Chirayu Baxi's Pro Tennis Fan Profile

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Brief description

A young fan's take on a well-chronicled team's history and future.

Town

Chicago

Who am I?

A fairly young Cubs fan, almost out of college, and ready for a World Series 100 years in the making! I love my team, its players, fans, and history. It's going to make it sweeter than anyone can possibly imagine, when it finally does happen (and it will, trust me on this one).

Personal website address

http://www.chicagocubsnews.com/crunchewy

Main Skills

Talking about the best baseball franchise ever!

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Chirayu Baxi's Weblog Posts


Minor news matters posted on 10/09/2008

Carlos Marmol sustained a few minor injuries in his home country of the Dominican Republic a day or two ago.  He was picked up from the airport by a few friends and family members, when the car they were driving was hit.  Reports are that he is fine, with only a few bruises and "swelling" of the forehead, which I assume means a bump on the head.  Since he's going to be the Cubs 8th-inning set-up man for years to come (I hope), all the best to him, and hopefully he's feeling great by the time 2009 rolls around.

Rich Harden had his shoulder examined on Wednesday, before the Cubs' deadline to pick up his 2009 option.

NLCS Game 1 between the Phillies and Dodgers tonight.  It'll be an interesting series.  I'll have only a passing interest in it, seeing as how my foucs is not on baseball these days.

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6 months, down the drain posted on 10/06/2008

Well, it's official.  The Chicago Cubs have become the biggest joke in professional sports.  For such a storied franchise, nothing in the world can explain how a team laden with so much talent could implode with such alacrity.  Or can it?  I'm going to try.

Well, first things first, the Cubs didn't hit.  No surprise there, seeing as how this team scored a grand total of 6 runs in the 2007 playoffs versus the Arizona Diamondbacks, and were swept 3-0.  How many times did they score this playoff season?  6.  What was the series record? 3-0.  Carbon copy.  No runs = no wins = no advancing = no championship.  About as simple as it gets.  The averages were abyssmal and I could throw Alfonso Soriano, the Human Strikeout, under the bus all winter long, but I won't.  Too easy.  Two men who actually showed up this series: Mark DeRosa and Derrek Lee.  Lee was on base 3 times in Game 3, the only game in which I felt the Cubs had multiple chances to win, and no one was anywhere close to driving him in, save Daryle Ward.  Aramis Ramirez could not figure out Dodger pitching, and the Cubs were lost without his bat.  I am not going anywhere near the $40 million problem named Kosuke Fukudome.

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Suspending judgment until.... later.... posted on 10/04/2008

No "Around the Horn this week".  Maybe I'm done with that, seeing as how the Cubs season is down to a one-game playoff at least 3 times in a row. 

Let's just get this out of the way: the Cubs must win.  Plain and simple.  It is not impossible for the Cubs to go into Los Angeles and take two, bring it back to Chicago, and finally win a game at home.  But there is no chance of that if the Cubs' play does not pick up.  NOW.

The pitching has been brutal so far.  Ryan Dempster got a bad case of the "it's-the-playoffs-OMGZ" in Game 1.  No hitting, save Mark DeRosa.  Carlos Zambrano, despite taking a tough loss, was a victim of unspeakably bad defense by every infielder.  That fateful 2nd inning, Zambrano essentially pitched 7 outs.  Ryan Theriot should have gloved the ball after the lead off single, DeRosa should have had an easy double play, and Derrek Lee, most surprisingly of all the infielders, booted a can of corn grounder.  Normally, he picks that like a badly congested nose.  Counting the double play as two outs, that's 4 potential outs passed up, and Zambrano had to work for the next 3.  7 outs.  SEVEN!  Unbelievable and unallowable.

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A Rookie's coming-of-age posted on 09/28/2008

Well, how about that?  2 blog postings in one month for me!  Good for me!

Continuing the Around the Horn system, and on the brink of the playoffs, I write this as the first pitch of the Brewers-Cubs game is being throw.  And the man that is the focus of this posting is not currently playing, but I'm alright with that.

 No one on the Chicago Cubs, save IF/OF Mark DeRosa, means more to the continued success of the Cubs as does C Geovany Soto. The guardian of the plate, and a force to be reckoned with in the middle of the order (and even in the bottom of the order, depending on how others in the line-up are hitting that day), Soto has done it all in this, his ROOKIE year.  The stats don't lie: .285/.364/.504, 23 HRs, 86 RBI, 141 hits, 35 doubles, 2 triples, and 62 BB.  As a

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A utility-man's appreciation posted on 09/15/2008

Let's just get this out of the way: P Carlos Zambrano's no-hitter on Sunday night at Miller Park was brilliant.  Sure, the Astros were tired, worn-down some from Hurricane Ike, and the game was a virtual home game, but you would have a great amount of difficult convincing me that Carlos couldn't do that to any other team in the majors.  His fastball was popping, he's splitter was uber-filthy, and he had every hitter off balance.  THe only time he lost his command has the pitch he plunked OF Hunter Pence with, and the walk to OF Michael Bourne was on three pitches that were extremely close but didn't go Carlos' way.  It is great to see Carlos Zambrano back on the mound, the human buzzsaw of every major league lineup.

And on we go to the Around the Horn feature of this blog, IF/OF Mark DeRosa.

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