excrementoccurs said:
0.5 games back but 3 games back in the loss column.
And that's the key. Despite picking up Holiday, the Cards are going to be on the outside looking in this year. That's why I think that move was questionable at best. Unless they can re-sign Holiday to a longer deal after this year, they just gave up two of their top prospects from their system for a rent-a-player that won't even get them to the playoffs. As a Cubs fan, I love that deal.
The Cubs have had the pitching all year. The bats have just been atrocious. Ramirez missed most of the first half. Lee, Soriano, Soto, and Bradley all simultaneously went through slumps that were longer and deeper than normal. Even Fontenot was underachieving at the plate. Point being, despite all the big bats in the line up being basically non-existent, they were still within striking distance. Lee has come out of it. Ramirez is healthy. Soriano has come out of his slump. Bradley is looking a little better too. It was only a matter of time before the bats came around, which is why they're making a move right now.
The Cubs still have the core of the line up that led the NL in runs scored last year, and they were near the bottom of the league in that category during the first half. That won't continue, and when it changes, which appears to be now, the Cubs will be tough to catch.
Stat of the day: The Cubs are now 48-14 (0.774) when scoring 3 or more runs in a game. The fact that they have had 32 games scoring fewer than 3 runs shows how bad the offense has been. However, with the big hitters coming out of their slumps, you have to think they'll be scoring 3 or more runs a whole lot more down the stretch, and with that pitching, it's their division to lose.