It's notable that I skipped an update in February, and that it's with an usual sense of relief that I was able to get 50 posts done this month. Frankly, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels siphoned much of my creative willpower. Thanks to NCHS making the state championship game, I was able to limp across the finish line with an hour to spare this month. As I recharge with new freedom and take stock of the rest of my goals, how did it go?
Physical Health
Exercise/stretch 5+ days per week
By choice, I've reduced to 3 days a week of exercise to allow my knee a breather (see below). However, I haven't stretched much at all, which would've helped me hit this goal as I should have. Like I said, DRS took a lot out of me.
Body fat 14%
Check. The fat-o-meter's been reading less than 13% recently.
Healthy knee
I visited the Sports Enhancement Center and got yet a third opinion that my knee is structurally sound. I'm set up with at least one physical therapy appointment to see if I can learn some new exercises. I have cut my running in half, which has provided some relief.
Fruits/vegetables 5+ days per week
Check.
Increased use of sunscreen and other skin care products
Check, though my usage did drop off a bit, maybe a third of the days in the last two months.
Financial Health
Expenses below 2014 levels
I still need to finalize what the 2014 levels were. I have done a good job of shopping at Sam's Club and thinking through purchase decisions. Plus I've been more selective in my medical health, no fliers with a chiropractor for example.
Improved tutoring records
Long way to go here. In fact I've been as bad as I've ever been. Still keeping up generally with invoices, but not with travel or other records.
Community Engagement
Volunteer for a new organization
No real progress to report here. I did explore a treasurer need at the PATH crisis center, but it seemed more like a mere mouthpiece without real access to the financial reports.
Develop and execute a marketing plan for tutoring
I've had several meetings with another tutor to discuss business possibilities, and I have recruited a total of three assistants to carry me through 15 students who I'd otherwise have had to say no to. That's been the most profound blessing of the year so far.
Personal Character And Leadership
Blog thanks weekly
Almost total whiff on this one, which is probably more serious than it seems on the surface. My spirit's been dragging a bit with the setback of failing in the DRS auditions, and one could fairly say I've spent less time being thankful these last two months than in any similar period in recent memory. Time to get that spark back.
Make 10 new acquaintances, including a mentoring relationship
Through DRS I met at least three new people I can now call friends. I haven't followed through on the mentoring idea.
Lead condominium association projects, such as new driveway (completed January)
Arrive early/discipline
I've continued to do "C" level work on this one, maybe sliding toward "C minus."
Summary
This has been a definitive two-month stretch that's led me to put theater in my rear view window for now. The next month is primed to be an energy surge, applying myself in arenas where my talent + hard work is enough to achieve my goals. Failure is the great teacher, a provider of chances to get stronger simply by getting up. I'm already back to logging 9-hour tutoring days with more requests pouring in. I'm back in the zone.
I remember from my actuarial days when a retired former department head visited us for a half hour. A comment that stuck with me was the "adrenaline rush" he felt as he came to work every morning.
At the time, the seed of the idea to leave actuarial work hadn't been planted in my mind, but my instant reaction was "I've almost never had an adrenaline rush coming to work."
Now, I understand why.
This afternoon texts flowed in an out speedily as I busily juggled the schedules of many of my 30 students. The timing of tests, quizzes, sports, spring breaks, plays and illness makes scheduling a continual mental ballet. It is a complicated and difficult task. For a person who finds it uninspiring (read: Joe in several actuarial projects) this could have been tedious at best, and nearly torturous at worst. But I thrive in it. The adrenaline rush of meeting the needs of hundreds of people (especially when you include parents) just in time, by using creative strengths, leads me into 8-hour tutoring marathons without hesitation, and sometimes without remembering to build in a meal.
My advice: Explore vocations until you find your rush.
Almost every day, Derek Stevens likes to stop at the sportsbook at the Golden Nugget Hotel & Casino, located between the two properties he owns, to plunk down a bet.
On Dec. 5, Stevens walked in and told sportsbook director Tony Miller that he wanted to make a bet on Michigan State to win it all and to make sure that if he did win, he'd win $1 million.
