Living and breathing in the Second City
Yeah, that hurts. If you haven’t seen the repay of Soriano getting hit in the hand by a fastball, it’ll make you whince. The question is not whether the Cubs can get by without him for six weeks. I can’t believe I’m saying this, but the Cubs’ talent is far to deep. One injury simply can’t sink the team. The question is whether they can keep up their momentum and stay on top in his absence? Let’s hope so.
In some strange way I think this might actually be good for them. One challenge good teams face is losing momentum at the end of the season, once they’ve clinched a playoff spot. The return of Soriano, could potentially give them something to play for late in the season, perhaps giving them enough momentum for a strong showing in the playoffs.
Of course, we have to get there first.
The fog comes
on little cat feet.
It sits looking
over harbor and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.
-Carl Sandburg
patrick
June 12th, 2008 at 7:25 am
I worry about whether the players think they can’t survive without him, the whole team machismo thing. They got hot the first time he went down, and played very well without him. Now that they have an honest-to-gosh big league center fielder, they can put Johnson in left and I’ll be there’s no dropoff. In fact, I predict that the story line of this successful season is how brilliant management was by taking a (minimal) chance on Edmonds and how he sustained us in the dark (but increasingly frequent) days of Soriano downtime. (your Captcha words are Utley & Responsibility - Chase Utley has been used as a Soriano hand injury analogy elsewhere - SCARY!)