Tag: Jake Arrieta

Jake Arrieta Showing No Signs of Slowing Down After Breakout ’15 Cy Young

In the second inning of his second spring start Monday against the San Diego Padres, Jake Arrieta put a man on base for fun.

Well, OK, not for fun. He did it—”it” being an intentional walk to the Friars’ Derek Norrisbecause he wanted to work out of the stretch. Apparently, Arrieta wasn’t confident he’d get a chance if he left it up to the opposition.

That’s about the only thing the Chicago Cubs right-hander and reigning National League Cy Young Award winner isn’t confident in these days.

He’s coming off a career-defining season that saw him fly into the firmament of MLB stars. Now, he’s out to prove it was no fluke.

It seems odd to even talk about a guy who went 22-6 last season with a 1.77 ERA and 0.865 WHIP while twirling a no-hitter, as being underrated. And Arrieta isn’t, really. 

But he might still be underestimated—at least a little.

A fifth-round pick by the Baltimore Orioles in 2007, Arrieta didn’t break out until 2014 when he was 28 years old. He posted a 2.53 ERA in 156.2 innings for the Cubs. Prior to that, he logged an ERA under 4.00 just once and never eclipsed 120 innings in a season.

So while no one disputes the glistening value he delivered on the north side in 2015, there are reasons to wonder if he can do it again in 2016.

Bleacher Report’s Rick Weiner tapped Arrieta as one of the more likely players to regress this season, noting that Arrieta’s 2.35 fielding independent pitching score (FIP) and a 2.61 expected fielding independent pitching score (xFIP) significantly outpaced his ERA.

As FanGraphs’ Eno Sarris put it, “When Jake Arrieta won the Cy Young, there was a smattering of ‘good for him, it probably won’t happen again…'”

Another figure the doubters can point to is the .246 batting average on balls in play (BABIP) opponents put up against Arrieta in 2015, per FanGraphs. That’s well below his career tally of .272 and suggests a regression could be in order.

On the other hand, the additions of free-agent outfielder Jason Heyward and second baseman Ben Zobrist should strengthen Chicago’s defense and benefit Arrieta and the rest of the pitching staff.

Speaking of which, while the Cubs didn’t land an ace in the David Price tier, they did nab veteran John Lackey away from the St. Louis Cardinals to round out a core that already includes left-hander Jon Lester.

Arrieta, however, is the unequivocal ace. He has earned the title, and he’s showing no signs of relenting.

He did seem to tire a bit down the stretch last season, surrendering eight runs in 10.2 innings in the National League Division Series and National League Championship Series after tossing a complete-game masterpiece in the win-or-go-home wild-card showdown against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

This time, Arrieta insists, will be different.

“I knew after a couple weeks of not throwing, letting the body kind of recover, that it was back to normal,” he said, per Bruce Levine of CBS Chicago. “Now, after dealing with the fatigue of last year, I have obviously bounced back. I am in better shape than ever…”

Count Cubs skipper Joe Maddon among the believers in Arrieta’s fitness ethic. “You talk to everybody who watches him, [and they’ll say] it’s kind of freaky,” Maddon said, per MLB.com’s Phil Rogers. “I don’t think anybody else could do what he does. In terms of his flexibility, the ridiculous strength all over his body, how he takes care of himself, all of that stuff matters.”

It’s easy to dismiss that brand of talk as self-serving hyperbole; everyone’s in the best shape of his life in mid-March. 

Arrieta, though, just finished reminding us all what makes him such a special talent, and the early spring returns indicate he hasn’t missed a beat. Why should we doubt that he has more rocket fuel sloshing in the tank?

Will he capture another Cy Young and challenge for another ERA title, which he could win if Zack Greinke toils in the less pitcher-friendly confines of Arizona?

Maybe.

Will he be the best pitcher on a young, hungry Cubs team that seems destined for another deep, possibly curse-busting postseason run?

Count on it, just as if you’re Arrieta counting four balls in a statement-making, springtime intentional walk.

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com, unless otherwise noted.

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Jake Arrieta Contract: Latest News and Rumors on Negotiations with Cubs

The Chicago Cubs and 2015 National League Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta agreed to terms on a one-year, $10.7 million contract in February, but it appears the deal wasn’t close to what the right-hander wanted.

