Boston Herald

Rizzo, Cubs rally past Nationals

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CHICAGO — Moments after his go-ahead hit, Anthony Rizzo walked across the infield at frenzied Wrigley Field and shouted “Respect me! Respect me!” A year after their historic championsh­ip, Rizzo and the Chicago Cubs are fighting for another memorable October.

Rizzo blooped a tiebreakin­g single into left field with two outs in the eighth and the Cubs overcame Max Scherzer’s brilliant performanc­e to beat the Washington Nationals, 2-1, yesterday for a 2-1 lead in their NL Division Series.

The Nationals had a base open with Rizzo coming to the plate and pinch runner Leonys Martin on second, but manager Dusty Baker elected to pitch to the slugger with Willson Conteras on-deck. Oliver Perez came in and Rizzo looped his first pitch into shallow leftcenter, finding a patch of grass between three Washington fielders.

Rizzo stumbled after he took a big turn around first and was tagged out to end the inning, but he didn’t seem to care too much, demanding veneration as the Cubs came out of the dugout for the ninth.

“I want to make guys pay,” Rizzo said. “I hit where I hit in the order. I drive in runs, and that’s just the mentality that I always take in. Usually I keep that stuff behind the scenes and say that stuff, but just my emotions got me there.”

Baker had a different viewpoint. Asked if Rizzo, who drove in two runs in each of the first two games of the series, seems like a player who gets hits at key moments in the playoffs, Baker responded: “Well, yeah, I guess. I mean, it’s not really turning it on when you bloop one in there, you know what I mean?”

Scherzer was dominant in his return from a right hamstring injury, carrying a no-hitter into the seventh. But just like in Game 1, when Chicago was held hitless into the sixth by Stephen Strasburg, the World Series champion Cubs showed off their resilience on the way to a stirring victory.

Game 4 of the best-offive series is today. Jake Arrieta returns from his own hamstring injury for the Cubs, while Tanner Roark gets the ball for the Nationals.

“We’ve got to attack. We’ve got to be in attack mode,” Rizzo said. “There’s no relaxing just because we’re up in the series.”

Chicago committed four errors, including two by left fielder Kyle Schwarber on one ugly play, and Jason Heyward also made an uncharacte­ristic baserunnin­g mistake. But the Cubs got a huge pinch-hit RBI single from Albert Almora Jr. and a solid pitching performanc­e from Jose Quintana in the return of postseason baseball to Wrigley after last year’s World Series ended in Cleveland.

After Rizzo’s big hit, AllStar Wade Davis retired three in a row for his second save of the series.

“We made mistakes,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “We made some errors, but then we made some great plays.”

Scherzer struck out seven before he was pulled after Ben Zobrist doubled to left-center on his 98th pitch for Chicago’s first hit with one out in the seventh. With Washington clinging to a 1-0 lead, Baker opted for left-hander Sammy Solis, who had a 5.88 ERA during the regular season. Maddon countered by sending Almora to hit for the lefty-batting Schwarber.

“I know you guys are probably going to secondgues­s that but these guys are here to make a decision,” Scherzer said.

Almora lined a 3-2 pitch into left-center for his first career postseason hit in 15 at-bats to tie the game at 1. Almora yelled and pounded his chest after rounding first and the crowd of 42,445 cheered wildly.

“When I got my chance, I did it for the whole team, mostly for Quintana and Schwarber,” Almora said.

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