Despite Stevens' being a regular customer, Miller's sportsbook doesn't accept bets that could cause such a colossal loss, so he called up his boss, Tilman Fertitta, who owns the Golden Nugget, to approve the bet.
Courtesy Derek Stevens"In my nine years at this sportsbook, I never accepted a bet that could result in us paying $1 million," Golden Nugget Hotel & Casino sportsbook director Tony Miller said.
It was a relatively smooth conversation. The Spartans were at 50-1 to win it all at the time, having just lost their third game of the young, eight-game season to Notre Dame.
So Miller accepted Stevens' $20,000 bet, never thinking he'd be sweating the possibility that the Spartans could pull it off.
"In my nine years at this sportsbook, I never accepted a bet that could result in us paying $1 million," Miller said. "The most I've ever seen won here was a $100,000 parlay."
Stevens, who owns The D and Golden Gate hotels in downtown Las Vegas, said he didn't see anything particularly special; he is just a fan and felt like getting aggressive.
"I bet $1,000 on an NFL game," said Stevens, who attended the University of Michigan but said he also pulls for the Spartans. "I don't do bets this big."
Asked whether he will hedge his bet so he comes out a winner even if the Spartans lose, Stevens said he needs to see how he feels over the next couple of days.
Stevens gives the Golden Nugget the business because Nevada state gaming regulations forbid owners from placing bets at their own establishments.
Miller and Stevens have become good friends over the years, which makes the fact that the Spartans have two games to win it all a bit awkward.
"This would be a massive loss for us," Miller said. "I see days where we lose $10,000 to $30,000, but nothing close to $1 million."
Stevens said he plans on watching Saturday night's game versus Duke at the sports bar at The D, inviting Spartans fans to show up in their green and white to root on the team and his $1 million bet.
"If I win, I'll give some bonus money to my employees," Stevens said. "I also want to give some money to the [Jerry] Tarkanian Basketball Academy, and the rest I will reinvest in my properties."
As for Miller, he watched Friday's Sweet 16 game against Oklahoma with Stevens but isn't sure where he'll catch this Saturday's game. All he knows is he'll be watching every second.
Said Miller: "I haven't watched a Spartans game as closely as I've watched the last two."
"And so as the pigeons say farewell to Beaumont Sur Mer, a new flock comes home to roost." - Andre Thibault
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels taught me some powerful lessons about the role of theater in my life going forward.
The energy it's consumed has left little ambition for blogging as much as I'd like, so I feel a sense of rising excitement as we head into today's final show.
Like all adventures there is too much to be thankful for to list. Some of the most significant influences:
Aimee Kerber who directed me with encouragement and made me a better performer, especially as a drunk.
Rosie Hauck who danced... and danced... and danced with me until it became like we'd been dancing our whole lives. We were naturally joined at the hip and she's become yet another dear theater friend.
Dave Montague who proved himself to be the best possible guy to lose a role to. His spirit of encouragement and perfectionism throughout made him a joy to walk beside.
Jen Maloy, for the humbling and touching words in your card.
Josh McCauley, one of my newest theater friends. It always helps when you have much in common, and I'm not just being cliquish with a fellow Irishman here, but he was a light in what was a dark show for me.
Bridgette Richard, who taught me to dance, invited the whole State Farm actuarial department, and encouraged us from start to finish.
And but of course "I have often been grateful for the power of the mild antihistamine."
For all the ways that theater has kept me young these last three years, and until the theater flame begins to burn again, I am blessed and thankful for this memorable chapter.
The 5 "not-so-secret"secrets to living your DREAM life:
-Let Go, and Let God! Let go of all your doubts, fears, worries, & insecurities and allow God to take the wheel
-Take Action! Whether it's your health/fitness, finances, career, spiritual life, relationships/marriage, etc... You must stop sitting back and waiting for things to go the way you want, you must take the necessary steps toward the life you want and CREATE the life you want!
-FORGIVENESS! In order to have the future you want, you must let go of the past. Keep the lessons you learned from the past, but keep moving toward a brighter future as well! Forgive yourself & others, not only for the sake of others, but for your own peace of mind!
