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Can the Cubs reverse the Bartman Curse this season?

2003 Results:
88 wins, 74 losses Runs scored – 725 (9th in NL)
Defeated Atlanta in NLDS 3-2Runs allowed – 683 (4th in NL)
Lost to Florida in NLCS 4-3Pythagoras record – 86-76


Players AcquiredPlayers Lost
Greg MadduxEric Karros
Derrek LeeAntonio Alfonseca
LaTroy HawkinsRandall Simon
Todd WalkerKenny Lofton
Michael BarrettHee Sop Choi
Todd HollandsworthDamian Miller
Kent Mercker
Jose Macias
Augie Ojeda



2003 Overview
After blowing a 3-2 NLCS lead to the Marlins (with Prior and Wood starting in games 6 & 7) the Cubs look to take another step forward in 2004 under Dusty Baker. With the signing of Greg Maddux, trade of Hee Sop Choi for Derrick Lee, and the signing of LaTroy Hawkins the Cubs feel they have taken that step forward.

Rotation:
Pitcher Age Throws Innings ERA ERA+ K/9 BB/9 HR/9
Prior 23 R 211.3 2.43 175 10.4 2.1 0.6
Wood 27 R 211.0 3.20 133 11.3 4.3 1.0
Maddux 38 R 218.3 3.96 105 5.1 1.4 1.0
Zambrano 23 R 214.0 3.11 136 7.1 4.0 0.4
Clement 29 R 201.7 4.11 103 7.6 3.5 1.0


Strikeouts & innings. Innings & strikeouts. The Cubs led all of baseball in strikeouts last season and nearly everyone of their pitchers has a strong strikeout rate. The scheduled rotation will be full of pitchers that each logged at least 200 innings last year.

Mark Prior leads the staff and established himself as the best starting pitcher in the NL last year at 22. There’s no reason to expect a decline in 2004.

Wood is another top pitcher who could move up to the elite status of starters if he were able to cut back on the walks.

Greg Maddux returns to his original team after 11 years in Atlanta. While his strikeouts are down and home runs are up, his control remains exceptional and he should remain an above average pitcher as he looks for his 17th consecutive year with 15 or more wins.

Zambrano and Clement make up one of the best combos of 4 & 5 starters in baseball.

One area for concern with the Cubs rotation is their workload. Wood and Prior were 1st and 3rd overall in pitcher abuse points . In addition to normal workload concerns Wood is an additional concern because of his prior elbow injury, and Prior has additional concerns because he was born in the 80’s. Zambrano, also born in the 80’s, ranked 17th in PAP pitching 214 innings making him a pitcher with a high risk of injury as well.

As a team the Cubs ranked first in PAP and, along with Montreal, were far and away above the other 28 teams in the league. Given Dusty Baker’s history (SF was 1st in PAP in 2002 and 3rd in 2001) this isn’t likely to change.

Bullpen:
Pitcher Age Throws Innings ERA ERA+ K/9 BB/9 HR/9
Borowski 33 R 68.3 2.63 161 8.7 2.5 0.7
Hawkins 31 R 77.3 1.86 248 8.7 1.7 0.5
Remlinger 38 L 69.0 3.65 116 10.8 5.1 1.4
Farnsworth 28 R 76.3 3.30 129 10.9 4.2 0.7
Mercker 36 L 55.3 1.95 242 7.8 5.2 1.0
Cruz 25 R 61.0 6.05 70 9.6 4.1 1.0


Joe Borowski followed up an excellent year as a middle reliever with an equally excellent year in 2003, this time as a closer, adding himself as further evidence that good middle relievers can also be good closers.

After his 2nd straight dominating year the Cubs were able to sign LaTroy Hawkins away from the Twins to serve as the top setup man. He should remain a top reliever as long as his control stays strong.

Remlinger provides a solid LH option for the Cubs. However, Remlinger is not a traditional LH pitcher. He’s much more effective against righthanders than lefthanders. Over the past 3 years his OPS allowed against LHB is .789 while his OPS allowed against RHB is a dominant .570. The increase in HRs and BBs allowed is a bit of a concern.

Farnsworth is another potentially dominating reliever. His success will be primarily tied to his walk rate.

