Los Angeles Times

Cubs feel passion, enthusiasm of city

Epstein and players categorize the energy and enthusiasm of the team’s fans as special.

- By Mike DiGiovanna mike.digiovanna@latimes.com Twitter: @MikeDiGiov­anna

Chicago is thrilled by “an unbelievab­le win.”

CHICAGO — A sense of anticipati­on that has been brewing all summer built toward a crescendo for Theo Epstein on Friday night, when the Chicago Cubs president took his dog for a walk around his Lakeview neighborho­od home, which is seven blocks from Wrigley Field.

“People are very into it, as they should be,” Epstein said of Cubs fans. “I love being in a city that’s playing October baseball, where you can feel everyone captivated by the ballclub, everyone walking around tired from staying up late, prioritizi­ng baseball above all else. It’s a great phenomenon.”

It was one Epstein experience­d as the Boston general manager in 2004, when the Red Sox ended their 86-year World Series drought by vanquishin­g the New York Yankees in the American League Championsh­ip Series and sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals for their first title since 1918.

And it’s a sensation Epstein and the Cubs will prolong for at least another week after a curse-busting 5-0 victory over the Dodgers in Game 6 of the National League Championsh­ip Series on Saturday night gave the Cubs their first World Series berth since 1945 and sent Wrigley Field into delirium.

“This is crazy, man,” pitcher John Lackey, who won World Series rings with the Angels (2002) and Red Sox (2013), said amid a raucous on-field celebratio­n. “I’ve been fortunate to win a couple World Series, but this is a different level.

“You can feel it in the city. Everywhere you go, you go get a damn coffee, people want to talk to you about it. ... There’s definitely something in the air and something pretty special.”

The city was engulfed in fear and anxiety Tuesday. The Cubs were shut out in Games 2 and 3 and trailed the series, 2-1, before breaking out for 23 runs and 33 hits to win three straight games. They scored five runs against Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw in Saturday night’s clincher.

“Three games ago, we were the worst best team in baseball,” said pitcher Jon Lester, who was dominant while winning Games 1 and 5. “We all go through slumps, through problems, through things that put us in bad situations, but we never gave up, we never quit, we kept grinding.”

The Cubs got significan­t contributi­ons from three of the four kids in their lineup.

Rookie catcher Willson Contreras, 24, hit a solo home run off the left-field foul pole in the fourth inning and did a masterful job handling pitchers Kyle Hendricks and Aroldis Chapman, who combined on a two-hitter.

Second baseman Javier Baez, 23, started two eyepopping double plays, in the first and eighth innings, and turned the game-ending double play in the ninth. He also showed a dash of precocious­ness when he stepped in front of Rizzo, while Rizzo was calling for the ball, to catch Josh Reddick’s fifthinnin­g popup.

Shortstop Addison Russell, 22, who homered in Games 4 and 5, doubled to left to start the second, popped up after his slide into the bag and cranked his right wrist as to rev up the engine of a motorcycle. Russell scored on Dexter Fowler’s two-out single for a 3-0 lead.

Chicago also started rookie Albert Almora Jr., 22, who has played all of 47 games in the big leagues, in right field over veteran Jason Heyward, who signed an eight-year, $184-million contract last winter.

“You look from Baez to Contreras to Russell to Almora. … I mean, that could be somebody’s triple-A team just based on experience and age,” Manager Joe Maddon said of the quartet, which has combined to play only 638 big league games.

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