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| Big Oak |
"Dad, can we play R.B.I. Baseball?" is a question I answered in the unhesitating affirmative not long after Matt Shaw took Patrick Corbin deep to left for three runs to end an at-bat in which a missed third strike call (an understandable one, as Brandon Valenzuela had set up inside, and the breaking ball just clipped the far side of the plate; that's tough for an umpire) had gone unchallenged to the consternation of Dan Shulman and Joe Siddall in the booth, and to the mystification, if nothing else, of those of us gathered on the couch with our shared bowl of Old Dutch chips and our tiny Orange Crushes. From there, everybody went outside for a while, and returned home to a five-run Cubs lead (Pete Crow-Armstrong had homered off of Lazaro Estrada), rather than the three-run lead that had already been enough to lightly discourage us. The Blue Jays didn't even manage a baserunner until Valenzuela's single in the fifth, and though they got a little something going in the sixth with Giménez and Straw singles to start the inning, an easy flyout and a comebacker that turned into a 1-6-3 double play left that promise unfulfilled. But Daulton Varsho (back in the lineup, though with quite a contraption on his still-imperfect left wrist) homered off of our old friend Trent Thornton, thus knocking in both Vladdy, who had reached on a single, and Okamoto, hit by a pitch. Five-three! Getting there, maybe! A little! Jeff Hoffman, for whom I seem to be rooting so hard this season, navigated the seventh, which set the stage for just such a top of the eighth: Myles Straw walked; Springer singled to left; Alejandro Kirk entered the game as a pinch hitter, singled in Straw, and was immediately replaced by Yohendrick Piñango uponst the basepaths (fair enough!); Vladdy singled to right-centre just like you'd hope to knock in Springer; and, after Valenzuela struck out, 岡本 和真 Okamoto Kazuma really got a hold of one for his team-leading sixteenth home run, hitting it several rows deep into Wrigley's famed left-field bleachers—which seemed to contain a disproportionate number of Blue Jays fans, a significant portion of whom were attired in matching custom t-shirts that suggested perhaps a bachelor party or some other sort of pals-fest? (Let us note, too, that the day after Dan Shulman mused that it was so perfectnly sunny a Wrigley afternoon that it recalled nothing so much as the Cubs game depicted in Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Shulman could not have been happier to explain Saturday afternoon that three fans in the stands were dressed as they were [a Gordie Howe Red Wings sweater, a Save Ferris t-shirt, and a very specific vest, respectively] in tribute to that fine film.) Incredible! Big Oak! We love that guy!
From there, it fell to Mason Fluharty, who struggled uncharacteristically in the home half of the eighth, so much so that he left the bases loaded and nobody out for Louis Varland, for whom such circumstances seem to be no big deal necessarily? A groundout that brought in a run (no complaints here), a strikeout of the likeable Seiya Suzuki, and a nifty catch by Myles Straw down the line brought the eighth to a close (John Schneider seems to have responded to the unusually high degree of outfielding foolishness that marred Friday's game by running out Straw, Varsho, and Lukes [who made a great bases-loaded catch to end the fourth] on Saturday, essentially an all-centre-fielder outfield [kind of like the post-Moneyball-A's, for a little bit there? because of how defense was relatively undervalued, and a skill that peaks early/whilst players are more affordable than they would be under freer market conditions? this brief moment perhaps looms larger in my mind than it did on the field on account of how it was a point of interest in the early-to-mid-period FanGraph Audios [FanGraphs Audio?] of Carson Cistulli and his guest Dave Cameron, of which/of whom I am perhaps inordinately fond). The ninth passed fairly unremarkably for Varland, aside from a throwing error of his own errantry, and there you go, a fantastic comeback win enjoyed by all! Except for the Cubs fans who grew increasingly and understandably annoyed at how loud the "Let's go Blue Jays" chants were getting towards the end there! There really were a tonne of Toronto fans there. I figure it must have something to do with Second City.
All of that is happy news, but I am saddened to report that this is where out time in Chicago must end for now, as whomever made the call to not install a retractable roof over Wrigley Field when it first opened in 1914 as home to the Chicago Whales of the short-lived Federal League totally has egg on their face today, in that today, it is just way too rainy for baseball in Chicago. A truly hideous turn of events for those of us in non-rainy locales whose afternoon yardworks were to be accompanied by the radio call of the game. It scarcely seems worth it to be out in the yard on a lovely June afternoon at all now, given the way things have turned out. Maybe it can yet be salvaged. I don't know. It's hard to say just now.
KS
























