68-86
After today's loss,Renteria couldn't even give a straight answer if EJAG will get another start.
This guy's ass must be sore with Theo's hand up it the past 8 months. Terrible and pathetic baseball in year 5 of Ricketts ownership,that's FACT! 5 fucking years of pure shit,there is no arguing that point!
Don't tell me what the future brings,because it will never justify 5 years of this!
If you disagree,then you are all minions of the propaganda. The Cubs are baseball's version of the Church of Scientology and I'm trying to break free. Please join me in my disgust and anger. Thank you for the dancefloor. (Coppock reference)
Paul Sullivan taking some shots,too:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/ba ... story.htmlthe Cubs may be the first last-place team in major league history to take a victory lap in September.
As the 2014 season grinds down to a merciful ending, the Cubs have been busy patting themselves on the back for having the Minor League Player of the Year in Kris Bryant, for record attendance at their new spring training home and for a TKO over the rooftop owners in their battle to erect a beer sign in right field worth $140 million to them, a jumbo-sized video board in left and additional signage in between.
But the product on the field was as bad as advertised, as Friday's 14-5 loss to the Dodgers displayed.
But with four straight sub-.500 seasons heading into the season, expectations never had been lower, though Chairman Tom Ricketts had said in spring training the club would be "fine."
"We have a good, young nucleus of guys, if they get back on their career trajectory that we anticipate they will, and we have a great new manager and a lot of positive energy coming through. Anything can happen," he said in February. "We're going to be fine. It's going to fine."
No one believed that, and it turned out the Cubs weren't fine. They fell to 68-86 Friday as starter Edwin Jackson, returning from a strained right lat, failed to last one inning.
Jackson (6-15, 6.38 ERA) allowed five runs while recording two outs in a six-run first, putting the game out of reach. While Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw wasn't exactly Kershawian in his five-inning outing, he still managed to notch his major league-leading 20th victory.