Continue for updates.


Epstein Comments on Negotiations with Arrieta

Wednesday, March 9

Per Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune:

“Jake’s priority (now) is helping the team come together and prepare for a season,” (Cubs president Theo) Epstein said Tuesday. “The last thing we would want is to create any distraction. (But) there will be quiet moments out of the competitive spotlight in the future when it will make sense to talk again. It’s certainly not something that is going on now or probably will as the season begins.”


Arrieta Comments on Securing New Deal

Wednesday, March 9

Arrieta said, per Gonzales on Tuesday:

There’s a small window you have as a professional athlete, so you want to try to capitalize on that. But financially, whether I signed an extension or not, we’re still going to be able to live a good life. Money can only make you so happy. We’re extremely happy where we’re at. I love my teammates. I love Chicago. So those are more important than the contract extension.


Cubs, Arrieta Far Off on Long-Term Deal

Monday, March 7

According to Jon Heyman of MLB Network, the two sides were working on a megadeal, but their talks ended prematurely because of a “decent-sized gap over the length of the deal.”

Heyman shared the figure Arrieta was hoping for:

However, Arrieta will be arbitration-eligible for the third time after the 2016 season, and free agency could loom following the 2017 season. Heyman reported the Cubs were not going to give him a seven-year deal two years before he is set to become a free agent.

He also noted the Cubs “say they love Arrieta and will try again.”


Arrieta Emerged as Elite Pitcher in 2015

The money top-tier pitchers such as David Price and Clayton Kershaw are making hovers around $30 million per year, and while Arrieta has made more than 25 starts in only two of his six years in the majors, he did finish with a 22-6 record and 1.77 ERA last year. His 222 ERA+ was just three points behind Zack Greinke’s mark of 225, per Baseball-Reference.com.

On top of his stellar pitching, he isn’t lacking confidence. On Monday, when asked on The Spiegel and Goff Show (h/t Chicago CBS) if any hitters in the National League scare him, he gave a simple answer: “Not right now.” 

If he has another solid season next year, the Cubs will need to open their wallets, or they could lose him to another team that does following the 2017 season.

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Jake Arrieta, Cubs Would Both Benefit from Immediate Mega-Extension

If there’s a pitfall to success, it’s that sustaining it bears a financial burden. In baseball, almost universally, the teams that are most successful boast underpaid players that exceed the expectations of their contracts.

Cubs ace Jake Arrieta, among Major League Baseball’s most underpaid pitchers, epitomizes that paradigm. The right-handed Arrieta carried the Cubs through much of the second half of the season and ended his 2015 campaign with a major league-best 22 wins and a 1.77 ERA.

The Cubs will eventually sign Arrieta to a lucrative, long-term deal. But when?

Both sides would benefit from doing so right now.

The Theo Epstein era in Chicago as Cubs president of baseball operations has been earmarked by an overhaul of the organization’s minor league system. Young, homegrown players like Kris Bryant, Kyle Schwarber and Addison Russell, all major contributors in 2015, are still under team control and, therefore, playing on bargain-basement deals. Their time to be paid will come later.

For Arrieta, it’s now.

Unquestionably, Epstein and Co.’s trophy transaction was trading for Arrieta, reliever Pedro Strop and cash in exchange for pitcher Scott Feldman and catcher Steve Clevenger (Feldman was the top-paid player on the Astros last season. In 2015, Clevenger hit .287 in 105 games for the Orioles).

Arrieta, a player who has yet to land a big deal, is looking for the kind of transformational wealth a long-term deal provides. Injuries and control issues stymied the start of the 29-year-old Arrieta’s career. So he has yet to cash in on the type of contract his 2015 statistics might otherwise suggest. But now, by any statistical measure, Arrieta is one of baseball’s best pitchers. 

And, arguably, its biggest bargain.

In 2015, Arrieta was second among all pitchers with a 7.6 WAR and won the 2015 National League Cy Young Award. He made $3,630,000 last season, according to Cot’s Baseball Contracts, costing the Cubs an astoundingly low $497,260.27 per win above replacement.