-Follow your PASSION! Working hard for something you don't care about is just stress, but working hard for something you're passionate about is THE DREAM!!!!
-Treat EVERYONE (no matter what, no excuses, no exceptions) the way you want to be treated, with dignity & respect!
I can honestly say that I wake up every morning overjoyed and grateful for the life I am living, in every single aspect of my life!!! Any areas where I am lacking, I start with faith & trust in God and then take action toward my DREAMS!!!
"When your past becomes more significant than your future, you're done." - John Wooden
As we age our physical abilities decline. What grows is our experience. We must continue to experience life, in the same or more adventurous paths, in order to be significant. And in some ways, the less we care about being personally significant, the more significant we become.
"He who has a why to live can bear almost any how." - Nietzche
I generally believe that God's put us here for a reason, a little different for each of us. This quote was cited by baseball manager Clint Hurdle, who managed his Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team while enduring agonizing physical pain from a degenerative hip. But because he believed in his mission, he stuck it out.
There was a time when I thought that maybe coaching or acting might be that driving purpose. The closest thing I have at the moment is teaching, which is a fine place to be. I still find the thought of the occasional 12-hour tutoring day during finals week to be as exciting as pulling a child safely from a burning building.
I've been invited by five different people in the last week to participate in various theater shows. Like a decade ago, when several people suggested that I consider joining the seminary, it's been a test of discerning my real gifts. It's a blessing to be gifted enough to be called, and also to be old enough to know better.
The Cubs have a new front-line starter and top-tier manager, a slew of elite prospects, and money to spend. The front office has a plan, and the division is in decline. So stop talking about building a future contender, North Siders. The playoff run begins now.
We’re supposed to be living in the future by now. To an entire generation of Americans,1 “2015” has long been shorthand for a quasi-utopic vision of better living through technology. In its depiction of 2015, Back to the Future Part II promised us flying cars, hoverboards, and pizzas that get rehydrated to perfection in two seconds. It also promised us video phones, enormous flat-screen TVs, and virtual-reality headsets, but it’s human nature to focus on the things we don’t have over the things we got used to five years ago. (And self-lacing shoes are on their way.)
But now that 2015 is upon us, there’s only one scene from Back to the Future Part II that really matters, and it’s this one:
“Yeah, it’s something, huh? Who would have thought? 100-to-1 shot! I wish I could go back to the beginning of the season, put some money on the Cubs.”
As far as predictions from the movie go, you’re better off counting on us getting flying cars — maybe Elon Musk will release the mother of all software updates for the Tesla before October — because this prophecy isn’t coming true. No, not the part about the Cubs winning the World Series — the other part. As Opening Day approaches, you can’t get 100-to-1 odds on the Cubs anywhere. Far from being the longest of shots, the team that has lost more games over the last five years than any except the Astros is now everyone’s preseason darling.
Rich Pilling/Getty Images Kris Bryant
Relics are once-ordinary objects that, by dint of suffering and the long passage of time, acquire a sacred patina. By that definition, the Cubs front office is seeking the holiest relic in the history of American sports: a Chicago Cubs world championship, the last of which, claimed in 1908, has almost certainly receded beyond the memory of any living Cubs fan.2
As with most relics, attaining this one will require not just talent and perseverance, but some kind of divine providence, because baseball’s current playoff structure introduces an uncontrollable element of randomness into the quest. The Cubs front office has no solution to that problem. No one does.3 But though Cubs president Theo Epstein and GM Jed Hoyer can’t guarantee a world championship, they can guarantee the next best thing, which has been nearly as elusive on the North Side: a consistent contender.
The Cubs have been consistently good at times (they managed six straight winning seasons from 1967 to 1972) and sporadically great at others (the 1984 team won 96 games and is still remembered as fondly as any non-pennant-winning club in modern history). But they haven’t been both in ages.