Cruz, prior to the Cubs signing Maddux, was a good candidate for the 5th starter but now will be another hard-throwing member of the bullpen. If (when?) someone in the rotation goes down Cruz should fill in capably.

Kent Mercker was signed from the Braves and provides the Cubs with another lefthanded option out of the pen. Given his peripheral stats his 1.95 ERA last season was a huge fluke that is virtually certain not to be duplicated in 2004.

Lineup:
Batter Age Pos Bats ABs Ave OBP SLG EQA
Barrett 27 C R 226 .208 .280 .398 .226
Bako 32 C L 188 .229 .311 .330 .228
Lee 28 1B R 539 .271 .379 .508 .307
Grudzielanek 34 2B R 481 .314 .366 .416 .276
Walker 31 2B L 587 .283 .333 .428 .265
Ramirez 26 3B R 607 .272 .324 .465 .272
Gonzalez 31 SS R 536 .228 .295 .409 .243
Alou 37 LF R 565 .280 .357 .462 .283
Patterson 24 CF L 329 .298 .329 .511 .285
Sosa 35 RF R 517 .279 .358 .553 .303


Damian Miller is out, and Michael Barrett is in at catcher. Either way, the position will still be a serious weakness for the Cubs.

The big upgrade for the Cubs this offseason was the trade for Derrick Lee. While Lee won’t be $7 million better than Choi, he will be an upgrade over the Karros/Choi combo (104 Eq runs vs 76 Eq runs) that the Cubs sent out on the field last year.

Second base will be slightly improved with the addition of Todd Walker which will allow the Cubs to platoon Walker with Mark Grudzielanek. Grudzielanek killed lefties last year (.360/.444/.470) while Walker was better against righties (.301/.352/.448).

The Cubs will get a full season out of Aramis Ramirez at third base this season. While his OBP is low, he does provide the lineup with some pop.

Alex Gonzalez returns at shortstop and there’s no reason to believe he’ll venture far off his annual 700 OPS.

Mosies Alou will man left field for the Cubs. His play has slipped the past 2 years with the Cubs, but he remains a solid contributor to the lineup. Injuries have always been a concern with Alou and those concerns won’t go away; Alou will be 38 in July.

Corey Patterson returns from a knee injury to play center field. Prior to the injury Patterson was having an apparent breakout year in the first half, but given his poor plate discipline (15 BB/ 77 Ks) it wouldn’t be a shock to see him slip some. However, at age 24 with over 1,000 ABs under his belt it’s very possible he could still improve considerably.

Right field will again be patrolled by Sammy Sosa. Despite struggling after getting hit in the head, and serving a suspension for corking his bat Sosa was still able to hit 40 HRs last year. Thirty of those HRs came in the last 3 months of the year. However, his overall numbers have slipped the last 2 years.

Year – Ave/OBP/SLG
2001 - .328/.437/.737
2002 - .288/.399/.594
2003 - .279/.358/.553

While his production is still strong, Sosa is no longer among the elite hitters in baseball. At age 35 the odds are against Sosa returning to elite status.

Bench:
Bench Age Pos Bats ABs Ave OBP SLG EQA
Goodwin 35 OF L 171 .287 .328 .363 .256
Hollandsworth 31 OF L 228 .254 .317 .421 .256
Macias 32 IF/OF S 272 .239 .273 .353 .208
Martinez 31 IF R 293 .283 .333 .375 .253


Walker gives the Cubs a nice option off the bench, when he isn’t starting, Hollandsworth can fill in for any of the outfield spots, and Goodwin is fast. If the Cubs have any serious injuries to their best hitters there’s going to be a significant drop-off.

Top Prospects
While no Cub prospect ranked in the top 50 hitters according to John Sickels, the Cubs did have 4 pitchers ranked in the top 50 pitchers.

19) Angel Guzman RHP B+
20) Chadd Blasko RHP B+
28) Andy Sisco LHP B+
43) Ricky Nolasco RHP B+

None of these prospects are expected to have an impact on the Cubs in 2004.

2004 Outlook:
If the Cubs remain (relatively) healthy they will very likely win the Central. However, given their usage, the starting pitching staff is very high risk. An injury to any of the returning starters is a strong possibility that would be a surprise to no one with the exception Dusty Baker.