By comparison, the other four pitchers in the league’s top five in WAR were Clayton Kershaw ($3,787,375.47 per win above replacement), David Price ($3,085,937.50 per win above replacement), Max Scherzer ($2,678,571.41 per win above replacement) and Chris Sale ($1,397,849.52 per win above replacement).

Arrieta has two years of arbitration remaining on his contract and is set to become a free agent before the 2018 season. The Cubs will never have more leverage in negotiations. The closer Arrieta gets to free agency, the more he will be willing to wait and test the open market.

So now would be the time to offer Arrieta a team-friendly deal that would simultaneously give the Cubs ace security.

A pitcher’s arm is baseball’s most fragile commodity. There’s no determining who might become seriously injured or why.

For example, White Sox ace Chris Sale looks like his elbow is about to pop out every time he throws. He hasn’t had serious arm surgery. Former Cubs pitcher Mark Prior was said to have perfect mechanics. His once-promising career ended early as a result of injury.

Testing the open market would require Arrieta to gamble on the unknown.

To command a contract that would pay him $25 million-$30 million per year, Arrieta would need to replicate his 2015 season in 2016 and 2017. Impossible? No. It may even be likely, considering how much he improved in 2015.

But it only takes one pitch to derail the career of a star hurler. One bad movement could mean Tommy John surgery, a torn labrum or any of the litany of arm injuries that can alter the trajectory of a promising career.

Arrieta has to weigh the upside of waiting, which may not justify the risk given his age.

He wouldn’t become a free agent until he was 31. His birthday is March 6, so he will actually turn 32 before the beginning of the 2018 season. By that age, teams would be less willing to offer Arrieta a longer deal.

If Arrieta were to accept a deal now and he continues to prove he has top-of-the-rotation stuff, then he could potentially sign another lucrative contract similar to the one 37-year-old John Lackey signed this offseason—a two-year, $32 million deal with the Cubs, according to ESPN.

What might a team-friendly deal look like?

There are many ways contracts can be structured. But a deal that pays Arrieta no more than $20 million per year could potentially save the Cubs at least $5 million per year should Arrieta continue as one of baseball’s best pitchers. Over the course of a six-year deal, that could pay him as much as $120 million. The deal could be front-loaded and include an opt-out, vesting option or other player-friendly clauses.

His value might never be higher.

It always seems in these negotiations that there is one side that has overwhelming leverage. Like any team and player approaching potential contract talks, the Cubs and Arrieta are on divergent roads.

Lucky for both sides that, right now, they intersect.

 

Seth Gruen covers Major League Baseball for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter @SethGruen.

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Jake Arrieta Wins 2015 NL Cy Young: Voting Results, Comments and Reaction

On the heels of one of the best seasons by a National League pitcher in recent memory, Chicago Cubs ace Jake Arrieta won the 2015 NL Cy Young Award Wednesday.

MLB passed along the news:

The Cubs congratulated Arrieta on Twitter: 

The NL Cy Young race was a competitive one, but Arrieta managed to beat out a pair of Los Angeles Dodgers superstars in Zack Greinke and Clayton Kershaw to take home the hardware.

Below are the voting results in what was a tight race for the prestigious accolade:

“Everything I’ve been through makes this even more special…Grinding through AAA and second guessing myself.” said Arrieta after receiving the award, per MLB Network PR on Twitter.

Arrieta went 22-6 with a 1.77 ERA, 0.87 WHIP and 236 strikeouts in 229 innings for a Cubs team that broke through with a playoff appearance. The 29-year-old righty led the NL in wins (22), games started (33), shutouts (3), complete games (4) and home runs allowed per nine innings (0.4).

He was nearly unhittable down the stretch as he went 12-1 with a 0.75 ERA in his final 15 starts, forming one of Major League Baseball’s best one-two punches alongside Jon Lester.

Mark Lazerus of the Chicago Sun-Times believes Arrieta’s phenomenal finish is unprecedented:

Arrieta emerged in a big way in 2014 after going from the Baltimore Orioles to Chicago in the middle of the previous season, but the 2015 campaign marked the year when he truly became elite.

He and Greinke were seemingly in a season-long battle for the honor of the NL’s top pitcher, and while neither truly pulled away with the title, Arrieta’s incredible run in the season’s final months likely set him apart.

