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Old 05-15-2025, 10:32 PM   #21
Nick Soulis
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Monday League Recap

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Rose Makes It 4000!



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Old 05-16-2025, 07:06 AM   #22
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Game #10
Wednesday April 18


St. Louis Cardinals at Chicago Cubs



Matthews Walks It Off in Extra-Inning Thriller as Cubs Edge Cardinals, 2-1

By PAUL SULLIVAN
Chicago Tribune Staff Writer

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Wrigley Field — A brisk April afternoon at the Friendly Confines turned dramatic late as Gary Matthews delivered a 10th-inning single to lift the Cubs to a 2-1 walk-off victory over the rival St. Louis Cardinals on Wednesday.

Before a bundled-up crowd of 10,386, Matthews laced a clean single to left off Cardinals reliever Bruce Sutter, scoring Ryne Sandberg and bringing the crowd to its feet in jubilation. The Cubs (3-7) snapped a seven-game skid and claimed their first extra-inning win of the young season.

“The crowd went wild,” Matthews said postgame, smiling as he recalled rounding first to a wave of cheers. “It’s moments like this that remind you why you love the game.”

The game was a pitcher’s duel for most of the afternoon. St. Louis right-hander Joaquin Andujar turned in a gem, throwing 9.0 innings while allowing just one run on five hits and fanning seven. But despite his brilliance, the Cardinals' bats fell silent against a trio of Cubs pitchers.

Chicago starter Chuck Rainey went 5.2 innings, surrendering just one run—a solo shot by Andy Van Slyke in the third that landed in the left field bleachers. Relievers Rich Bordi and Tim Stoddard kept St. Louis off the board the rest of the way. Stoddard (1-1) earned the win with two sharp innings of relief, striking out four and working around a pair of walks.

The Cubs got on the board in the second when Matthews drew a walk and later came around to score on a wild throw from Ozzie Smith that prolonged the inning. But after that, both offenses went cold, combining for just 12 hits across 10 innings and stranding 16 runners.

The turning point came in the bottom of the 10th. Sandberg, who had been mired in a slump, reached on an error by Smith with one out. He advanced to second on Leon Durham’s single and then moved to third on a walk by Mel Hall. That set the stage for Matthews’ heroics.

Sutter (0-1), the former Cub and now Cardinals closer, was tagged with the loss. He allowed one unearned run on one hit in 0.2 innings of work.

“I thought we had it locked down with Andujar going nine strong,” Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog said. “But when you don’t hit, you leave yourself no margin for error. And we made two costly ones.”

Indeed, St. Louis committed a pair of errors—one from Van Slyke and another from Smith—that helped extend innings and gave the Cubs extra chances.

Chicago’s offense was paced by Durham, who went 2-for-4 with a double, and Matthews, who reached base twice. Hall added a hit and threw out Willie McGee at second with a laser from right field, killing a potential St. Louis rally in the seventh.

For the Cubs, the win offered a welcome sigh of relief amid a rocky start to the season.

“This was a gut-check game,” said manager Jim Frey. “We’ve had some tough breaks, but the guys didn’t quit. We battled, and today we got the bounce we needed.”

GAME NOTES:

Joaquin Andujar was named Player of the Game despite the loss, with a game score of 75.

Tim Stoddard was credited with two balks during his two-inning appearance.

Temperature at first pitch was a chilly 43 degrees with an 11 mph wind blowing in from right field.

Attendance: 10,386
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Old 05-16-2025, 10:53 PM   #23
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Game #11
Wednesday April 18


St. Louis Cardinals at Chicago Cubs



Woods Socks It to Cardinals as Cubs Cruise to 6-1 Win at Wrigley
By Dan Cahill, Tribune Sports Staff

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CHICAGO — With the wind brushing out to right field on a brisk 42-degree afternoon at Wrigley, Gary Woods brought the heat of his own, belting two home runs—including a decisive three-run blast in the eighth—to power the Cubs past the rival St. Louis Cardinals, 6-1, on Wednesday.

Woods, who entered the game hitting .571, only added fuel to his sizzling start with a 4-for-4 showing at the plate. His solo homer in the second got the Cubs on the board, and his eighth-inning shot off weary Cardinals starter Dave LaPoint put the game out of reach.

"Gary was seeing beach balls today," Cubs manager Jim Frey said postgame. "Whenever we hold the other team to one run, I like our chances. But when Woods does that? Well, then we just sit back and enjoy the ride."

The Cardinals struck early, thanks to a solo homer off the bat of Tommy Herr in the first inning—his first of the season—tagging Cubs starter Scott Sanderson. But that would be the only blemish on an otherwise solid performance from the right-hander, who scattered seven hits across seven innings for his first win of the year.

