Toronto Star

Just another Saturday for long-suffering Cubs

Chicago one win from appearing in first Series in 71 years

- ANDREW SELIGMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND— All that’s left for the Chicago Cubs to do is make history. The Cubs came home to Wrigley Field with a 3-2 lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL Championsh­ip Series and a chance Saturday night to end a more than seven-decade wait to return to the World Series.

“We’re not going to run away from anything,” manager Joe Maddon said. “It’s within our reach right now. But I do want us to go after it as though it’s, again, hate to say it, but Saturday. Let’s just go play our Saturday game and see how it falls.”

For a franchise defined more by heartbreak and losing, this will be no ordinary Saturday. Then again, this has been no ordinary season.

The Cubs led the majors with 103 wins and ran away with the NL Central title. They won more games than any Cubs team since 1910, and if they beat Clayton Kershaw and the Dodgers, they’ll face Cleveland in their first World Series since 1945.

That, of course, will put them on the verge of their first championsh­ip since 1908.

But before they can think about that, they have to get to the World Series, and their first opportunit­y comes against one of the game’s most dominant pitchers in Kershaw. The Cubs will go with Kyle Hendricks, the major-league ERA leader, in Game 6.

Game 7 would be on Sunday, if necessary.

“We’ve won two games in a row before,” Los Angeles’s Adrian Gonzalez said. “Nothing says we can’t do it Saturday and Sunday.”

The Cubs put themselves in this position by shaking off back-to-back shutout losses and combining to score 18 runs in the past two games.

Jon Lester threw seven solid innings, Addison Russell continued his resurgence at the plate with a tiebreakin­g home run and the Cubs beat the Dodgers 8-4 on Thursday night.

Russell has gone deep in back-toback games and is 5-for-10 after going 1-for-24 to start the post-season. Anthony Rizzo is also connecting, with five hits and a homer over the past two games after going 2-for-26. Javier Baez continues to come through with big hits while making sensationa­l plays at second base.

Now, it’s up to Kershaw to cool off the Cubs. The three-time NL Cy Young Award winner is 2-0 with a 3.72 ERA in three starts and one relief appear- ance this post-season and has been erasing a reputation for struggling in the playoffs. He was nothing short of spectacula­r against Chicago in Game 2, pitching two-hit ball over seven innings before Kenley Jansen closed out a 1-0 victory.

Kershaw was ready to pitch Thursday on three days’ rest. He’ll get five between starts instead, though he will be pitching for the fourth time in 12 days.

“We’re down a game, but we’ve won on the road before,” manager Dave Roberts said. “We’ve won two games before. And I think that for us it’s an isolated focus on Game 6. We get a rested Kersh. So with that, we feel good.”

But it’s the Cubs who are in position to move on.

The Second World War had just ended the last time they won the pennant, and the World Series that year is remembered as much for a goat and a curse as it is for the Detroit Tigers winning in seven games.

The Cubs angered Billy Goat Tavern owner Billy Sianis when they asked him to leave Game 4 because the odour of his pet goat Murphy was bothering fans. Sianis supposedly placed a curse on the franchise, and since then, it’s been mostly losing with a few close calls for the franchise.

Thirteen years ago, the Cubs returned home up 3-2 over the Marlins in the NLCS. Chicago was five outs from the World Series when a fan named Steve Bartman reached up for Luis Castillo’s foul as Moises Alou leaned into the stands.

The ball deflected off Bartman’s hands. Alou went wild. The Cubs melted down.

“We’ve heard the history, but at the same time we’re trying to make history,” Dexter Fowler said.

 ?? JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Clayton Kershaw, the Dodgers’ Game 6 starter, limited the Cubs to two hits over seven shutout innings in Game 2.
JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/USA TODAY SPORTS Clayton Kershaw, the Dodgers’ Game 6 starter, limited the Cubs to two hits over seven shutout innings in Game 2.

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