It was Greinke who was named the National League’s Most Outstanding Pitcher in the Players Choice Awards voting, but the writers had a different view and were ultimately more impressed with what Arrieta brought to the table statistically.

Many figured the Cubs had a chance to be a factor in 2015 due largely to a young and talented lineup that included the likes of Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo and Kyle Schwarber.

They all certainly contributed to the team’s success, but Arrieta’s ability to give Chicago a guaranteed win when he took the mound for a large portion of the season was paramount in the Cubs becoming one of baseball’s best teams.

Arrieta’s ascent to the elite ranks over the past two seasons has been nothing short of remarkable, and it is fitting that the writers recognized his progress in the form of one of Major League Baseball’s top honors.

 

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Cy Young or Not, Jake Arrieta Achieved Pitching Perfection in 2015

The shame of the 2015 National League Cy Young race is that only one pitcher can win it. Really, the award wouldn’t be misplaced on any of the three finalists’ mantelpieces. 

If there is an odds-on favorite for the award, though, it’s probably Jake Arrieta.

That’s the opinion of ESPN.com’s Cy Young predictor anyway, and it’s believable. Arrieta accumulated plenty of numbers to please the Cy Young voters, including an MLB-best 22 wins and a 1.77 ERA that ranked second in MLB. He also was historically awesome after the All-Star break, posting a 0.75 ERA that ranks as the best ever in the second half.

But when the winner is announced Wednesday evening, be warned: There’s a chance it won’t be Arrieta.

Instead, the Cy Young could go to Los Angeles Dodgers ace Zack Greinke, whose 1.66 ERA was the lowest MLB had seen in 20 years. Or it could go to fellow Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw, who became MLB’s first 300-strikeout pitcher since Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson in 2002.

In case the Cy Young doesn’t go to Arrieta, do yourself a favor and resolve not to weep for him. He would not be the victim of robbery. He would merely be the victim of a really, really close competition.

But regardless of whether Arrieta walks away with the Cy Young, we’re going to pay proper homage to his 2015 season anyway. Even if he doesn’t get a shiny trophy for it, he showed us what perfect pitching looks like.

Look, a pitcher’s job is straightforward. He’s not supposed to allow the opposition to score any runs, and…well, that’s it.

As for how a pitcher is supposed to do his job, let’s pretend that there’s a stone tablet on an ancient pitcher’s mound somewhere that says the following:

  1. Thou shalt not issue walks.
  2. Thou shalt collect strikeouts.
  3. Thou shalt not get hit hard.

Amen. Avoiding walks means avoiding free baserunners. Chasing strikeouts means chasing the easiest possible outs. Avoiding hard contact will mostly mean getting even more easy outs.

Following all three of these commandments should be every pitcher’s goal. If a pitcher can master all three, then he’ll be nigh impossible to beat.

Which brings us back to Arrieta. He actually was nearly impossible to beat in 2015, and it was indeed because the 29-year-old mastered the three commandments of pitching.

We already knew coming into 2015 that Arrieta could handle strikeouts, as the main ingredient of his big breakout in 2014—you know, the one where he had a 2.53 ERA in 25 startswas a career-best 27.2 strikeout percentage. He kept right on going in 2015, posting a 27.1 K percentage that put him in MLB’s top 10.

But where Arrieta merely held course there, he got even better with his control and contact management.

Regarding the former, he dropped his walk rate from 6.7 in 2014 to a career-low 5.5 in 2015, good enough to place him at No. 21 in MLB. Regarding the latter, Arrieta allowed the fewest hits (5.9) and home runs (0.4) per nine innings of any pitcher in baseball, and those numbers weren’t accidents.

No, sir. Arrieta was a top-five ground-ball artist with a 56.2 GB percentage, and Baseball Savant tells us that his average exit velocity was the lowest among all pitchers who allowed at least 190 balls in play:

This is what it looks like when a pitcher takes the next step following a big breakout. Arrieta remained elite at striking batters out, became elite at limiting walks and, if we take it from FanGraphs‘ Tony Blengino, emerged as the contact manager of the year in the National League.

And yeah, he earned all of it. Arrieta didn’t just produce like a perfect pitcher. He also looked like a perfect pitcher.

How does one look like a perfect pitcher? You can start with stuff, command or ingenuity. But it’s hard to argue with the notion that the perfect pitcher needs to have all three. And in 2015, this is what Arrieta achieved.

