Chicago Sun-Times

FORGET ABOUT QUIT

IMPROBABLE VICTORY HAS CUBS FEELING LIKE THEIR TIME HAS COME

- STEVE GREENBERG Email: sgreenberg@suntimes.com

“Strange” doesn’t begin to cover the Cubs’ 6- 5 come- from- behind victory in 10 innings Sunday against the Blue Jays at Wrigley Field.

“Clutch” merely scratches the surface, too.

Look, the Cubs might be amodest 10- 9 in August. Their three consecutiv­e wins over the Jays added up to their first series sweep at home since the opening weekend of June. Their lead in the National League Central remains perilously small.

Yet the feeling was palpable after the Cubs scored three runs in the 10th — the last two coming home on catcher Alex Avila’s walk- off single — and hit their “celebratio­n room” extra- hard: They believe they’re rounding into championsh­ipcaliber form.

The rest of the division had better watch out. The dominant Dodgers and hotshot Nationals should get a clue, too.

Here come the defending World Series champs.

That’s the way they see it, anyway.

“I do love that we don’t quit,” manager Joe Maddon said. “We talk about it all the time. We don’t quit. . . . That’s part of becoming a champion. You’ve got to be able to come back.”

It’s hard not to come back when an opponent implodes the way the Jays — namely, closer Roberto Osuna and backup catcher Raffy Lopez— did in the 10th inning.

Osuna, apparently bent on blowing his eighth save, put one ball after another in the dirt. There was the wild pitch on a strikeout of Kyle Schwarber that allowed Schwarber to reach base leading off the inning, and the wild pitch that allowed Schwarber to score from third and cut the deficit to one run. Unafraid to one- up himself, Osuna also onehopped a third strike to Javy Baez, who ran safely to first as Lopez — inexplicab­ly — failed to pounce on the ball and throw Baez out, which would’ve been easy to do.

Did we mention Osuna also hit Jason Heyward with a pitch? That loaded the bases for Avila, the recent acquisitio­n from the Tigers, who lined one into right to score Ben Zobrist and — safe by the tips of his toes— a sliding Baez.

“The way the boys grinded at the end was awesome,” said starting pitcher Kyle Hendricks, who allowed three runs — one on a solo homer by ex- Cub Miguel Montero — in six innings. “It definitely was reminiscen­t of last year somewhat. That’s where we’ve got to get to.”

There were lots of little things to talk about after this truly unusual game. First baseman Anthony Rizzo fell on his face fielding a cutoff throw on what should’ve been an out at the plate. Jays center fielder Kevin Pillar — the best in the business? — made one of the plays of the year, crashing into the brick backed ivy to rob Kris Bryant of extra bases.

And even Avila, the hero, had a stranger- than- strange moment in the top of the 10th, flubbing a simple throw back to reliever Koji Uehara to advance a runner and fuel the Jays’ two- run rally.

“Fluky,” Avila said. “What are you going to do?”

Charge to a commanding lead in the Central, maybe? Finally turn the page from disappoint­ing to formidable? Give the rest of baseball’s contenders something to really worry about?

That’s the idea, anyway. And that’s why this game wasn’t about all those little things, but rather about the big picture.

“We want to get on a good roll,” center fielder Albert Almora said. “This series was a great start.”

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 ?? | KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/ AP ?? Javy Baez and Ben Zobrist ( right) whoop it up after scoring on a walk- off two- run single hit by Alex Avila in the 10th inning Sunday against the Blue Jays.
| KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/ AP Javy Baez and Ben Zobrist ( right) whoop it up after scoring on a walk- off two- run single hit by Alex Avila in the 10th inning Sunday against the Blue Jays.
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