Offensively, despite the addition of Lee the Cubs will very likely remain a slightly below average offensive team.

However, with the Maddux signing two things become apparent. One, the Cubs are willing to spend money if they need to, and two, they have pitching depth that will allow them to trade Cruz or their minor league prospects for improvements to the lineup during the season.

Mix that all together and you’re looking at the likely NL Central winner with 90 wins.
Chicago Cubs 2004 Preview | 27 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
_Young - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 12:52 AM EST (#71316) #
Seeing Maddux's IP total from 2003 prompted me to look at his game started numbers.

36 GS.

In the MLB last year, only he and Halladay started that many games. Wow, so much for being fragile. I had the impression that the Braves were being careful with him, talk about media brainwashing.
He averaged a shade over 6 innings per game too, double wow.
robertdudek - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 01:40 AM EST (#71317) #
A shade over 6 innings is pretty low for a quality starter. Clearly, the Braves figured Maddux would benefit from starting more games but not working as hard in each one. I don't think that will happen this year - 32 starts will be his max this year.
_Matt - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 01:46 AM EST (#71318) #
It'll be interesting to see how he can match up out of the 3-spot... 20 wins is not out of the question...
Thomas - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 02:57 AM EST (#71319) #
I believe Dusty named Wood the opening day starter, and said he'd start Maddux second, to break up the power pitchers. It smells to me like a ploy to get on Wood's good side before his FA year in 05, when Texas is going to have some money to play with, although not as much as they'd like as they'll be paying A-Rod $9 million to not play for them.

I wonder if Dusty's theory about it being easier to hit a power pitcher after having seen one the day before has any validity? My guess is it has some, but not enough to compensate for losing any starts due to the way the rotation works out.
_Warse - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 04:21 AM EST (#71320) #
This is completely off topic, but did anyone else scan the Pitcher Abuse Points rankings for one HLH? If you did, you'd notice that despite pitching 266 innings (1st in baseball), Doc was 55th in Abuse rankings.

While it's true that Doc is a very efficient pitcher, it's nice to know the Blue Jays organization is taking care of its most valuable on-field commodity.

You may now resume your Cubs related discussion.....
_coliver - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 07:43 AM EST (#71321) #
Come come, everyone do the Bartman,
you know that you can can.
Pistol - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 08:19 AM EST (#71322) #
http://www.aarongleeman.com/
And if you want to read more about the Cubs and strikeouts, check out Gleeman's latest - COMN.
Pistol - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 08:22 AM EST (#71323) #
http://www.suntimes.com/output/cubs/cst-spt-kiley26.html
It smells to me like a ploy to get on Wood's good side before his FA year in 05

Apparently Wood is close to signing an extension. COMN.
_Revolver - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 04:48 PM EST (#71324) #
Wood is near to signing an extention with the cubs. All this texas talk is baseless and wrong. Wood feels bad for blowing game 7. He loves chicago, his wife is from chicago. He's not going anywhere. Cubs players have loyalty. Over the last 10 years cub's management has been loyal to its players, and loyal to fans by making this a decent ball club with a top notch manager. Wood respects that.
_tag - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 04:48 PM EST (#71325) #
The Cubs are unquestionably strong this year, but the clock is ticking. Sosa and Alou are slipping and Miguel Batista's comment about "pitching his wing off" definately applies here.

Short term, there's no doubt that the Cubs will fill the win column. Will be a very intriguing division battle with Houston, again. The Astros will come out on top tho.
_Dr. Zarco - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 07:46 PM EST (#71326) #
The Steve Bartman Ball is being blown up soon by a local restaurant here in Chicago. It's a really big deal to everyone here. It's all rather amusing.
Coach - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 09:25 PM EST (#71327) #
The Steve Bartman Ball is being blown up soon by a local restaurant here in Chicago.

I knew this would happen. Hardly anyone remembers the real reason the Cubs lost Game 6 -- Alex Gonzalez butchering the subsequent double-play ball (an easy bouncer, right at him) that would have rendered Alou's non-catch meaningless. The Cubs would have been out of the inning with a 2-run lead. Gonzo pulled a Buckner, but he somehow escaped the goat horns, while poor Bartman will be blamed forever.

