Calgary Herald

Cubs facing tough task

- JAY COHEN T H E A S S O C I AT E D P R E S S

Kris Bryant, Kyle Schwarber and Jason Hammel played hacky sack with a baseball, and manager Joe Maddon chatted amiably with his players and staff as he made his way around Wrigley Field on Monday afternoon.

Down 2- 0 to the New York Mets in the NL Championsh­ip Series, the Chicago Cubs are sticking with what worked for them during a breakthrou­gh season.

“We’ll come out tomorrow, we’ll be ready to play,” Maddon said. “Our guys are always ready to play.”

It might not matter if the Mets continue to pitch as well as they did in New York. Matt Harvey and Noah Syndergaar­d shut down Chicago’s powerful lineup in the first two games of the series, putting New York in an ideal position to make it to the World Series for the first time in 15 years — a quaint little drought compared to the Cubs’ seven mostly empty decades since they last played in the Fall Classic.

According to STATS, the winner of the first two games of a best- of- seven series in the baseball playoffs has advanced 83 per cent ( 63 of 76) of the time, and the Mets have Jacob deGrom heading to the mound for Game 3 on Tuesday night.

“We have a lot of confidence,” manager Terry Collins said. “Any night that he pitches, we’ve got a good chance to win.”

DeGrom is coming off a pair of impressive victories in the NL Division Series, albeit for different reasons.

The 27- year- old was dominant in Game 1 at Los Angeles, striking out 13 while pitching seven scoreless innings in New York’s 3- 1 win. Then he came back for Game 5 and worked six effective innings despite not having his best stuff.

The reigning NL rookie of the year matched Bartolo Colon for the team lead with 14 wins this year, but it was the gutsy start against the Dodgers that really cemented his place among the best young pitchers in the game.

“The second game was definitely a battle,” deGrom said. “I feel like it was more impressive just because it wasn’t easy. When you have your best stuff, it’s a lot easier to pitch.”

While deGrom has struggled in three career starts against Chicago, Harvey and Syndergaar­d provided a roadmap for the right- hander in the first two games of the series.

Harvey and Syndergaar­d pounded the strike zone, getting ahead of the Cubs’ young sluggers and keeping them off balance.

The Mets started the Cubs with a strike in 43 of 68 atbats in New York, according to STATS. They threw 177 of their 274 pitches for a strike, a 64.6 per cent success rate.

 ??  ?? Jacob deGrom
Jacob deGrom

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