Ace Lester used to dealing
Jon Lester has been in the middle of these down-to-the-last-game scenarios before.
So if anybody’s preparing for the possibility of taking the mound Tuesday in a wild-card game instead of a National League Division Series opener Thursday, it’s Lester, right?
“No,” Lester said as he pulled on his coat to head out of the clubhouse after the Cubs’ 2-1 loss Saturday to the Cardinals.
Game 162 of the regular season Sunday — with Mike Montgomery starting against Cards rookie Jack Flaherty — is enough for Lester to consider, regardless of all the October implications.
“That’s all we can control,” he said.
The Cubs’ ace is expected to open Game 1 of the NLDS on Thursday if the Cubs survive the charging Brewers to win the Central.
He’s ready to react to whatever might be asked of him after the dust settles Sunday.
“All our guys are,” said Lester, who would be on his natural fifth day for a start Tuesday. “We all know the situation. But at the same time, you can’t worry about it.
“Whatever situation arises tomorrow, we’ll figure it out, then deal with the consequences from there.”
That could mean anything from returning to the ballpark Monday for a division-title tiebreaker to resting up for a playoff opener Thursday.
This is the third time that the last day of the season has had so much significance for Lester.
In 2011 with the fading Red Sox, he started the season finale, handed off a 3-2 lead to the bullpen and watched as the Orioles came back in the ninth to eliminate Boston.
In 2014 after a trade from Boston to Oakland, the Athletics qualified for the second wild-card berth on the last day of the season, putting Lester on the mound for the wild-card game in Kansas City. He handed off a lead in the eighth before another elimination loss.
“It’s different,” Lester said of the drama and fallout of final-day uncertainty. “It’s something you have to deal with. But if we take care of our business, we don’t need to worry about other teams and what they’re doing.”
The Cubs are assured playoff baseball regardless of Sunday’s outcome. And the division title remains in their control — even if it means playing back-to-back days against the Cards and Brewers.
“If that’s the hand we’re dealt, that’s the hand we’re dealt,” Lester said. “Just deal with it.”