Even going back to his rocky days with the Baltimore Orioles, Arrieta has always had stuff. This, of course, became especially evident in his breakout season in 2014, and it became even more evident in 2015.

As Brooks Baseball can vouch, the first thing Arrieta did was simplify his arsenal to a point where he was essentially a three-pitch pitcher. He used his four-seam fastball and changeup only as show-me pitches and relied mainly on his sinker, slider and curveball.

Good call. Per Baseball Prospectus, Arrieta‘s sinker and slider boasted elite velocity. And according to Mike Petriello of MLB.com, Arrieta‘s sinker and curveball produced elite spin rate that equated to nasty movement.

That was particularly easy to see in his curveball, which on a good day was capable of doing this:

Oddly enough, Arrieta‘s slider did not have that elite spin. But that could be related to how his slider is actually two pitches, both of which were nasty even without elite spin.

Sometimes it’s a cutter with late, sharp glove-side run. Other times, it’s more of a traditional slider that can do this:

These are the tools Arrieta used to not only get strikeouts, but to manage contact.

His increased reliance on his sinker explains where his ground balls came from. And in general, Arrieta‘s stuff was so wicked that it allowed him to post the league’s lowest exit velocity off pitches in the strike zone. Even when he gave hitters good pitches to hit, they couldn’t hit them.

As for where Arrieta‘s improved command came from, that’s more of a complicated story.

Arrieta basically didn’t have any command earlier in his career, as he walked over 10 percent of the batters he faced between 2010 and 2013. At the root of that problem were mechanical inconsistencies that he had to overcome. According to the man himself, he has.

“There’s no perfect delivery; there are no perfect mechanics,” Arrieta told Eno Sarris of FanGraphs last spring. “It’s all about being able to have a comfortable delivery that you can repeat a hundred times per start, which is what I have now.”

As Sarris highlighted, Arrieta has a delivery he can more easily repeat now in part because his mechanics don’t have as many moving parts as they used to. And as Harry Pavlidis highlighted at Baseball Prospectus in 2014, Arrieta has seemingly benefited from having “balance” and “posture” ingrained in his mind by Cubs pitching coach Chris Bosio.

The result? It would indeed appear that Arrieta has settled on a release point that suits him. That led to a career-best 64.3 strike percentage in 2014 followed by a new career best of 65.2 percent in 2015.

Despite all this, it’s noteworthy that Arrieta isn’t actually throwing more pitches in the strike zone. His 44.6 zone rate in 2015 was only a tick below his career 44.9 zone rate. So what gives?

Well, throwing strikes isn’t always about throwing pitches in the zone. That’s not always the equivalent of throwing good pitches. For that, Arrieta has become a perfect case study.

As one American League scout told Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune, Arrieta showed in 2015 that he knew “when to throw a strike, and when to throw a ball.” This is an incredibly difficult point to illustrate with data or imagery, but it will ring true if you go back and rewatch one of Arrieta‘s starts from 2015—particularly one from the second half of the year.

Do that, and what you’ll see is not a pitcher pounding the strike zone, but a pitcher using location and movement to toy with the strike zone. Using primarily his sinker and slider, Arrieta could entice hitters to expand the zone by painting the edges and also catch them looking after setting them up with pitches outside the zone.

This allowed him to enjoy the best of both worlds. In addition to his par-for-the-course 44.6 zone percentage, Arrieta also got strikes by inducing a career-high 35.0 chase percentage. That is to say, his ability to mix his awesome stuff with pinpoint command and clever sequencing earned him strikes from both umpires and hitters.

In all, everything worked together in beautiful harmony for Arrieta in 2015. He came into the year with awesome stuff, improving command and pitching know-how. His stuff remained awesome, and he improved his command and pitching know-how even more. We shouldn’t be surprised that he excelled at the things at which all pitchers should strive to excel.

If Arrieta has his druthers, he’ll be rewarded with the National League Cy Young on Wednesday. If not, he’ll be able to rest easy knowing that he at least has the admiration of all those who know perfect pitching when they see it.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked. Special thanks to The Pitcher List for the GIFs.

