acknowledge that it would likely be the bullpen.

During Saturday’s game against the cross-town rival White Sox, Zambrano stormed into the dugout shouting at anybody and everybody, with most of his visable anger directed at first baseman Derrek Lee, for failing to dive for a ball hit down the first base line.

The Cubs sent Zambrano home and Hendry immediately suspended him.

Under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement, teams cannot indefinitely suspend a player and must come to an agreed-upon resolution, which the parties did on Monday.

Last year’s situation with Milton Bradley was different, because there were only two weeks to go in the season.

Hendry was asked by the media if at any time Zambrano indicated a desire to be traded, and Hendry said that this had not occurred.

The Cubs GM said that he believes Zambrano is remorseful, and that he had talked to some teammates. Earlier in the day, Alfonso Soriano said that Zambrano would need to apologize to the team, but that he had been unable to reach the Cubs right-hander on the phone.

Ryan Dempster has also previously indicated that Zambrano would need to apologize to his teammates.

As part of the deal, Zambrano will receive unspecified help to deal with anger and other issues he is going through.

Zambrano has clashed with teammates in the past, most notable when a fight occurred between he and catcher Michael Barrett in the middle of a 2007 game.

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Carlos Zambrano Aftermath, Boston Red Sox Injury Woes, Fantasy Grab of the Week

Lots to cover in today’s blog, starting with the dysfunctional dugout of the Chicago Cubs, where Carlos Zambrano has made a spectacle of himself several times over the years. He’s ranted and raved, smashed a Gatorade machine, thrown gloves, bats and balls, left games prior to their conclusion, and generally been the proverbial ticking time bomb. In the past, his blowups have been mostly amusing.

My personal favorite was the time he attempted to throw the umpire out of the game after being ejected himself for arguing a close call at home plate. The prior low point was the fistfight with former Cubs catcher Michael Barrett.

But Zambrano went way over the line on Friday when he had a complete meltdown following a rough opening inning against the White Sox. Zambrano stormed into the dugout, yelling at no one in particular, and at first glance it appeared to be little more than another in a long line of emotional outbursts by the Z-Man. But within seconds, Zambrano focused his attention on Derrek Lee.

Lee had been unable to flag down a hard ground ball by Juan Pierre leading off the bottom of the first inning, and Zambrano was apparently none too pleased about it. Whether or not Zambrano was directly accusing Lee of loafing remains unclear. But the video evidence shows Lee and Zambrano having to be separated, at which point Zambrano was banished to the clubhouse and removed from the game.

I was virtually certain that the standard mea culpa from Zambrano would be forthcoming, and that this would simply be chalked up as the latest in a long series of wild incidents involving the volatile pitcher.

That is evidently not going to be the case, as an unnamed source close to Zambrano has told the Chicago Sun-Times that Zambrano feels his actions are being “completely misunderstood” and that Lee is to blame for confronting him.

Zambrano is apparently unaware that they have this new contraption called a camera and that there’s actually a video of the entire incident. It’s crystal clear that while Zambrano’s tantrum began with him storming back and forth and screaming at no specific individual, he focused his verbal wrath on Lee in a matter of seconds.

According to the anonymous source, Zambrano was simply trying to “pump the team up” and that Lee “took it personal.” Ya think? Considering that Zambrano was yelling right into Lee’s face, taking it personally doesn’t seem to be an unreasonable reaction.

If Zambrano is trying to spin this into something where he was just trying to rev up the team, his teammates are clearly not buying it. Alfonso Soriano told the Sun-Times “that’s not the way we see it” and added that “if he explains, maybe we can see it the way his friend sees it.”

Another unnamed Cub was less diplomatic, stating that “anybody who believes (Zambrano’s version) must be smoking something.” When queried as to whether the team would accept an apology from Zambrano, Soriano said he didn’t know.

By the way, whatever chance to extinguish the fire while it was still blazing was wiped out on Friday evening when the unrepentant Zambrano decided to go ahead with his dinner plans. He went out with White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen. Make no mistake, this is not something that is sitting at all well with Zambrano’s teammates.