Consider this: The Cubs have not won 90 games in consecutive seasons since 1930. That streak goes a long way toward explaining The Streak, and is nearly as improbable. That’s also the streak that the front office has the power to end. The postseason is a lottery, but you can’t win if you don’t play, and Epstein and Hoyer have the Cubs poised to hold a lot of tickets. It is their acumen, in fact, that has ruined the movie’s prophecy.
Nam Y. Huh/AP Photo Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein
We weren’t supposed to be living in this future just yet. The Cubs have been building toward better days since the moment Epstein and Hoyer were hired after the 2011 season, but the pair inherited such an old, expensive, and bad roster (and a weak farm system to boot) that it seemed foolishly optimistic to think the club would be ready to contend by 2015. As recently as last March, when I looked in on the state of the franchise, I hedged my bets on the time frame despite being exceedingly optimistic about the team’s long-term future. The most I was willing to commit to was that “The Cubs may not get past the Cardinals, but a spot in the 2015 wild-card game is worth reaching for.” As recently as last October, even Cubs fans were still unwilling to buy in, judging from the 50-to-1 odds you could have gotten on a 2015 world championship at the time.
And then, somewhere between the October hiring of manager Joe Maddon and the December signing of ace Jon Lester, a dam broke, and baseball fans nationwide suddenly realized that this sleeping giant of a franchise had awoken from its extended hibernation. This winter’s liberal dispensation of cash eroded the hard-earned cynicism of Cubs fans who were skeptical of ownership’s promise to spend money as soon as the front office asked for it. After years of entrenched pessimism, the collective mood has turned so exuberant that Alan Greenspan would denounce it. The Vegas odds on the Cubs winning the World Series dropped as low as 6-to-1 a few weeks ago, presumably because Cubs fans were delirious from priapism after seeing this in spring training:
While it may have taken the Cubs hiring one of the game’s best managers and signing one of the game’s best free agents for everyone to notice, the fact is that the groundwork for one of the quickest-loading bandwagons in recent sports history was laid before this offseason began. The 2014 Cubs may have been terrible, but 2014 wasn’t terrible for the Cubs.
Rich Pilling/Getty Images Jorge Soler
It was actually pretty spectacular. Here’s just a partial list of the good things that were happening while the Cubs played possum with a 73-89 record:
• First baseman Anthony Rizzo, who slumped to a .233/.323/.419 line in 2013, hit .286/.386/.527 with 32 homers and finished 10th in NL MVP voting. Rizzo is under team control through 2021. • Shortstop Starlin Castro, who also slumped in 2013 by hitting .245/.284/.347, also bounced back in a big way, hitting .292/.339/.438. Like Rizzo, Castro set a career high in OPS+, and like Rizzo, Castro enters this season at just 25 years old. Castro is under team control through 2020. • Third baseman Kris Bryant, the no. 2 overall pick in the 2013 draft, had set extreme expectations for himself after hitting .336/.390/.688 in a 36-game 2013 pro debut. He then obliterated those expectations in 2014, hitting .325/.438/.661 between Double-A and Triple-A and leading the minors with 43 homers. Baseball America ranks him as the no. 1 prospect in baseball. • Right fielder Jorge Soler, who had signed a nine-year, $30 million contract with the Cubs after he defected from Cuba in 2012, had a difficult 2013. He hit .281/.343/.467 in A-ball, good but not overwhelming numbers, and appeared in only 55 games before a stress fracture in his left tibia knocked him out of action. He also got suspended for five games for charging the opponents’ dugout with a bat.
Soler started 2014 by missing two months with hamstring issues, but once he was healthy he needed only 22 games in Double-A, where he hit .415 and slugged .862, to earn a promotion to Triple-A, where he hit .282/.378/.618 in 32 games. Promoted to the majors in late August, Soler became the third player in the last 100 years4 to mash an extra-base hit in each of the first five games of his career. He hit .292/.330/.573 in his 24-game audition with the Cubs. Baseball America rates Soler as the no. 12 prospect in baseball. • Jason Hammel, who had signed a one-year contract with the Cubs after posting a disappointing 4.97 ERA in Baltimore in 2013, had the best season of his career, managing a 2.98 ERA in his 17 starts before being traded to Oakland. Hammel rejoined the Cubs this offseason on a very reasonable two-year, $20 million contract. • After two promising seasons in the rotation in 2012 and 2013, Jeff Samardzija broke out in 2014, posting a 2.83 ERA in his first 17 starts before also being traded to Oakland. • In exchange for a half-season of Hammel and a season and a half of Samardzija,5 A’s GM Billy Beane decided to go for broke, surrendering Addison Russell, Billy McKinney, and Dan Straily.
