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The Chicago Cubs are a Major League Baseball team based
in Chicago , Illinois . They are in the Central Division
of the National League. Chicago has been the only city
to hold a team continuously since 1876, Chicago began
as the "White Stockings," primarily and was
the best team in baseball. The team was founded in 1870,
as an independent professional club and joined the National
Association in 1871. The Cubs a charter National League
member in 1876.
The Chicago Cubs were was originally known as "White
Stockings", in the 1870s. In the 1890s the name
was changed to Colts. In 1898 the team was known as
Orphans. Remnants, in 1901, after a number of players
deserted the team for the American League. In 1902 manager
Frank Selee arrived and rebuilt the team with some new
players who were totally inexperienced players and the
team was named "Cubs". The 1920s saw six different
managers for the Cubs, and not surprisingly they produced
mixed results. In 1921, the chewing gum manufacturer,
William Wrigley, purchased the Chicago Cubs.
The best player on the Cubs in the 1980s was Ryne Sandberg,
a slick second baseman who won the 1984 MVP award and
plugged the middle infield spot for Chicago for 15 seasons.
In 1984, the organization won their first NL Eastern
Division championship, and return to post-season play
for the first time since 1945. In 1993 Randy Myers sets
an NL record with 53 saves. The Chicago Cubs have won
more games than any other franchise in baseball history.
Fans affectionately refer to the team as the "Cubbies."
The home ballpark of the team is Wrigley Field,and was
opened on April 23, 1914 , and was built at a cost of
$250,000. The first game at this park was played in
1916. The stadium has a seating capacity of 38,902.
The uniform color of the team is red and blue and the
logo design is a red C on a blue field. The team has
won three division titles, followed by 16 league pennants
and two world series in 1907 and 1908. Some of the top
players to enter the Hall of Fame group include Pete
Alexander, Cap Anson, Richie Ashburn, and Ernie Banks.
Some other people of note to be associated with this
team include Jack Brickhouse, broadcaster for the Cubs
on WGN radio and television from 1946 through 1981.
The Cubs have not appeared in a World Series since
1945, and have not won one since 1908. The 2005 season
will mark 97 years since the Cubs last won a world championship,
the longest drought in the Major Leagues. It's not an
honor the team, its fans or players cherish. This World
Series did have a Chicago angle. The Red Sox made the
Cubs faithful feel good because Boston beat their arch
rivals, the St. Louis Cardinals. Cubs fans have been
temporarily switching sides and loading up on Red Sox
gear at Chicago-area sporting goods stores. Maybe the
the Chicago Cubs will get a World Series title soon,
the fans can only hope.
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The Cubs fell into a lengthy doldrum after their early 1900s
Glory Years, broken only by their pennant in the war-shortened
season of 1918. Around that time, chewing-gum tycoon William
Wrigley obtained majority ownership of the Cubs, and things
started to turn around, especially after they acquired the
services of astute baseball man William Veeck, Sr.
With Wrigley's money and Veeck's savvy, the Cubs were soon
back in business in the National League, the front office
having built a team that would be strong contenders for
the next decade. During that stretch, they achieved the
unusual accomplishment of winning a pennant every three
years - 1929, 1932, 1935 and 1938 - sometimes in thrilling
fashion, such as 1935 when they won a record 21 games in
a row in September, and 1938 when they won a crucial late-season
game with a walk-off "home run in the gloamin'"
by Gabby Hartnett.
Unfortunately, their success did not extend to the post-season,
as they fell to their American League rivals each time,
often in humilating fashion. By the late 1930s, the double-Bills
(Wrigley and Veeck), had been in Baseball Heaven for several
years. As the decade wound down, the front office under
P.K. Wrigley was unable to rekindle the kind of success
that P.K.'s father had created, and the Cubs slipped into
mediocrity. They enjoyed one more pennant, at the close
of another wartime year, 1945, lost the World Series, and
have not been back since then, at least through the 2004
season.
Day Games at Wrigley
The Cubs' home ballpark, Wrigley Field, played host to only
day games until 1988 because the stadium owner donated the
lights to the war effort in the 1940s, and it then became
tradition. The first night game was scheduled to be played
August 8, 1988, versus Philadelphia, but it was rained out
after 3 1/2 innings. The high point of that contest, beyond
the cry of "Let there be lights", was when famous
top-heavy entertainer Morganna Roberts, "The Kissing
Bandit", ran onto the field and attempted to plant
one on Ryne Sandberg. She was thwarted by Chicago's Finest,
but Ryno hit the next pitch out of the park to thunderous
approval. Unfortunately, the rainout nullified his home
run. The first official night game thus occurred the following
evening, August 9, 1988; the Cubs defeated the New York
Mets, 6-4. While night games are now possible at Wrigley,
the Cubs still play more day games at home than any other
Major League team.