It’s not the idea of dining with the “enemy” as that mindset doesn’t exist anymore. But this was a time when Zambrano needed to be reaching out to his own clubhouse family, and instead he lived up to his selfish reputation by refusing to change his plans.

The Cubs have a real problem here. The situation with Zambrano might be beyond repair, especially when factoring in his lengthy history of boorish behavior. When Manny Ramirez went past the point of no return with the Red Sox in the summer of 2008, Boston was able to work a deal, and even though they basically had to pay the Dodgers to take him off their hands, they were also able to land a front line player in a three-team swap that landed them Jason Bay.

The difference is that for all his foibles, Manny could still rake with the best and that production compensated for the baggage that would surely accompany Ramirez wherever he landed. That’s not the case with Zambrano. He’s no more than a marginal starting pitcher these days, and his career path indicates he’s unlikely to ever be more than that down the road. Thus, the Cubs may well be stuck with either finding a way to get some use out of Zambrano or simply releasing him and eating his monstrous contract.

I don’t think there’s any question that the best move for the Cubs is to dump Zambrano and pay the piper to the tune of roughly $45 million. But that would leave GM Jim Hendry in a really vulnerable position as far as his job security is concerned.

Don’t forget, Hendry already put himself on some thin ice last year with the insane signing and subsequent disaster involving Milton Bradley. Cutting Zambrano would be admitting to making another major error in judgment, and that could cost Hendry his job.

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The Red Sox won the battle this weekend, but it’s conceivable that they may have also lost the 2010 war in spite of winning two out of three against the Giants. Talk about carnage! Dustin Pedroia had five hits, including three homers, in Thursday’s wild win against the Rockies. On Friday, he fouled a ball off his foot, broke a bone, and he’s gone for the next month. Clay Buchholz, who has been pitching outstanding ball, hurt himself running the bases on Saturday and hyperextended a knee.

Fortunately, this injury doesn’t appear serious and Buchholz may not miss much action. But the Red Sox took another potential big hit on Sunday when Victor Martinez evidently took one too many foul tips off his catching hand, suffering a fracture in the process.

The silver lining in this latest cloud is that the Red Sox have not yet determined whether V-Mart will need a DL stint, so it’s possible that the injury isn’t terribly serious. Nevertheless, with Josh Beckett and Jacoby Ellsbury, along with backups Jeremy Hermida and Mike Lowell on the shelf already, my guess is that Theo Epstein may be looking to deal for depth sooner than later.

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Fantasy Grab of the Week: Every Monday, I’ll focus on one player who is currently owned in less than 10% of all Yahoo leagues. Catching lightning in a bottle can win championships, and if you can get there by snaring a player for a small investment, it’s definitely worth a minimal gamble. This week’s grab is Russell Branyan who was dealt back the Seattle Mariners this weekend.

The Cleveland Indians are dumping veteran talent, so Branyan heads right back to the team that he enjoyed a career year with in 2009. Branyan will hit in the middle of the Mariners lineup, so he’ll have a good chance to put up some serious production category numbers again. Ideally, you’ll want to platoon Branyan in leagues where daily lineup changes are allowed, as he’s a BA liability against lefties.

But even in weekly leagues, the HR/RBI potential owned by Branyan makes him a solid addition. Check the free agent pool in your league and buy Branyan if he’s available.

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I managed another winning week with my baseball selections, and June turned out to be a very profitable month. I’ve got a guaranteed profit for anyone buying my July baseball package.

Make sure to find out the details by emailing me directly at:cokin@cox.net.

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Carlos Zambrano’s Outburst Overshadows What’s Really Wrong With the Cubs

Mount Zambrano erupted again yesterday during the Chicago Cub-Chicago White Sox Crosstown Classic because of his perception of a lack of effort by some of his teammates in the first inning where he gave up four runs.

Everyone is saying the Cubs should get rid of him because of his emotional outburst in the dugout.

I say it’s about time somebody on this team showed some life and that they cared about what’s happening on the field.

Former Arizona Diamondback manager and current Cub color analyst Bob Brenly said after the incident, “It’s good to see somebody show some emotion, because this has been a dead-ass team for the past three months. There have been plenty of opportunities for somebody to blow a cork.”

