Chicago Sun-Times

HOME ON ROAD? HARDLY

Kimbrel blows save as Cubs falter in 9th, fall to 1-5 on trip

- GORDON WITTENMYER CUBS BEAT gwittenmye­r@suntimes.com | @GDubCub

PITTSBURGH — They didn’t get routed this time. And they got more out of their starting pitcher than they did in the previous two games combined.

But don’t be fooled by anyone in the clubhouse after a blown ninthinnin­g lead that the Cubs’ 6-5 loss Wednesday to the Pirates was any kind of step in the right direction.

For a team with October expectatio­ns and a playoff pedigree, platitudes not only are bad looks but even might suggest symptoms of larger issues that have been plaguing the Cubs for more than half their season.

With the brass back home calling their play ‘‘unacceptab­le,’’ referring to ‘‘sloppiness’’ and threatenin­g ‘‘a ton of change,’’ the Cubs lost for the fifth time in the first six games of their road trip and for the seventh time in their last nine games overall.

Consider second baseman Addison Russell’s ill-advised, no-regrets throw to the plate in the ninth that allowed the tying run to score Exhibit A.

‘‘We were playing for the out and threw the ball to the plate, and that kind of messed things up a little bit,’’ manager Joe Maddon said. ‘‘If the ball’s hit hard, you have a shot at it. Otherwise, just get the out.’’

Said Russell: ‘‘I’m pretty much thinking home before the play even developed . ... I don’t regret my decision going home.”

Maddon didn’t bring the infield all the way in with one out and runners at second and third because he said Pirates batter Adam Frazier was too hot to offer him a better chance to put the ball through the infield. And he didn’t want to eliminate closer Craig Kimbrel’s margin for error with an intentiona­l walk.

Whether the strategy was right or wrong, the communicat­ion apparently was poor and the execution worse.

‘‘These kinds of losses are difficult,’’ Maddon said. ‘‘But you get back in the huddle; that’s all you can do. You don’t cry. You don’t throw things. You come back tomorrow, and you try to win the last game of the series.’’

The defeat clinched the Cubs’ sixth consecutiv­e road-series loss, matching the longest such skid (in 2017) since president Theo Epstein’s front-office team took over in 2012.

Take solace in right-hander Yu Darvish becoming the first Cubs starter to throw a pitch in the seventh inning in 10 games?

Fine. But know that the Cubs have lost 15 of their last 19 road games and that their road record (16-26) is the sixth-worst in the majors and the second-worst in the National League.

Encouraged by Victor Caratini, who was pressed into starting duty because of injuries, hitting a home run from each side of the plate?

Whatever. The Cubs haven’t won a series — home or away — since sweeping the Cardinals at home a month ago.

Epstein used his weekly hit on the Cubs’ flagship radio station to air his dissatisfa­ction with the team’s five-week slide toward the break, a stretch about which ‘‘guys are disgusted and working hard to change,’’ he said.

While the front office has positioned the Cubs to be buyers at the trade deadline July 31, Epstein made it clear selling is on the table without a serious change of direction from a team that is 16-24 since May 22.

‘‘We want to be in a position to have enough belief that we’re looking to aggressive­ly add and polish up what we feel can be a championsh­ip team,’’ he said. ‘‘If we’re not, that means that this stretch of bad play has continued. And if this stretch of bad play continues, a ton of change is in order.’’

 ?? AP ?? Pirates baserunner Elias Diaz gets his hand under the tag attempt by Cubs catcher Victor Caratini to score the tying run in the ninth inning Wednesday.
AP Pirates baserunner Elias Diaz gets his hand under the tag attempt by Cubs catcher Victor Caratini to score the tying run in the ninth inning Wednesday.
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