Chicago Sun-Times

Possible ace up his sleeve

Arrieta can turn best- of- five series in Cubs’ favor

- STEVE GREENBERG Follow me on Twitter @SLGreenber­g. Email: sgreenberg@suntimes.com

LOS ANGELES— Maybe Jake Arrieta didn’t need to hear it. Then again, maybe he did.

It was the start of spring training in Mesa, Ariz., and Arrieta was preparing to attempt the nearly impossible: a repeat performanc­e of his electrifyi­ng 2015 season, in which he won the Cy Young and was essentiall­y unhittable. It was one of the greatest hot streaks by any Cubs player in history.

Yet along with that excellence came great responsibi­lity. Arrieta worked his body hard to carry the Cubs into the postseason. His mind got a real workout, too. He admits now that, by the time the Cubs ran up against the Mets in the National League Championsh­ip Series, he was drained mentally.

Maddon had a two- part message for Arrieta in Mesa. One, that the hook would come earlier in 2016— an effort to keep him fresh for the later stages of the season. And two, that the team neither expected nor needed Arrieta to be invincible. Not until October, that is. Now? The 32 fewer innings Arrieta threw during this regular season means his gas tank is full. And the big- game experience the 30- year- old has gained should have him sharp for Game 3 Tuesday of the NLCS against the Dodgers.

“I think I’m in a much better place,” he said a day before his fifth playoff start with the Cubs.

No one will stand in Arrieta’s way now if he wants to reach for his superhero’s cape.

Jon Lester earned the right to start Game 1 of each playoff round thus far. Kyle Hendricks was such a steady tactician all season, that it made perfect sense for Maddon to throw Hendricks in Game 2 and save Arrieta for the road.

But the Cubs and Dodgers are tied 1- 1, making this no different than a best- of- five series from here forward. In that context, the stage is set for Arrieta to come through as the ace he wants to be. He can turn the series in the Cubs’ favor Tuesday and, if it goes that far, get the ball in Game 7 with the World Series on the line. Talk about High Stakes Jake. “To be 1- 1, we like our chances moving forward,” he said. “I like our chances.”

Arrieta walked through the clubhouse prior to Monday’s team workout with fire in his eyes and pep in his step. He told teammates he wished Game 3 were a day earlier. He was ready to go.

“He’s going to be a bulldog and he’s going to go right at the batters,” Addison Russell said. “We have all the confidence in the world in him.”

Arrieta didn’t have his best stuff over the course of his last several starts of the regular season, but he pitched like an ace in Game 3 of the NLDS in San Francisco. The Cubs ended up losing that night, yet Arrieta outpitched Giants star Madison Bumgarner and mashed a threerun homer that felt more like a declaratio­n:

Don’t you worry, High Stakes Jake is up for this.

It doesn’t hurt that Arrieta’s last start at Dodger Stadium, in August of 2015, was a no- hitter, or that he threw seven innings of shutout ball against them at Wrigley Field in May. The Dodgers have faced Arrieta at his best.

“He’s a very good pitcher,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.

The version of Arrieta the Cubs are counting on seeing the rest of the way is better than good. It’s his series now.

 ?? | GETTY IMAGES ?? Jake Arrieta didn’t have his best stuff over the course of his last several starts of the regular season, but he pitched like an ace in Game 3 of the NLDS.
| GETTY IMAGES Jake Arrieta didn’t have his best stuff over the course of his last several starts of the regular season, but he pitched like an ace in Game 3 of the NLDS.
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