Russell, who was just 20 years old last season, hit .295/.350/.508 in Double-A and is considered an elite defensive shortstop; he frequently gets compared to Barry Larkin, and Baseball America rates him as the no. 3 prospect in baseball. McKinney, an outfielder whom the A’s drafted in the first round in 2013, was hitting .241/.330/.400 at the time of the trade, but hit .301/.390/.432 after, as a 19-year-old in high-A ball. He also made Baseball America’s Top 100. Straily is now with Houston due to another trade I’ll get to in a bit. • Javier Baez, who hit 37 homers between A-ball and Double-A in 2013, continued to show freakish power for a middle infielder, hitting 23 homers in 104 games and slugging .510 in Triple-A in 2014 before being promoted to the majors. In Chicago, Baez showed potentially huge power with nine homers in 52 games, but that display was often overshadowed by his massive contact issues, as he hit .169 and struck out in 41 percent of his plate appearances. He has as much variance as any young player in the game today, but his upside is enormous. • Arismendy Alcantara elevated himself as a prospect by hitting .307/.353/.537 in his first taste of Triple-A, earning a call-up in July. While he hit only .205/.254/.367 in Chicago, he showed good defensive chops at both second base and in center field. Given his ability to play multiple positions and switch-hit, Alcantara figures to be a key element of this year’s team as a super-utility man. • Left fielder Chris Coghlan, signed as a free agent after several lost seasons in Miami, found his way into the lineup and hit .283/.352/.452 in 125 games, his best performance since his Rookie of the Year season in 2009. • Right-handed starter Kyle Hendricks, one of two prospects the Cubs acquired from Texas for Ryan Dempster at the trade deadline in 2012, was called up in July and was sensational, posting a 2.46 ERA in 13 starts despite a fastball that averaged 88 mph and just 47 strikeouts in 80.1 innings. Between his lack of velocity and strikeouts, there’s no way he can continue to be that effective, but Hendricks’s elite command of all of his pitches keeps him from making mistakes both outside the strike zone (walks) and inside (homers). Plus, his ERA could jump a point and a half and he’d still be an effective no. 4 starter. • Jake Arrieta became the biggest breakout pitcher in baseball. Despite excellent stuff, Arrieta had been a huge disappointment in Baltimore, posting a 5.46 ERA over parts of four seasons. The Cubs were intrigued by both his stuff and his peripheral numbers — his FIP in Baltimore was nearly a full run lower than his ERA — and acquired him in 2013 in exchange for three lost months of Scott Feldman.
