Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Cubs v. Braves, and we were there

"CHICAGO -- There were plenty of heroes Tuesday night for the Cubs. Start with Ted Lilly, who picked up the win, and rookie Geovany Soto, who belted a clutch three-run homer in the eighth. There was also Reed Johnson, who drove in two and made two great catches.
But the key at-bat in the Cubs' 10-5 win over the Atlanta Braves may have come in the eighth, when Scott Eyre came in to pitch.
The lefty reliever had to face one batter, Gregor Blanco, but there were two on, two outs, and the Braves had pulled within one, at 6-5. Eyre struck out Blanco to extend his streak of scoreless appearances to 31 in a row to tie the club record set by Ryan Dempster in his closer days, Aug. 16, 2005-April 19, 2006. He's now stranded all 13 inherited runners this season.
Just don't ask him about it.
"I don't know how long it's been," Eyre said. "I don't care."
The 41,624 at Wrigley Field did. They were on their feet when he got to two strikes, and kept the roar going until the final out.
Derrek Lee drove in two runs, including one on his 14th homer, to back Lilly and lead Chicago to victory. The Cubs now are 27-8 at home, marking the franchise's best home start since the 1907 squad went 27-8 en route to winning the World Series. The Braves dropped to 7-22 on the road.
"We talked this spring about taking care of the home-field advantage," Lee said. "I don't know if we expected to play this well, but it's been fun."
Lilly (6-5) gave up three runs, four hits, and three walks over 6 2/3 innings, striking out eight. He fell behind in the first inning when Greg Norton hit a three-run homer with two outs. His next pitch sailed over Brian McCann's head, prompting home-plate umpire Doug Eddings to immediately issue warnings to both benches.
"It was like a [batting practice] fastball," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said. "The ball just slipped."
"I understand what [Eddings] was saying," Lilly said. "It obviously looked bad. I had just given up a homer, and then I throw one up around the head. I'm sure Brian knows that I didn't mean to do it."
Lilly didn't change his approach the rest of the way, but he did settle down. He gave up two hits over the next 5 2/3 innings and came up big in the second, after Omar Infante tripled to lead off. Lilly shut down the next three hitters and escaped a potential mess.
"I guess I just felt like I had to," Lilly said. "I was confident that we were going to score some runs at some point. Our offense has been pretty tough to shut down. ... Obviously, that's not how I'd like to start the first inning again. I think I've given up a run in the first inning the last few outings."
The Cubs got to Atlanta's Tom Glavine (2-3) early. They peppered him with six hits, totaling four runs. Glavine left early with a strained left elbow, and is headed for the disabled list.
Lee, who batted .185 on the just-completed seven-game West Coast road trip, tied the game with his 14th homer leading off the third. He didn't hit his 14th home run last season until Aug. 20. Johnson added a two-out RBI single, and snared Omar Infante's fly ball in left center on the run, just steps in front of the outfield wall to end the Braves' fourth.
Johnson made a stellar catch in Washington that was a "10" on his scale. What did this one rate?
"Four," Johnson said. "There was probably more doubt in my mind on this play because I didn't know if I was going to catch it even when I left my feet. I reached up as high as I could and just got it in the tip of my glove, just barely. It was a good play, just no dive involved."
The crowd also acknowledged Johnson's plays. The Cubs were happy to be home.
"They'll let you know when you do something right, and they'll let you know when you do something wrong," Johnson said of Cubs fans. "The 25 guys we've got in here are tougher on themselves than any of the fans or any of the media can be. We're playing well right now."
Including Eyre, who missed the first month because of a sore elbow.
"It's nice to contribute in games that mean something, and you're out there in a key situation getting the job done and it makes you feel better about yourself," said Eyre, who spent most of last season trying to convince Piniella his first name was 'Scott,' not 'Steve.' "This team, everybody has a good time," Eyre added. "The music's always playing."
Lilly was calm even though he fell behind early, which seems to be a trend. The Cubs have now come from behind in nine of their past 11 wins, and have won 21 games that way on the season.
"You just feel like you're never out of it as a starter," Lilly said. "I think our lineup is just going to continue to battle against good pitching. We're tough, we've had a lot of come-from-behind wins this year. As a staff, I think we know that. If we can just limit the damage, we're going to be in every ballgame.
"It's fun to play here," he said. "Obviously, as energetic as the crowd is, even when we're down by a few runs, they think we can win, too. It's a fun place to play."

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