Chicago Sun-Times

Rockies in the rearview

Cubs hitting reset after series loss; ditto for Heyward

- GORDON WITTENMYER Follow me on Twitter @ GDubCub. Email: gwittenmye­r@suntimes.com

DENVER — You couldn’t blame this one on Jason Heyward.

The Cubs’ struggling right fielder spent Sunday’s 11- 4 loss to the Colorado Rockies the same way he did the previous three games: taking manager Joe Maddon’s prescripti­on to “chill” and watch the other guys play.

But by the time he packed his bag in the clubhouse, he was back to doing what the rest of the team was doing after their series loss at Coors Field.

“Right now it’s just all about trying to hit the reset button for me,” said Heyward, who resumes his starting role in right field Monday when the Cubs open a three- game series against the Padres in San Diego against ex- Cub Edwin Jackson. “It’s about going forward. The goal was just to come in and relax and watch a baseball game and not overthink it — and understand that I can help this team in a lot of ways coming back from it.

“I feel good. My head’s fine. I had fun watching my guys play. Now I look at it as, ‘ Let’s go win as many games as possible and put myself right there in the middle of helping this team win.’ ”

For all the ugly baseball the Cubs endured Sunday — from Nolan Arenado’s pair of three- run homers to errors committed by four different Cubs — they left Colorado virtually no worse off than when they arrived. Their season- high 13- game division lead over the St. Louis Cardinals has shrunk to 12. Nobody else needed to go on the disabled list since the start of the series. And second- year shortstop Addison Russell even flexed a little muscle with his 16th and 17th home runs of the season.

“I think if Addison played here [ at Coors Field] right now, he’d probably have at least 25 homers and be approachin­g 100 RBIs,” said Maddon, who took Russell out of the game after the second homer to give him a breather in the blowout. “In his brief major- league career, he’s playing at the top of his game right now. That was not an anomaly. He’s got that kind of power.”

The Cubs will take little else of this game with them to San Diego as their nine- game trip continues.

“An oil painting it was not,” Maddon said. “That’s the kind of game I really don’t dwell on very long. Once [ the media] leave here, I promise you I’m going to crack open a Miller Lite, I’m going to grab something to eat and look on TripAdviso­r to find somewhere for us to eat tonight in San Diego.”

It sounds a lot like Heyward’s approach to the first 4 ½ months of his season: A mental flush and a renewed focus on the final 39 games of the regular season and the playoff reset to follow.

“I’ve already said it, but numbers aren’t going to mean anything to me at this point as an individual,” said Heyward, whose .225, no-power slump this season has deepened since the All- Star break (. 170, one homer).

“Wins and losses and what I do to help this team win, like I can, that’s it. That’s the bottom line,” he said. “And in October, if we keep doing what we can, right now, keep playing the way we’re capable of after that point, nobody looks up and sees what the regular season looks like. Nobody cares. That’s the fortunate thing about playing in October.”

No matter might become of his playing status by then.

“I’m going to do what I can right now,” he said, “and go out there and relax, have some fun and help this team. And if we get to October, go from there.”

 ?? | DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ AP ?? Cubs manager Joe Maddon takes the ball from starter Jason Hammel ( right) in the fourth inning of the Cubs’ blowout loss Sunday.
| DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ AP Cubs manager Joe Maddon takes the ball from starter Jason Hammel ( right) in the fourth inning of the Cubs’ blowout loss Sunday.
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