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Cubs vs. Mets: NLCS Game 2 TV Schedule, Pick and Ticket Info

It’s based on a small sample size and one that is likely to change in the long run, but if his first two playoff starts are any indication, Matt Harvey should be a star for a long time.

All the talk surrounding the Cubs‘ young bats was deafening leading up to Game 1 of the NLCS on Saturday night, but the young Mets pitcher was having none of it and put in one of the best pitching performances of the postseason to secure the win.

With a five-inning, two-earned run night against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NLDS already under his belt, Harvey has been one of the stars of the postseason so far. The Mets will turn to another young pitcher, Noah Syndergaard, in Game 2 with the hopes of securing the win against potential Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta.

Game 1 belonged to Harvey and the Mets, but the series is far from guaranteed, and Sunday night will go a long way toward deciding who is going to continue their dream of winning the World Series.

Let’s take a look at where to watch the game and who is going to win in Flushing, New York.

 

Date: Oct. 18

Time: 7:30 p.m.

TV: TBS

Ticket Info: ScoreBig.com

 

Prediction

New York was known for its talented group of young pitchers in the regular season, and so far in the playoffs, the narrative hasn’t changed.

Harvey was brilliant in shutting down the Cubs offensively Saturday night, only allowing four hits over 7.2 innings pitched, but the pitching advantage shifts back to Chicago in a big way in Game 2.

Syndergaard has been one of the surprises of the season despite his youth, recording a 3.24 ERA in the regular season. But his year doesn’t compare to the magical season that Arrieta has put forth.

The Cubs ace led the National League in wins, ranked second in ERA at 1.77 and finished third in strikeouts. His first playoff outing was a gem. He pitched a complete game, giving up five hits and no earned runs against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the Wild Card Game.

His second outing wasn’t as strong. He allowed four earned runs in 5.2 innings pitched against the St. Louis Cardinals, but after the second half to the season Arrieta had, the safe bet would be on that being an outlier with a bounce-back against the Mets coming.

New York’s bats showed up in Game 1, with homers from Travis d’Arnaud and Daniel Murphy and a two-RBI night from Curtis Granderson, but it is hard to count on them putting up big numbers throughout the series.

Chicago, on the other hand, has to be disappointed with how its offense performed in Game 1. Kris Bryant, Dexter Fowler and Anthony Rizzo finished hitless on the night with only Kyle Schwarber and Starlin Castro able to break out of the funk and pick up RBIs.

There is a lack of experience in the Cubs lineup, but with so much talent, the odds are good that Chicago will find a way to put up runs in Game 2 and give Arrieta the support he needs to win.

A win in Game 2 would be huge for either team. For the Mets, it would mean holding onto home-field advantage as the series shifts to a long trip to Chicago. For the Cubs, it could be a decisive win with Wrigley Field providing a difficult environment for the Mets.

Arrieta is just too good to be kept down for long, and he should come out strong against the Mets to help Chicago secure a victory and draw the series even at 1-1.

Prediction: Cubs 5, Mets 1

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Cardinals vs. Cubs: Latest News and Notes Ahead of NLDS Game 3

In just a few hours, (5:07 p.m. CT to be exact), a pivotal Game 3 of the of the National League Division Series will take place at the historic Wrigley Park, where the hometown Chicago Cubs are looking to break the series tie against the St. Louis Cardinals. It won’t be an easy task for either team to take the lead, but there is no doubt that both teams are more than ready to step it up and walk away with a win.

For the Chicago Cubs, this is an opportunity to make the next two games memorable since this is the first postseason game to take place in Chicago since 2008. As a unit, the Cubs have had success when Cardinals lead pitcher Michael Wacha is on the mound, batting a .311 average along with a .365 on-base percentage in a total of 115 plate appearance.

Individually, it’s hard to ignore the incredible run that Cubs pitcher Jake Arrieta has been on recently. As per our very own featured columnist Joel Reuter, the 29-year old is 8-0, with a 0.27 ERA, 0.552 WHIP, 73 strikeouts and 67.0 innings pitched in his last nine starts. Most recently, Arrieta pitched an impressive five-run shutout during a crucial Wild Card Game against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

When asked about his mindset going into tonight’s matchup, Arietta views it as a special opportunity:

“Getting two in St. Louis would’ve been great, but getting one in St. Louis puts us in a good situation to do some special things here at Wrigley over the next couple of days,” he said, per Greg Garno at MLB.com.