Zambrano’s anger stemmed from the first batter Juan Pierre bouncing a ball down the first base line past Derrick Lee who loped after the ball as it went past him for a double. Zambrano thought he should have dived for the ball. He had the same reaction to another play in the inning.

Many observers did think Lee could have possibly knocked that ball down.

Zambrano recorded the final out of the inning taking a throw from Lee as he stomped on the bag.

He then pointed up to the sky as is his custom after each inning…and then the heavens exploded.

He came into the dugout spewing venom, and according to a source said, “If you’re not going to play for me, then I’m not going to play for you.”

He was prancing back and forth in the dugout and came back at Lee when he reacted to Zambrano’s outburst and told him to shut the f–k up. Piniella and the coaches got in between them and Zambrano went into the tunnel.

He came back shortly after and sat on the bench before he was excused for the day by Pineilla and told to go home.

After the game, Piniella said his behavior was unacceptable. GM Jim Hendry responded by suspending him indefinitely.

There is now talk that Zambrano may have played his last game as a Cub, though his no trade clause and the $45 million left on his contract may stand in the way of that.

Hendry then proceeded to shoot himself in the foot as he has done before by saying, “He hasn’t been up to the standards that he was at before for two years….If you look at his last 50 starts, he probably ranks in the bottom third in the National League of overall performance.”

That comment should have every team calling the Cubs. I’m sure if they can find a trade partner now, they’ll really get top dollar in return for him.

But why trade one of the few guys on the team that actually shows he cares?

A comment to the Chicago Tribune today said, “The Cubs should suspend the other 24 players, not the only one that shows some fire and cares about winning.”

While I don’t agree that nobody else on the team cares about winning, there are a lot of guys just collecting a paycheck right now.

There is one thing you can never say about Zambrano and that is that he dogs it. There isn’t a player on the team that runs the bases harder when putting the ball in play.

I wish I could say that about some of the alleged star hitters on the team.

I also wish Pineilla and Hendry cared more about the pitiful play on the field than a player with a reputation for blowing up, aggravated because of his poor performance and what he saw as a lack of effort by his teammates.

I’m not condoning calling out his teammates during a game. That’s not good for the team.

But somebody has to inject some life into this corpse of a club, and the manager certainly isn’t doing it. Neither is supposed team leader Lee, who has been as dead on the field as his personality this year.

Zambrano has anger issues, and he’s probably always going to have them. But at least he doesn’t take losing lying down.

Trade Zambrano if you must and get whatever you can for him in return, but he’s not the problem. It goes a lot deeper than that.

An overhaul of the front office along with injecting new blood is what is needed here.

Jim Hendry has already said he’s not firing Lou Piniella this year.

New owner Tom Ricketts is currently on safari in Africa.

Hopefully when he gets home he realizes he has a lot bigger game to hunt and brings in some fresh meat.

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Carlos Zambrano Becomes Jim Hendry’s Latest Scapegoat: Who Are We Really Mad At?

“It was unacceptable,” said Cubs manager Lou Piniella of pitcher Carlos Zambrano’s dugout fireworks after the first inning of Friday’s 6-0 loss to the crosstown rival White Sox at U.S. Cellular Field.

“His conduct was not acceptable,” said general manager Jim Hendry, echoing Piniella’s sentiments while announcing Zambrano’s indefinite suspension from the team.

Unacceptable seems to be the team’s buzz word for the day, and to be sure, Zambrano’s actions were unsavory—he engaged teammate Derrek Lee in a shouting match and screamed at what seemed to be the entire Cubs bench. Is it really fair, though, for Zambrano to be singled out so?

Not remotely. Yes, Big Z was in the wrong to so publicly and demonstratively chastise the sorry bunch of losers who stood by and observed the Sox’s four-run first inning. The lambasting, though, was long overdue.

The 2010 Cubs were no one’s darlings. For a team still boasting one of the league’s highest payrolls, relatively little was expected. Their 32-41 record, in isolation, is by no means a surprise.

It should appall Cubs fans, however, to note the lackluster way this team has reached its mid-summer nadir. There has been no hustle in this team from day one; there has been no heart.

