Chicago Sun-Times

Cubs lose, Jake looms CUBS BEAT

Arrieta won’t pitch in series, but he still rules proceeding­s

- GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmye­r@ suntimes. com | @ GDubCub

On a night when one highperfor­mance starter struggled and one struggling young starter excelled, the bigger spectacle at Wrigley Field was all about two starters who won’t throw a pitch this week in Chicago.

Jake and the mistake? OK, that’s probably unfair.

“Yeah,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “Just give it some time.”

But make no mistake about this: The Phillies’ 6- 1 victory Tuesday against the Cubs in the opener of a three- game series was mere background noise for the celebrated return of Jake Arrieta, who received a standing ovation after a rousing video- board tribute to his historic Cubs run after the first inning.

That came a few hours after Yu Darvish — the big- money free agent the Cubs essentiall­y chose over Arrieta — played catch from 90 feet as he continued a deliberate, cautious throwing program to return from his second disabledli­st stretch in three weeks.

The Cubs have set no timetable for a possible return from the triceps inflammati­on. Darvish hasn’t pitched in more than two weeks, suggesting a minor- league rehab assignment of at least a start or two will be required before he returns to the rotation.

“There’s no finish line; I’m hoping that it’s not too long,” Maddon said. “But I think during the course of this week, we’ll have a better idea of what we think the finish line [ might be].”

Meanwhile, fan- favorite Arrieta — the 2015 Cy Young winner and 2016 World Series hero — is off to a 5- 3 start and has a 2.66 ERA with the upstart Phillies, drawing obvious favorable comparison­s to the four- time All- Star the Cubs signed to a six- year, $ 126 million deal instead.

But for all of Darvish’s early adversity with his new team, including fifth- inning woes and a DL stay for the flu, Maddon stressed, again, the fairness of having patience before burying Darvish in Arrieta’s scoreboard highlights.

“I could not be happier for Jake,” Maddon said. “He’s in a good place right now. He’s doing extremely well.

“But people have a tendency to jump to conclusion­s in this game, and in life in general. Just give it time. Hopefully, they’re both going to have the same kind of numbers after the next three or four years. I’m a big Jake fan, but, yes, it’s way too early to jump to conclusion­s.”

Meanwhile, on this night, Kyle Hendricks struggled for the Cubs, allowing five early runs and making it through only five innings. Phillies starter Zach Eflin ( 2- 2) pitched into the eighth inning — the first time in a month he has pitched more than 4‰ innings — before allowing a run.

NOTES:

Cubs shortstop Addison Russell, who left Sunday’s game against the Mets after spraining a thumb on a swing in the fifth inning, had an MRI exam late Tuesday afternoon after the soreness persisted longer than hoped. Results were expected Wednesday.

Russell said after the game Sunday that he thought he might miss only one or two games.

† Right- hander Carl Edwards Jr., the setup ace who has been on the DL the last week because of shoulder inflammati­on, is painfree, the team said, as he continues a strengthen­ing program for the shoulder.

The team is taking a cautious approach with the hard- throwing Edwards and is not ready to announce a timetable for him to start playing catch again.

 ?? AP ?? Cesar Hernandez jogs home after Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks walked Carlos Santana with the bases loaded in the third inning.
AP Cesar Hernandez jogs home after Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks walked Carlos Santana with the bases loaded in the third inning.
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