As for the St. Louis Cardinals, participating in the postseason is nothing new to them, as they are one of the top teams who have the talent to do so. Perhaps the X-factor in tonight’s game will be the Cardinals bullpen, who will need to step up in a big way if starting pitcher Wacha continues to struggle as he has in recent weeks on the mound. Overall, this relief squad averaged a 2.82 ERA this season, ranking them in third place in majors.

In addition to recent trips to the playoffs, this is not the first time that the Cardinals were up against the league’s most sought-after pitcher. Last year, they faced Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, who also happened to be the Major League MVP and National League Cy Young Award winner.

Arrieta is having a similar stellar season to the one Kershaw had last year, serving as familiar territory for the Cardinals. “I swear, it feels like it’s déjà vu,” said Cardinals leadoff man Matt Carpenter on Sunday, per Jayson Stark of ESPN.com. “Just facing a different guy.”

Yet this experienced squad is ready tackle this déjà vu moment head on. “We’ve gone up against a number of teams and a number of pitchers where everybody kind of ruled us out and said you can’t do this or that, and I think this team has responded well in the past,” said Cardinal manager Mike Mathany. per Jenifer Langosch of MLB.com. “We understand there’s a pitcher on their side that’s been throwing the ball very well, and we need to just come out and do what we do.”

Judging by the numbers, it is easy to assume that the Cubs will walk away with tonight’s win. However, it’s impossible to count out a team like the Cardinals, who have more postseason experience in recent years. Needless to say, fans are in for a treat tonight!

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Jake Arrieta, Wrigley Field Give Cubs Big NLDS Advantage After Game 2 Win

The Chicago Cubs needed only one win to distinctly swing the advantage.

On Saturday, they got it. Now, the home-field advantage is on their side. But more importantly, so is the pitching lineup.

The Cubs’ 6-3 win over the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 2 of the National League Division Series at Busch Stadium evened the best-of-five tilt. Now the scene moves to Wrigley Field, where Chicago’s North Side, and the 101-year-old stadium, will be rocking at unheard-of levels for Monday’s Game 3.

Aside from the Cubs having a chance to take the series lead, right-hander Jake Arrieta‘s presence on the mound will be the reason for the party. The undisputed team ace—one of the best pitchers in baseball, a front-runner for the league’s Cy Young Award and the man who carried the Cubs through the Wild Card Game in Pittsburgh earlier in the weekwill be taking the ball for the first time in the NLDS.

That by itself, no matter where the game is held, is the Cubs’ golden advantage.

“Getting Jake pitching in the next game is kind of a good thought for us,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon told reporters in his postgame press conference, streamed on MLB.com. “Obviously.”

Going into last offseason, the Cubs might have been somewhat unsure if Arrieta was the No. 1 starter he turned into in 2014, or if he was more like the guy who had a 5.23 ERA and 80 ERA+ in the previous four seasons combined between the Baltimore Orioles and Chicago.

So, with a need for front-line pitching, they signed Jon Lester to a $155 million contract in December, thinking they’d either have two guys to head to the rotation or at least Lester.

It turned out there was no need to wonder. Arrieta developed into one of the game’s true aces with his 0.75 second-half ERA, which is significant not just because it is amazingly minuscule but because no other pitcher in major league history has ever produced one so small after the July All-Star break.

He takes that resume, along with a complete-game shutout of the Pittsburgh Pirates in the Wild Card Game, to Wrigley for the pivotal Game 3 of this NLDS, which at one time over the summer seemed to be a lock for the then-dominant Cardinals.

Anyone who understands the Cubs’ fandom and the city’s love for the team, which is difficult not to in this country, knows how big this game is for Chicago. Imagine just how raucous Wrigley Field will be at first pitch Monday. 

Other clubs have seen postseason baseball suddenly ignite their ballparks and cities in the recent past. San Francisco, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh and Toronto come to mind, but it is difficult to see any of those outdoing what Chicago’s electricity for Monday. This franchise has not won a World Series in more than a century, and now it has the pitching and lineup to legitimately make a run at this year’s Fall Classic.