Their ancient, narrowly competent manager—once one of baseball’s most fiery and effective motivators—has seemed cranky at best, and utterly disengaged at worst. Their sometime cornerstones at the corner infield positions (third baseman Aramis Ramirez and first baseman Lee) have struggled at the plate and straggled in the field. Each has clearly suffered a season of long loss of focus and energy, not to mention a certain amount of their once prodigious skill to the weather of age.

Behind Piniella stands a staff ill-prepared to cover its leaders shortcomings. Bench coach Alan Trammell is a tactical wizard, but seems to have little sway over the strategically inferior Piniella, and offers nothing in the way of a healthy kick in the pants to the team’s many loafers.

Pitching coach Larry Rothschild can supply no useful input to the confused Piniella on bullpen usage, while hitting coach Rudy Jaramillo continues to work feverishly on the broken swings of Ramirez and Lee (not to mention the ever-hapless Koyie Hill), rather than simply suggest to his boss that he start the team’s better hitters (Xavier Nady, Chad Tracy and Geovany Soto for instance) more often.

Alongside the skipper stands Hendry, the architect of this rapidly crumbling house of cards. Despite astute moves this winter (signing outfielder Marlon Byrd and trading for starting pitcher Carlos Silva), Hendry failed to address the team’s real areas of need (the bullpen, to which he counter-productively returned left-handed walk artist John Grabow, and the back half of the starting rotation) while insisting that the team was, in fact, looking to win now.

To be sure, there have been pleasant surprises along the way. Byrd and Silva have far exceeded expectations, as have outfielder Tyler Colvin and catcher Soto. Any of those four would be deserving All-Stars, and were more of their teammates playing with their razor-sharp focus, this team could well be 41-32.

Instead, though, the team’s followers—Ryan Theriot, Alfonso Soriano, Kosuke Fukudome, and Randy Wells—have seemingly lost whatever spark had kept them attentive to the task at hand, and have followed Lee and Ramirez into la-la land.

Above all the doings and undoings stands the puppet-master, team chairman Tom Ricketts, whose slick and media-savvy public relations work successfully diverted attention from a fairly outrageous hike in ticket prices (one fans have wisely not rewarded, as Wrigley Field has so far averaged about 1,200 fewer patrons per game than it had through this time last season) and a revealingly un-revolutionary approach to the business side of the game. Meet the new boss; he’s the same as the old boss.

If one accepts, then, that the Cubs have been generally unacceptable this season, it may stand to reason that Big Z—ever the unwillingly cooperative lightning rod—was merely trying to be the leader everyone expected him to be this year. In football, a sideline tirade of similar magnitude would make a quarterback his fan base’s new hero. The aggressiveness, the anger, and even the finger-pointing fury Zambrano displayed only reflected a deep-seeded frustration with the shameful attitude the so-called leaders of the 2010 Cubs have adopted as their de facto identity.

Insofar as his actions were undeniably detrimental to team chemistry, Zambrano should be made to apologize. But in the final calculus, Hendry, Piniella, Rothschild, Lee, and Ramirez should all lose their places on this team before Zambrano.

Distractions like this one can help save a manager’s hide, or justify retaining a pair of aging erstwhile sluggers. Ultimately, though, in a championship vacuum like the one at the corner of Clark and Addison in Chicago’s Lakeview community, distractions are simply unacceptable.

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Breaking News: Chicago Cubs’ Carlos Zambrano Suspended Indefinitely

The Chicago Cubs have suspended pitcher Carlos Zambrano indefinitely after a dugout tirade during Friday’s 6-0 loss to the cross-town White Sox.

Zambrano had to be restrained and separated from teammate Derrek Lee after he gave up four runs in the bottom half of the first inning at US Cellular Field.

Presumably, the issue was that Lee let a ground ball get by him at first base prior to Zambrano giving up a three-run home run.

Cubs General Manager Jim Hendry had this to say about the suspension:

“His conduct wasn’t acceptable… his actions toward his teammates and staff were not acceptable.”

“He will not be at the ballpark tomorrow. We’ll play with 24. We’ll play with 24 before we tolerate that kind of behavior.”

Cubs Manager Lou Piniella added, “He was ranting and raving and out of control.”

“We just couldn’t tolerate that. It was embarrassing. There’s no excuse for this, none at all.”