"Just tried to keep the ball down and let the defense work," said Sanderson, who struck out five and didn’t allow a walk until the sixth inning.

Chicago responded in the bottom of the second with Woods’s solo shot, and then grabbed the lead for good in the fourth. Ron Cey’s RBI single plated Bill Buckner, who finished 3-for-4 with a run scored, and Woods followed with another base hit to make it 3-1.

From there, the Cubs’ bullpen sealed the deal. Rookie Rich Meridith worked a clean eighth and Lee Smith closed it out in the ninth, needing just 11 pitches to retire the side in order.

LaPoint (1-3), meanwhile, was left out to dry by his offense. Despite going 7.1 innings and striking out eight, the St. Louis bats fell silent after the first, stranding eight runners and going 0-for-4 with runners in scoring position.

"Any time you leave that many guys out there, you’re asking for trouble," said Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog. "We made Sanderson work early, but we didn’t capitalize."

Offensively, the Cardinals managed seven hits but only one that mattered—Herr’s first-inning homer. Lonnie Smith, Ozzie Smith, and Willie McGee were all held hitless, with the heart of the order going a combined 0-for-9.

Cubs fans, braving the chilly April air at Wrigley, had plenty to cheer about. The North Siders racked up 12 hits, turned a double play, and committed just one error in what Kokosioulis called the "most complete game" of their young season.

Game Notes:

Player of the Game: Gary Woods (4-for-4, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 10 total bases)

Attendance: 25,434

Time of Game: 2 hours, 43 minutes

Weather: Clear skies, 42°F, wind blowing out to right at 9 mph

The Cubs improve to 4-7, while the Cardinals fall to 5-7.
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Old 05-16-2025, 10:57 PM   #24
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Old Yesterday, 10:28 PM   #25
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Game #12
Thursday April 19


St. Louis Cardinals at Chicago Cubs



Cox Muzzles Cubs as Cardinals Cruise at Wrigley

By Paul Sullivan
Chicago Tribune Sports

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CHICAGO — On a chilly Thursday afternoon at Wrigley Field, the Cardinals brought the heat — and Danny Cox brought the hammer.

Behind a masterful eight-inning performance by the right-hander, the St. Louis Cardinals quieted the Cubs’ bats and the North Side faithful in a 5-1 victory that snapped a modest two-game slide and dropped Chicago to 4-8 on the season.

Cox, now 1-1 on the year, scattered just four hits while striking out six and walking only one, taming a Cubs lineup that had shown flashes of power in recent days. The only blemish on his line came in the third inning, when Bob Dernier drove home Larry Bowa with a two-out RBI single. But from that point on, the Cubs were effectively silenced.

“Danny gave us everything he had,” said Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog. “He challenged hitters all day long and worked quickly. That’s the kind of effort we needed.”

The Cardinals (6-7) broke through in the sixth inning against Cubs starter Scott Sanderson Trout, who had held them scoreless through five. With one out and Ozzie Smith aboard via a walk, George Hendrick laced a two-run single to right. Willie McGee followed moments later with an RBI hit of his own, capping a three-run frame.

Trout (0-3) was tagged with the loss and continues to search for his rhythm early in the campaign. He allowed seven hits and five earned runs over 6⅓ innings, despite a solid first half of the outing.

St. Louis struck again in the seventh with some help from the Cubs' defense. An error by Ron Cey opened the door for two unearned runs, as Art Howe drove in a run with a single and Hendrick added another RBI on a sharp liner.

“We just didn’t get the big hits when we needed them,” said Cubs manager Jim Frey. “Cox pitched well, give him credit. But we didn’t put much pressure on them.”

The Cubs finished with just four hits — singles by Dernier, Gary Matthews, Jody Davis, and Bowa — and managed only two baserunners after the fourth inning. Chicago’s lone real threat ended quickly when Dernier was caught stealing in the third.

Offensively, the Cardinals were led by McGee, who collected three hits and an RBI while swiping his fourth base of the season. Ozzie Smith reached base three times, scored twice, and stole two bags of his own, keeping the Cubs defense on its toes.

The lone bright spot for the Cubs came in the form of reliever Rich Patterson, who struck out two Cardinals in a perfect ninth.

Game Notes:

Attendance was not announced, but the crowd braved 52-degree weather and partly cloudy skies. A light wind blew out to right field at 4 mph.

Cox threw 104 pitches, 74 for strikes.

St. Louis executed one double play and had no errors.

The Cubs, meanwhile, committed one costly error and turned a single double play.
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