The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Defending the crown

Different feel for Chicago Cubs heading into these playoffs

- BY JAY COHEN

There are no billy goats this time. No more lovable losers, either.

A year after their historic World Series run, the Cubs are back in the playoffs for the third straight season. For some Chicago toddlers, with names like Addison, Clark and Wrigley, this is all they have ever known — an almost unfathomab­le notion for generation­s of Cubs fans.

But unlike last year, when the Cubs’ run to their first championsh­ip since 1908 captivated the country, they are just another playoff team this time around. Cody Bellinger and the Los Angeles Dodgers rolled to a major league-high 104 wins. Cleveland and Houston also won 100-plus games, and the Nationals have Bryce Harper back for the best-of-five NL Division Series against Chicago, starting Friday in Washington.

That’s just fine with Anthony Rizzo and company.

“It doesn’t really matter to me, to be honest,” Rizzo said. “In my opinion we’re the favourites to win it all again. In Bryce Harper’s opinion, they’re the favourites. In Bellinger’s opinion, they’re the favourites, with the Dodgers. So everyone’s the favourites. You’ve just got to go out and play.”

While they are no longer America’s favourite team - not after months of national TV appearance­s, magazine covers and cereal boxes - the Cubs return to the playoffs with something more valuable. After making to the NL Championsh­ip Series in 2015 and beating the Indians in an epic World Series last fall, they welcome the pressure of October.

“Underdogs or overdogs, whatever,” manager Joe Maddon said. “The thing that feels different is that we know how to do this.”

The Cubs were shut out in consecutiv­e games in the NLCS last year before they eliminated the Dodgers with three straight wins. They dropped three of the first four games in the World Series, and then put together another three-game win streak to take home the title.

Now free of everything that went along with the franchise’s long championsh­ip drought, the Cubs are looking forward to putting their experience to good use.

“This year, it’s a different feel for sure,” said Ben Zobrist, who won the World Series MVP award last fall. “As a club we feel like all those memories are very fresh, knowing how the postseason feels, and I think everybody’s just really excited about the chance to get back into that same mode of thinking, that same adrenaline rush.”

That chance was hardly a given when Chicago was 43-45 on July 9 and 5 1/2 games back of NL Central-leading Milwaukee. But the Cubs roared by the Brewers with a 49-25 record for the last part of the season.

Chicago led the majors with 423 runs after the All-Star break. It became the first defending World Series champion to win its division since the 2009 Philadelph­ia Phillies.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this November 2016 file photo, the Chicago Cubs celebrate after defeating the Cleveland Indians 8-7 in 10 innings in Game 7 of Major League Baseball’s World Series in Cleveland.
AP PHOTO In this November 2016 file photo, the Chicago Cubs celebrate after defeating the Cleveland Indians 8-7 in 10 innings in Game 7 of Major League Baseball’s World Series in Cleveland.

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