This NLDS to this point sets up the party, while Arrieta sets up the celebration.

“I mean that was part of the drive as a wild-card team to get past Pittsburgh was to bring that game home also. Our fans are spectacular,” Maddon told reporters Saturday in a pregame press conference when asked about going home with his ace in tow. “You saw the reaction on Clark [Street] the night we did beat Pittsburgh. It’s pretty outstanding. It’s astounding also to watch all of this unfold.”

The Cubs are creating the excitement not only with Arrieta but with a long history of failure. They have injected drama and youth into this series, just as did they did in their regular season.

In Game 1, the Cubs started three rookies in the field, as they did in Game 2 and the wild-card tilt. In the game-changing second inning of Game 2, Maddon called for a stolen base, which was successful, and rookie Addison Russell put down a squeeze bunt to score a run.

Maddon also put rookie Jorge Soler into the No. 2 spot in the lineup, his first start in the postseason. He went 2-for-2 with a home run, a double and two walks, helping mask the recent struggles of rookie Kris Bryant, who is in a 3-for-34 skid over nine games but is likely to win the league’s Rookie of the Year Award.

Some may point to the Cubs’ youth as a problem, but Maddon disagrees.

“I don’t see that,” the manager told reporters when asked about his young lineup. “When I talk to them I see a little bit of inexperience but I don’t see youth.”

What the baseball world will see Monday is the city of Chicago and Wrigley Field pumping the energy. It will also see Arrieta taking the ball for the first time in this series, and if recent history means anything, the Cubs will be sitting in a sweet spot by the end of the day.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Young Cubs Fan Gets Incredible Image of Jake Arrieta Shaved into His Head

This young Chicago Cubs fan went above and beyond with a crazy real haircut bearing the image of star pitcher Jake Arrieta this week.

Endless props to that barber.

A night after chucking a complete-game shutout against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the National League Wild Card Game, the 29-year-old caught wind of the ‘do:

[Twitter, h/t BSO]

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Cubs vs. Pirates NL Wild Card Game: Live Score and Instant Reaction

FINAL SCORE: Cubs 4-0 Pirates

The Cubs are moving on.

In a game that had pitcher’s duel written all over it, Jake Arietta answered the call and helped lead the Chicago Cubs to a 4-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates in the National League Wild Card Game on Wednesday night.

Arrieta was masterful, twirling a complete-game four-hitter while striking out 11 Buccos. He worked through the game unscathed until the Pirates rallied the bases loaded in the sixth inning. However, Starling Marte ripped into a double play to end the threat.

Arrieta got some early help from the top of Chicago’s lineup, courtesy of Kyle Schwarber and Dexter Fowler. After driving home Fowler with a single in the first inning, the lefty rookie slugger Schwarber blasted a 449-foot home run to right field that drove in Fowler again and put the Cubs ahead, 3-0, in the third.

Not to be outdone, Fowler added a solo shot in the fifth to put Chicago up, 4-0. It would prove more than enough for Arrieta, as the only drama he encountered after the sixth was a bench-clearing brawl in the seventh.

He was plunked in his at-bat and had some words with Tony Watson, which emptied both benches in the process. The lone ejection was Sean Rodriguez, who took out some frustration on the water cooler. Arrieta responded to the chaos by stealing second base and getting through the seventh inning with help from a nifty Kris Bryant double-play turn to end the threat. 

Pittsburgh’s Gerrit Cole finished the night having given up four runs on six hits and tallying four strikeouts in five innings. The two home runs proved to be the difference, with the Pirates unable to find an answer on offense.

For the second straight year, Pittsburgh was held scoreless on its home field in the Wild Card Game. In those two games combined, the Bucs had just eight hits, nine baserunners and struck out 21 times.

The Pirates end their season with 98 wins, the second most in the majors. That won’t make losing two years in a row feel any better, and winning the division becomes that much more important in 2016.

For Chicago, tonight marked 14 consecutive wins in games Arrieta has pitched. The victory also ended a nine-game postseason losing streak.

The Cubs will now travel to St. Louis to play the Cardinals, whom they’ve faced 19 times this year but never in the playoffs. Chicago went 8-11 against St. Louis this season.

First pitch is slated for Friday at 6:45 p.m. ET.

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