Chicago Sun-Times

CUBS ARE Q’D UP

CUBS 10, O’S 3 QUINTANA SET FOR DEBUT AS NORTH SIDERS GO FOR SWEEP TODAY

- GORDON WITTENMYER

BALTIMORE — If it’s not now, it might be next year for the Cubs.

At least that’s the way a lot of the players looked at this first week or two out of the All- Star break — even before the trade for Jose Quintana.

“I don’t think from our perspectiv­e anything’s different than what we already set out to do coming into the second half,” Ben Zobrist said.

Two games under .500 and 5 ½ games behind the first- place Brewers, the defending champs were the most underachie­ving team at the break. They were never more than four games above .500, never more than two games under and never showed signs that change was imminent.

“There’s a lot to be said for having a break at the right time,” said right- hander Jake Arrieta, who turned in one of his best starts of the season Saturday in the Cubs’ 10- 3 victory against the Orioles.

The Cubs ( 45- 45) pounded the Orioles’ worst- in- baseball rotation the first two games out of the break to win back- to- back games on a road trip for the first time since April.

It might be the start of something — or not, if the first half was any indication.

At the very least, it syncs well with Quintana’s debut Sunday, just ahead of John Lackey’s return from the disabled list the next series in Atlanta.

“It’s just that time to really find our groove,” left- hander Mike Montgomery said. “Adding him, and just what these guys are capa- ble of, we feel pretty good about it.”

The start of something? It had better be if they plan to make a move before the sense of urgency morphs into desperatio­n.

If the first two games didn’t already suggest it, the schedule out of the break is comparativ­ely soft, with also- rans in the Orioles and Braves on the road, followed by the mediocre Cardinals and rebuilding White Sox at home, followed by two more against the Sox on the South Side, then a three- game showdown with the Brewers in Milwaukee.

That leads into July 31, tradedeadl­ine day.

“It’s a really important two weeks,” team president Theo Epstein said Friday when talking about the team’s plans to add more before the deadline. “If we can get hot and start to play the way that we know we’re capable of, that probably puts

us in a little bit more aggressive posture, trying to maximize all 25 spots on the roster and maybe even do some things for this year.

“But if we don’t get hot, obviously, we’d have a little bit longer- term perspectiv­e.”

First baseman Anthony Rizzo said the Cubs don’t need any more incentive than they already had coming out of their four days off.

“Winning’s addicting,’’ Rizzo said. ‘‘ We want to get back to the top and be the best. There’s no room to slide now. We’re going to keep playing hard and believe it’s going to turn.”

That’s where the starting pitching comes in, manager Joe Maddon and history say.

“It’s going to start with us; we know it,” Montgomery said. “We won last year because of our pitching. We’re kind of looking forward to that.”

After riding their 2.96 rotation ERA to a wire- to- wire division title last season, the Cubs have staggered in large part because of a first- half 4.66 rotation ERA that Arrieta improved by allowing only one earned run in 6‰ innings.

Now Quintana can make an impact.

If anything, Jon Lester said, there’s more incentive in not “wasting” Quintana’s talents than in pushing the front office to add more by the end of the month.

“It gives you a little shot in the arm, and you say, ‘ Hey, let’s get going and make this mean something,’ as opposed to you make a trade and waste prospects for nothing,” he said.

What about Epstein making more this month?

“Obviously, he’s not going to make a big deal if we’re not doing well,” said Lester, who starts Monday in Atlanta. “That’s on us to play, and whatever he decides that we need, we need. But the guys in this clubhouse can’t worry about what’s going on up there and who’s talking about what.

“If we don’t [ make a deal], we have a really good team in this clubhouse, and we’ll continue to just try to play good baseball.”

Follow me on Twitter @ GDubCub.

 ??  ?? Newly acquired left- hander Jose Quintana will make his Cubs debut Sunday against the Baltimore Orioles. | ANDREW LIPOVSKY/ AP
Newly acquired left- hander Jose Quintana will make his Cubs debut Sunday against the Baltimore Orioles. | ANDREW LIPOVSKY/ AP
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