Chicago Sun-Times

FRIENDLY CONFINES

Arrieta getswarmwe­lcome in return toWrigley with Phillies

- STEVE GREENBERG CUBS BEAT sgreenberg@ suntimes. com | @ SLGreenber­g

T“WOULD IT HAVE BEEN GREAT IF I SIGNED HERE? YES. AM I HAPPY WITH THEWAY THINGSWORK­ED OUT ULTIMATELY, SIGNING [ FOR THREE YEARS AND $ 75 MILLION] WITH THE PHILLIES? ABSOLUTELY.” — JAKE ARRIETA

hey say you don’t know what you have until it’s gone. Yet the Cubs knew what they had in Jake Arrieta — they had to, as anyone with two eyes and a brain did — and chose to sail into the wide blue yonder without him.

Without the most instrument­al player in their spectacula­r rise to World Series glory. Without the most important starting pitcher in the history of the franchise.

Those are distinctio­ns worth mentioning from time to time, aren’t they? Especially when the Bunyanesqu­e right- hander just so happens to have five times the victories and about half the ERA of the man who essentiall­y replaced him, Yu Darvish.

Making his return toWrigley Field on Tuesday with his new team, Arrieta sat in the visitors’ dugout, a red- and- white No. 49 on his chest and black Kith shades on his unforgetta­ble face, and spoke of good times old and new.

“Would it have been great if I signed here? Yes,” he said. “Am I happy with the way things worked out ultimately, signing [ for three years and $ 75 million] with the Phillies? Absolutely.”

Arrieta, 32, reminisced about his greatest achievemen­ts — the Cy Young season, the no- hitters, the dazzling postseason victories — during his 4 ½ years with the Cubs. He talked about missing his “brothers” in blue and noted again how special Cubs fans are to him.

“To have 40,000- plus here every night, bitter cold or humid heat, it meant a lot to us, and it meant a lot to me and my family,” he said.

He even had kind words for Darvish, calling him a “tremendous pitcher” who has been “put in a difficult situation.”

If Arrieta has hard feelings for the Cubs, who made only a half- hearted — at best — effort to re- sign him, it’s awfully hard to tell. Then again, when did Arrieta ever give himself away? Always cool. Always confident. Always ready to take the ball for a big game.

And always a fan of Chicago, and it of him. A return to the city was filled with fun for Arrieta and his family even before the start of this three- game series. They st rolled through Millennium Park, dined at Cindy’s Rooftop and Maple & Ash, spent time with friends. Needless to say, he was recognized everywhere.

“It kind of felt like it did when I played here,” he said.

A tribute to Arrieta played on the video board above left field after the first inning. It showed him with a 2013 mullet, a reminder that the hair on his head once stood out more than the beard on his face. It showed him doing pushups in the outfield grass, taking an on- field Gatorade bath, taking a clubhouse champagne bath, riding in a championsh­ip parade, brandishin­g theWorld Series trophy.

After it ended — “Thank you, Jake Arrieta” on the screen — he stood outside the dugout and waved his cap to every corner of the ballpark, the crowd standing and cheering until the pitcher disappeare­d down the steps and resumed his post- Cubs existence.

Alas, Arrieta won’t be taking his 5- 3 record and 2.66 ERA to the mound in this series. What a shame, right? Such a spectacle, that would be.

“I can’t believe you’re ducking the Cubbies,” Anthony Rizzo chided him in a text message.

To which Arrieta replied: “I’m just trying to help you guys catch Milwaukee.”

Could he have delivered a more perfect comeback? Call it Arrieta’s latest victory. There will be many more.

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 ?? CHARLES REXARBOGAS­T/ AP ?? Phillies right- hander Jake Arrieta chats with former teammate Kris Bryant during Cubs batting practice Tuesday.
CHARLES REXARBOGAS­T/ AP Phillies right- hander Jake Arrieta chats with former teammate Kris Bryant during Cubs batting practice Tuesday.
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