Chicago - A message from the station manager

By Jim Coffman

The day couldn’t have started worse for the Cubs. They watched on Sunday as DJ LeMahieu sparked an early four-run Rockie rally with a three-run triple. LeMahieu of course was the one of the guys the Cubs gave up in Theo Epstein’s first ill-fated trade way back in his first year in command. LeMahieu and Tyler Colvin were the ransom paid to acquire third-baseman Ian Stewart, who was a total bust on and off the field.

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Posted on April 13, 2015

Spicoli And The Robot

By Marty Gangler

It’s amazing what one good decision can do. It can wipe out a lot of bad ones. Like a lot. And at this point in the Ricketts regime as keeper of the Cubs, Tommy Boy has made one correct decision and pretty much everything else has been horrendous: He hired Theo Epstein. And then Theo hired Joe Maddon.
If you remember, we here at the Cub Factor haven’t agreed with the punting of multiple seasons, but we are here now and the Cubs have a puncher’s chance this season and aren’t trying to punish your baseball sensibilities. With this being said, there is a real distinction between the baseball side and the business side.
Tell me this conversation hasn’t happened:

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Posted on April 13, 2015

Not Yet Royal

By Roger Wallenstein

Finding anything positive about a miserable 10-1 Opening Day drubbing in Kansas City was a challenge. However, I was fortunate to be driving cross-country last Monday listening to the Royals’ broadcast on Sirius as the White Sox dropped the first of their four-game swoon to inaugurate the season.
This was the 47th Opener for Kansas City, a franchise born from major league expansion in 1969. Kansas City had been without a team for two seasons after Charlie Finley moved the Athletics west to Oakland. Denny Matthews was in the radio booth when those first Royals were introduced, and he’s been there ever since.
My familiarity with Matthews was limited, but after listening to him and his sidekick Steve Physioc for three hours, my admiration for his account of a lopsided game grew with each inning.

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Posted on April 13, 2015

Fantasy Fix: Deep Sleepers

By Dan O’Shea

There are never enough bench spots to accommodate everyone you want to take a flier on during your fantasy draft. There are always going to be a few guys who go undrafted, but who you’ll have on your waiver wire watch list as the season starts.
Here are a few very deep sleepers I’ll be watching closely in the first month of the season, ready to add them if they get hot and a DL stint or other excuse opens up a roster spot:

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Posted on April 7, 2015

We’re Here, They’re Gone

By Roger Wallenstein

The cycle begins anew this afternoon in Kansas City. Before it’s completed, not only will we see leaves on the trees, but they will be tinted with orange, yellow and brown. For those of us who pay attention, we’ll either be bursting with post-season anticipation or wondering how long it will take Rick Hahn to axe Robin Ventura. Or somewhere in between if the team improves but fails to challenge baseball’s elite.
The journey begins with 99 and 89 losses the past two seasons along with declining attendance for the past eight. Prognosticators like Sports Illustrated predict that our athletes will improve another 10 games and lose just 79, finishing third behind the Indians and Tigers. Does that mean the number will dwindle to 69 in 2016?

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Posted on April 6, 2015

SportsMonday: All Jumbotron, No Cattle

By Jim Coffman

No one was surprised, were they? Nobody who knows anything about baseball?
Because anyone who knows anything about baseball knew that a lineup with Starlin Castro batting clean-up, Mike Olt batting anywhere, the pitcher as the eighth-best hitter . . . that lineup will not generate competent short-term or long-term major league offense.
The first half of that statement began to play out in the Cubs’ punchless 3-0 loss to the Cardinals on Opening Night. And just to state the obvious: if Kris Bryant had been in the lineup, Starlin would not have batted clean-up, Mike Olt would not have been in the lineup and . . . well, I guess Jon Lester would have still batted eighth but somehow I’m sure that move would have seemed a little less desperate.

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Posted on April 6, 2015

TrackNotes: Dubai Diary

By Thomas Chambers

Saturday, March 28.
7:15 a.m. Today’s another day, I guess.
Still steamin’ from the NCAA fixes the night before, it’s up and at ’em for the single longest day of horse race handicapping of the year.
It’s the richest racing Middle East oil money will buy with the Dubai World Cup from beautiful Meydan Grandstand and Racecourse. Add Florida Derby Day from Gulfstream Park and the Louisiana Derby from New Orleans Fair Grounds and you’ve got interesting racing right into the gloamin’.

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Posted on April 3, 2015

The Beachwood Radio Sports Hour #45: The Kris Byrant Pundit Trap

By Jim Coffman and Steve Rhodes

If Kris Bryant’s demotion is about service time, Theo is lying to reporters – and they’re going along with the lie instead of calling him out for it. If it’s not about service time, our genius commentariat is not only getting the story wrong, but defending Theo for something he isn’t doing because he agrees with the fans they are calling dolts.
Plus: The Easier, Cheaper, Better White Sox; Deja Derrick Rose; Patrick Kane Is Derrick Rose In An Alternate Universe; Sports Economics For Dummies; We Thank Roberto Garza For His Service; Go Sparty! Fuck ‘Em Bucky!; and Chicago Fire Averaging A Goal A Week!

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Posted on April 2, 2015

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