Chicago Sun-Times

FOR THE BIRDS

Carpenter hits 3 HRs, 2 doubles as Cards feast on Lester, who has worst start of season

- STEVE GREENBERG sgreenberg@suntimes.com | @SLGreenber­g

The day began with Cubs manager Joe Maddon extolling starting pitcher Jon Lester’s excellence under duress and ended with three of the team’s position players comparing notes after having pitched in an 18-5 loss to the Cardinals.

Indeed, it was a strange one.

Lester (12-3) entered the game with an 8-0 record in his last nine starts and hadn’t taken a loss since May 23. Cardinals leadoff man Matt Carpenter apparently wasn’t impressed.

Carpenter crushed a first-inning home run off the video screen in right and went on to have a dream day, becoming the first Cardinals player in more than a century to have five extra-base hits in a game. He also joined the Cubs’ Kris Bryant as the only players ever to have three home runs and two doubles in a game. Bryant pulled it off in Cincinnati in 2016.

“He’s always been good, but right now he’s probably at the top of his game,” Maddon said. “You know, bully for him.”

As for Lester, here’s what Maddon said before the game:

“I just think he’s pitching so well. He has turned into a pitch maker. Even when things don’t go well, he’s staying [steady]. He’s not letting things snowball.”

Eight earned runs allowed in three-plus innings later, the veteran lefty told a much different story.

“I don’t want to chalk it up to, ‘Days like this happen,’ ” he said. “Mechanical­ly, I think this has kind of been coming. I’ve been battling myself a little bit, probably for the last three, four starts.”

It was Lester’s worst start of the season and easily in his bottom five since joining the Cubs in 2015. Add his mechanical issues — however small and temporary — to the list of pitching problems that includes Yu Darvish being missing in action, Tyler Chatwood being unable to throw strikes and closer Brandon Morrow being on the disabled list.

Lester’s ERA soared from an excellent 2.58 to 3.14 — still good but perhaps no longer worthy of Cy Young conversati­on.

Speaking of ERAs, Ian Happ’s is a lot better — as in 0.00 — after the first inning pitched of his career. Tommy La Stella’s is 6.75 after he threw 1⅓ innings. And Victor Caratini probably shouldn’t quit his day job as a catcher, although surrenderi­ng only two runs before recording three outs isn’t so bad when you really think about it.

Together, the three players put the Cubs’ bullpen in a less precarious position than it would’ve been in entering the day-night doublehead­er Saturday. It was the first time since at least 1907 that more than one Cubs position player pitched in a game.

Was there some friendly competitio­n between them over who threw the best? “Yes,” Happ said. “I won.”

After the game, Happ noted the oddity of being surrounded by reporters who were asking about his pitching. When veteran first baseman Anthony Rizzo — who has lobbied on many occasions for a chance to pitch — caught sight of the scene, he shook his head in mock disgust.

“I’ve been here eight years, and I can’t pitch,” he said. “They’re pitching first-rounders now. Unbelievab­le.”

On a day when pretty much everything went wrong, the key move for Maddon was yanking Rizzo from a hopeless game before he could badger the manager for the ball.

“That made my decision-making process a lot easier,” Maddon said.

Again, a strange day. Kind of fun, too, as it always is in fish-out-of-water situations like the ones La Stella, Caratini and Happ found themselves in.

Yet there’s also ongoing concern about a rotation whose imperfecti­ons have been largely hidden by a strong group of hitters and a solid bullpen. If Lester becomes shaky for a while, it won’t be a pretty picture.

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 ?? AP ?? Jon Lester wipes the rain from his face after allowing Matt Carpenter’s second homer. His ERA rose from 2.58 to 3.14 after he allowed eight runs in three-plus innings.
AP Jon Lester wipes the rain from his face after allowing Matt Carpenter’s second homer. His ERA rose from 2.58 to 3.14 after he allowed eight runs in three-plus innings.
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