Piniella also said that he supported Hendry’s decision.

Lee would not discuss the situation, but said the team would stick together.

It’s been a rough year for Zambrano, who has gone 3-5 with a 5.10 ERA. He was also demoted to the bullpen earlier in the season.

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Suspended: Carlos Zambrano Makes a Fool Out Of Himself Once Again

Carlos Zambrano couldn’t even make it to the second inning of his start against the crosstown rival White Sox before throwing yet another tantrum, even being sent home by manager Lou Pinella and eventually suspended indefinitely by Jim Hendry. 

Zambrano gave up four runs in the first inning, but as usual found someone else to blame.

The inning began with a Juan Pierre double just out of reach of Cubs first baseman Derrek Lee. Lee was drawn in by the chance Pierre could lay down a bunt and the bouncer down the line was clearly out of reach for the Gold Glove first baseman.

Zambrano then was able to get Omar Vizquel to pop out, so there was a man on second base with one out. Very feasible for a sane pitcher to get out of the inning.

Alex Rios then hit a ball down the third base line scoring Pierre, which Aramis Ramirez had no chance at getting. Zambrano begged to differ as he felt a guy who just came off the DL should be able to fly.

Paul Konerko hit a base hit and Carlos Quentin hit a ball that no one outside the bleachers had a chance at catching making it 4-0 White Sox after one.

Then this happened.

Lee’s lips say exactly what most people have been wanting to say to Zambrano for years. 

Yet another water cooler hurt at the hands of a five-year-old trapped in an overpaid 29-year-old’s body.

Pinella mentioned that Zambrano had words for Hendry in the tunnel. One would think he asked to be traded or something along the lines of not being able to handle the team anymore.

Either that or Zambrano felt Hendry should have caught Quentin’s home run.

The Cubs are out of options.

They’ve been patient, hoping the talent would outweigh the immaturity.

The team has tried to move him to the pen, which I’m sure he’ll use as reasoning for his current struggles, as a timeout chair to perhaps light a fire underneath him.

Forget about the bullpen, someone needs to find this immature waste of talent a playpen, so he can play with people his age.

The Cubs have to get rid of Zambrano someway, somehow. With the talent seemingly fading away, he brings nothing to the table, but someone who will throw his plate of food.

Drop him, trade him or replace him with a bag of balls because all he is right now is an expensive cry baby.

How about trading him for a new water cooler?

 

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Crosstown Rivalry: White Sox Get To Carlos Zambrano

This article is also available on The Daily Cub and The Chicago Perspective .

After taking two out of three games in their first series against the Cubs, the White Sox were able to rattle Carlos Zambrano’s cage enough to give him a mental breakdown and get him taken out after one inning. Zambrano was also involved in an altercation with Derek Lee in the dugout.

In the first inning, the White Sox were able to put four runs on the board, mostly thanks to Carlos Quentin’s three-run homer that brought in Alex Rios and Paul Konerko.

Zambrano was noticeably livid heading into the dugout. The episode ended with Lou Piniella and Alan Trammel escorting Zambrano into the clubhouse. Zambrano was consequently told to go home.

ESPN is now reporting that Zambrano has been suspended, but they don’t have information on how long the suspension will be.

The altercation overshadowed another outstanding performance by Jake Peavy, who went seven scoreless innings for the White Sox, bringing his consecutive scoreless inning total to 21.

As for the Cubs, the bullpen did a great job of stopping the bleeding, only allowing two runs through the next eight innings.  Gorzelanny was fantastic, allowing just one run over the next 3.1 innings.

The Cubs bats were silent as they only had six baserunners through the game.  Meanwhile, the White Sox were able to score six runs on seven hits and two walks.

The White Sox now lead the crosstown rivalry 3-1 on the season, and the Cubs are going to have to win these next two games to pull off another tie on the season.

It is going to be tough, however, as the White Sox have won 10 straight games since losing the series finale to the Cubs in their last meeting. The Sox have won 14 of their last 15 games.

Meanwhile, the Cubs are nine games below .500 and are 2-4 over their last six.

I’m Joe W.

Joe Willett also write at The Daily Cub and The Chicago Perspective .

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