The Commercial Appeal

Cubs shut out Cards for 98th win of season

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CHICAGO — Jake Arrieta almost certainly won’t win a second straight NL Cy Young Award. He likely won’t be the No. 1 or 2 postseason pitcher for the loaded Chicago Cubs, either.

But Arrieta showed Friday he can still dominant. And he figures it’s because he’s stopped trying so hard.

Arrieta struck out 10 in seven innings and the Cubs beat the sloppy St. Louis Cardinals 5-0 for their 98th victory, the most since they last played in the World Series in 1945.

“A lot of the time more effort creates some inconsiste­ncies in my delivery,” Arrieta said. “Trying to do more than I have to. I had several outs today where I took my foot off the gas and I was at 60-70 percent and got nice, easy ground balls to second base or shortstop.”

Manager Joe Maddon said Arrieta looked “familiar” when he struck out the side on 11 pitches in the first inning, a reference to his 22-win 2015 season that included a 1.77 ERA. Arrieta said “competitiv­eness and stubbornne­ss” are why his walks, hits and runs are up from a year ago.

“We’ve been hypercriti­cal of him all year based on what he did last year,” Maddon said. “But to his credit, I think he’s handled that very well.”

With veteran Miguel Montero back catching him, Arrieta (187) allowed five hits and walked one. Anthony Rizzo had three hits and Ben Zobrist drove in two runs as the Cubs tied a team record with their 56th home win. They moved within one victory or one Washington loss of clinching home-field advantage throughout the NL playoffs.

Chicago scored four runs in the first inning off Mike Leake (9-11) and dropped the Cardinals a game behind the Mets and Giants for the two NL wild-card berths.

Pedro Strop, just off the disabled list, worked the eighth, and Travis Wood and Carl Edwards Jr. finished the five-hitter.

Rizzo, Zobrist and Chris Coghlan drove in runs in the first off Leake, who lasted 3⅓ innings and is winless in four starts since recovering from shingles.

“I couldn’t locate early. I was slightly erratic,” Leake said. “I just started out on the wrong foot.”

Leake allowed another run on one of two wild pitches. Cardinals’ gaffes included Kolten Wong face-planting into the turf chasing Rizzo’s first-inning double and Matt Adams getting picked off first.

Leake gave up five runs, seven hits and three walks. Manager Mike Matheny used six relievers.

The Cardinals are hoping to return to Wrigley Field in two weeks. But that requires earning one of the two wild-card berths and then winning the singleelim­ination game for a spot in the division series.

Zobrist’s fourth-inning groundout added another run for Chicago (98-55), which has won four straight.

The Cubs have so much depth as they seek their first World Series title since 1908 that Arrieta is likely the No. 3 playoff starter behind Jon Lester and Kyle Hendricks.

But Arrieta feels if he can “control his effort,” he’ll be at his best come October.

“I don’t give up many hits,” Arrieta said. “So if I can keep guys off base via the walk, I’m going to be in a pretty good spot.”

Today, Cubs right-hander Jason Hammel (15-9, 3.56 ERA), contending for the team’s final postseason rotation spot, faces St. Louis rookie right-hander Alex Reyes (3-1, 1.08).

 ?? CHARLES REX ARBOGAST / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cardinals manager Mike Matheny (second from right) appeals to first base umpire Jim Reynolds that Mike Leake (left) was hit by a pitch from Cubs pitcher Jake Arrieta on Friday. Leake was not sent to first base on appeal.
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST / ASSOCIATED PRESS Cardinals manager Mike Matheny (second from right) appeals to first base umpire Jim Reynolds that Mike Leake (left) was hit by a pitch from Cubs pitcher Jake Arrieta on Friday. Leake was not sent to first base on appeal.

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