Wood and Prior were 1st and 3rd overall in pitcher abuse points.

That's just criminal, and when one of them breaks down, Dusty will shrug and blame the curse.
_peteski - Friday, February 27 2004 @ 02:32 PM EST (#71328) #
http://www.esportsmediagroup.com/e-sports/articles/1,1090,46--15760--1-2,00.html
Put the blame where it really belongs: Bernie Mac (COMN).
_josh - Friday, February 27 2004 @ 03:11 PM EST (#71329) #
i was looking for somewhere where you can get all the updated stuff on the cubs and this is the only place, thanks.

what are the pap? pitcher abuse points? how are they credited?
_perlhack - Friday, February 27 2004 @ 06:24 PM EST (#71330) #
josh, PAP scores are generated by Baseball Prospectus (BP). You can view last year's numbers, or check BP's statistics page, which has links to much more information (not just PAP).

Keep in mind that PAP scores are just one method of measuring how pitchers are used throughout the season. It does have its flaws.
_will - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 02:56 PM EST (#71331) #
i think that the signing of maddux will give the cubs 3 soild starters for the 2004 season. I think they should have tryed to get ivan too.
_will - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 02:57 PM EST (#71332) #
i think that the signing of maddux will give the cubs 3 soild starters for the 2004 season. I think they should have tryed to get ivan too.
_will - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 02:57 PM EST (#71333) #
i think that the signing of maddux will give the cubs 3 soild starters for the 2004 season. I think they should have tryed to get ivan too.
_will - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 02:58 PM EST (#71334) #
i think that the signing of maddux will give the cubs 3 soild starters for the 2004 season. I think they should have tryed to get ivan too.
_will - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 02:58 PM EST (#71335) #
i think that the signing of maddux will give the cubs 3 soild starters for the 2004 season. I think they should have tryed to get ivan too.
_Rob - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 04:15 PM EST (#71336) #
How many solid starters will the Cubs have for the 2004 season? :)
Gitz - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 04:40 PM EST (#71337) #
I knew this would happen. Hardly anyone remembers the real reason the Cubs lost Game 6 -- Alex Gonzalez butchering the subsequent double-play ball (an easy bouncer, right at him) that would have rendered Alou's non-catch meaningless. The Cubs would have been out of the inning with a 2-run lead. Gonzo pulled a Buckner, but he somehow escaped the goat horns, while poor Bartman will be blamed forever.

Prescient as always, Coach. If today's Giants/Cubs spring training game is an indicator, we're in for a long year of this, because the announcers never ONCE mentioned Gonzalez's misplay. They showed the foul ball, they showed the baseball being blown up, and they talked about "the curse" extensively, but they didn't bother with the truth. But who has time for the truth during these trying times?
_Spicol - Thursday, March 04 2004 @ 04:40 PM EST (#71338) #
How many solid starters will the Cubs have for the 2004 season?

Five. Not only is Will repetitive, he also drastically underestimates Carlos Zambrano and Matt Clement.

Zambrano is only 22 and will be until June. To be where he is right now in terms of development, at his age, is phenomenal. In fact, a solid argument could be made for his ceiling being higher than Kerry Wood's.
_Cory - Sunday, March 14 2004 @ 03:13 AM EST (#71339) #
Sorry Zambrano is not 22. Everyone (or should I say most people) know that. He's probably more along the lines of 25.
_Carlos Zambrano - Sunday, March 14 2004 @ 08:22 PM EST (#71340) #
I'd better be 25 or even older, or the Cubs are sunk. We might be anyway; have you seen me and Clement this spring? Of course, I've also seen Wade Miller and his sore shoulder from last September this spring.
_M. T. Head - Tuesday, March 16 2004 @ 05:27 AM EST (#71341) #
While it is thought by many, me included, that Baker abuses his starting pitchers, it must be noted that his SF staffs had very few breakdowns, Mark Gardner, age 114, excepted.
_MsMoni - Wednesday, April 21 2004 @ 11:33 PM EDT (#71342) #
Go Cubs! Go Cubs!
Chicago Cubs 2004 Preview | 27 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.