In his first full season with the Cubs, Arrieta made some mechanical tweaks, perfected a slider that he can manipulate as if it’s three different pitches, and kicked the ever-loving crap out of the National League. His 2.53 ERA in 25 starts actually underrates him; with 167 strikeouts, 41 walks, and just five homers allowed in 156.2 innings, his 2.26 FIP was the second-best in the majors among pitchers with 100 or more innings, behind only Clayton Kershaw. It was just one season, and there’s always the possibility that it was a stone-cold fluke. But in 2014, Arrieta was a bona fide no. 1 starter. And it’s worth noting that Samardzija, the last Cubs pitcher to improve so dramatically from one year to the next, kept getting better and better after breaking out. There’s a reason pitching coach Chris Bosio has such a strong reputation. • The Cubs had the no. 4 pick in the June draft and selected catcher/outfielder Kyle Schwarber out of Indiana University. The jury is still very much out on whether Schwarber can develop the defensive chops to stick behind the plate, but after mashing .344/.428/.634 in his pro debut and advancing to high-A ball barely a month after signing, his bat looks like it will play at any position. He’s just the fourth-best hitting prospect in the organization, but Baseball America ranks him as the no. 19 prospect in the game. • Maddon unexpectedly opted out of his contract with the Tampa Bay Rays shortly after their GM, Andrew Friedman, joined the Dodgers. With arguably the game’s best manager suddenly available, the Cubs made the cold, ruthless, and correct decision to part with incumbent Rick Renteria — who had committed no fireable offenses in his one year at the helm — and hire Maddon. • The Cubs landed Lester, the second-best player on the free-agent market (behind Max Scherzer) and their top target. And because Lester had been traded to Oakland at the deadline, he did not have draft pick compensation attached to him. The Cubs would have signed him anyway; getting to keep their second-round pick in this year’s draft was just a bonus. • The bullpen, which was a mess in 2013 (ranking 13th in the NL with a 4.04 bullpen ERA), was much improved. Pedro Strop, also acquired in the Feldman trade after allowing 19 runs in 22.1 innings for the Orioles in 2013, returned to his 2012 form immediately after the trade; he threw 61 innings for the Cubs last year with a 2.21 ERA. Justin Grimm and Neil Ramirez, who were starters in the Rangers’ system when the Cubs acquired them in the Matt Garza trade, both shone after a move to the bullpen. And Hector Rondon, who had an uneven rookie season as a Rule 5 player in 2013, was a revelation in 2014: He somehow cut his walk rate in half while increasing the average velocity on his fastball from 93.0 to 95.0 mph. Strop, Ramirez, and Rondon made the Cubs one of just six major league teams that had three relievers (minimum: 50 games) with an ERA under 2.50 last season.
Counting Baez as a second baseman and Alcantara as a center fielder, the Cubs had a player take a significant step forward at every position except catcher. They saw two starting pitchers and half the bullpen make a similar leap. And they added the no. 3, no. 19, and no. 83 prospects in the game.
Even before Lester and Maddon started hogging the headlines, 2014 was a damn good year, the kind that could pay dividends for the franchise well into erstwhile Cubs fan Hillary Clinton’s6 second presidential term. Coghlan will be 30 in June and a free agent in two years, but every other position player listed above is under club control through at least the 2020 season.
Norm Hall/Getty Images Jake Arrieta
Despite all of that good news, though, the Cubs lost 89 games. This was partly by design, of course. Bryant and Russell didn’t get any time in the majors, and Soler played just 24 games. Meanwhile, guys like Junior Lake (.211/.246/.351), Mike Olt (.160/.248/.356), and Nate Schierholtz (.192/.240/.300) got nearly 1,000 plate appearances in extended auditions from a team without any ambitions of playing meaningful baseball in 2014.
While they couldn’t salvage anything from Lake, Olt, or Schierholtz, the Cubs got enough from utilityman Emilio Bonifacio and left-handed specialist James Russell to trade them both to Atlanta for a legitimate catching prospect in Victor Caratini. And their decision to give former utilityman Luis Valbuena an everyday job paid off when Valbuena had the best season of his career, hitting .249/.341/.435 with 16 homers and 33 doubles. After the season, the Cubs were able to package Valbuena (whose job Bryant was about to take) and Straily to Houston for Dexter Fowler, who filled the Cubs’ dual need for a center fielder and leadoff hitter.
On the mound, all of the good work done by Arrieta, Hendricks, Hammel, and Samardzija was undone by the fact that the two guys who made the most starts for the 2014 Cubs were Travis Wood, who posted a 5.03 ERA in 31 starts, and Edwin Jackson, who was allowed to throw 141 innings despite a 6.33 ERA. Jackson was worth negative 2.3 Wins Above Replacement per Baseball-Reference.com, making him the worst player in the major leagues. Of the six starters who threw the most innings for the Cubs last year, four had ERAs under 3.00, but thanks to the Samardzija-Hammel trade, they combined for just 72 starts. Meanwhile, the other two were so bad that the team’s overall rotation ERA was 4.11, 13th in the NL.