"Lovable losers"
It can't go without mention that the Cubs have the longest
dry spell between championships in all of professional sports,
having failed to win a World Series since 1908. To make
matters worse, the Cubs haven't even been in a World Series
since 1945, and finished in the second division, or bottom
half, of the National League for 20 consecutive years beginning
in 1947. They didn't win any playoff series between 1908
and 2003, when they beat the Atlanta Braves in the NLDS.
Derrek Lee, Aramis Ramirez and Moises Alou celebrate a Lee
home runThe Cubs' 2003 playoff run ended in an emotional
game 7 of the NLCS against the Florida Marlins. While at
one point ahead in the 7-game series 3 games to 1, the Marlins
came back to win the final three games. Marlins pitcher
Josh Beckett shut out the Cubs in game 5. An implosion of
the Cubs defense late in game 6, following the now-infamous
incident in which a fan touched a ball in foul territory,
allowed the Marlins to score 8 runs in the eighth inning
(see The Inning) and tie the series. The Cubs were unable
to win the final game at home, and were without a pennant
again.
To historians of the game, this incident echoed another
Cubs disaster, Game 4 of the 1929 World Series, in which
the Cubs yielded 10 runs to the Philadelphia Athletics in
the seventh inning. A key play in that inning was centerfielder
Hack Wilson losing a fly ball in the sun, resulting in a
3-run inside-the-park home run.
The long history of the Cubs is a dichotomy. For their
first 80 years, prior to and including 1945, more often
than not the Cubs were generally assumed to be contenders,
playing well and winning the occasional pennant. For much
of the 60 year span since then, it was as if the baseball
gods had pretty much slammed the door on them, granting
them just an occasional glimpse through the keyhole. It
did not take astute observers long to realize that something
bad had happened to this once-proud franchise...
In his 1950 book The World Series and Highlights of Baseball,
LaMont Buchanan wrote the following prose next to photos
of Wrigley during the 1945 World Series and of their newly-hired
manager: "From the sublime to last place! Wrigley Field,
the ivy of its walls still whispering of past greatness,
watches its Cubs grow less ferocious in '47, '48, '49. New
doctor of the cure is smiling Frank Frisch, veteran of previous
baseball transfusions who thinks, 'It's nice to have the
fans with you.' Chicago has a great baseball tradition.
The fans remember glorious yesterdays as they wait for brighter
tomorrows. And eventually their Cubs will bite again."
Little did anyone realize how long "eventually"
might turn out to be.
What may be the least known and cried over, but possibly
the most telling, statistic of futility for the Cubs, though,
is that their first back-to-back winning seasons since 1973
came in 2003 and 2004. Not division titles, not playoff
appearances, just winning seasons. Nonetheless, they remain
one of the best-loved and best-attended teams in the league,
with attendance figures consistently in the top 10, despite
a smaller stadium than many other teams. Wrigley Field consistently
sells out during the season.
As with the Boston Red Sox (prior to their astonishing
2004 post-season triumph), the Cubs of recent generations
have seemed to be a team that "bad things happen to".
Although there is a tendency to compare the Cubs and the
Red Sox, there is a stark difference. Since World War II,
the Red Sox have been frequent contenders and frequent visitors
to the post-season, including five trips to the World Series.
They have had more of a reputation as "chokers"
than as "losers", the tag that the Cubs bear.
The Cubs have shown they can win, or at least contend,
when their pitching is superior. Outstanding pitching has
been a major difference in every one of their winning seasons
since World War II. But although there is no substitute
for front-office savvy and on-the-field excellence, the
venerable ballpark itself has to be considered a factor
in the teams' failures to go farther than they have. When
the bleachers were extended into left field in 1937, it
shortened the true power alley from a posted distance of
372 feet to about 350 feet, which is too short for major
league standards, especially for a left field. Most batters
are right-handed, so their natural power alley is left-center.
Thus most asymmetric ballparks have their short field in
right. Not so with Wrigley. This allows more left-center
field home runs than the average ballpark would. Ferguson
Jenkins, upon being traded to the Texas Rangers after a
successful though home-run prone career with the Cubs, bitterly
complained that "Wrigley Field is a bad ballpark!"
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