This year, three of the four good starters return, with Lester taking Samardzija’s spot. The Cubs have no plans to be sellers at the deadline this year, so health permitting, Lester, Arrieta, Hammel, and Hendricks should make 120 starts in 2015. Jackson and Wood are fighting over a single rotation spot — or possibly sharing it, with Wood starting against lefty-heavy lineups and Jackson the reverse; Maddon is being coy about his plans — and if they don’t perform, they’ll be in danger of losing their spot once Tsuyoshi Wada or Jacob Turner heals up from injuries. Even with regression from Arrieta and Hendricks, the Cubs’ rotation as a whole should be significantly improved in 2015.
The Cubs have also further upgraded their pitching staff by giving their arms elite receivers to throw to. The ability to coax favorable calls on borderline pitches from the home plate umpire has finally come under the sabermetricspotlight in recent years, and the difference between a bad pitch framer and an elite one adds up, pitch by pitch, game by game, to dozens of runs each year. Incumbent catcher Welington Castillo had been one of the worst pitch framers in baseball.
While the Cubs were outbid at the last moment for Russell Martin, perhaps the best pitch framer in the game,7 they turned to a nice consolation prize in Miguel Montero. The former Diamondback will platoon with David Ross, who was also acquired in large part for his glovework, while Castillo is out in the cold, a third wheel on the roster waiting to be traded to a team desperate for catching depth. Variousanalyses of their pitch-framing abilities estimate that Montero was anywhere between 23 and 48 runs better than Castillo last season, while the difference between Ross and former backup John Baker was worth about eight to 10 runs. That means the Cubs have gained something like three to five wins for a skill that until recently was completely hidden from view.
Montero has made another kind of impact already: After having patiently built up the franchise’s most important asset, its farm system, adding the new backstop was an example of the Cubs bringing their other prime strength, their immense payroll space, to bear. The Cubs had an Opening Day payroll of more than $144 million in 2010, a number that dropped four years in a row as dead weights like Alfonso Soriano and Carlos Zambrano were shipped away or saw their contracts mercifully end. The 2010 Cubs had eight players on the roster making more than $12 million, but entering this past offseason, just one Cub (Jackson — oops) was under contract in 2015 for even $7 million.
This made it possible for the club to ink Lester to a six-year, $155 million contract; re-sign Hammel; take on Fowler’s $9.5 million 2015 salary;8 and acquire Montero, who had three years and $40 million left on his contract, while giving Arizona little more than salary relief in return.9 The Cubs’ ability to absorb contracts means that they can acquire talented but overpaid players while simultaneously holding on to their core of young talent, flexibility many franchises would envy.
Even with all of their offseason additions, and even as revenues soar throughout baseball, the Cubs’ Opening Day payroll will be around $117 million — $25 million less than it was five years ago. That’s why they were able to throw $5 million a year at Maddon, and why they made a halfhearted play for James Shields when Shields struggled to find a home in free agency. They weren’t more gung-ho on Shields because they’d rather make a play this coming winter for an even better starting pitcher to pair with Lester: David Price, Johnny Cueto, Jordan Zimmermann, Mat Latos, and Samardzija are all entering the final year of their contracts, and Zack Greinke has an opt-out in his.
The Cubs’ wealth of pre-arbitration players means that their 2016 payroll only figures to go up a few million dollars with their current roster, and after 2016, Edwin Jackson’s $13 million a year comes off the books. With no big-name free agents of their own to worry about — Fowler will be their only notable free agent this winter — the Cubs will have the revenue to add a Lester-class superstar each of the next two winters without breaking a sweat.
The bottom line: Whatever happens in 2015, the Cubs are positioned to keep improving, meaning this will likely be the worst Cubs team of the next six years.
Rich Pilling/Getty Images Addison Russell
The worst Cubs team of the next six years looks like at least a fringe contender. Objective projection systems agree that the Cubs will be in the hunt for at least a wild-card spot: Baseball Prospectus has the Cubs at 84-78, with a 43 percent chance of making the playoffs, while FanGraphs projects them to go 83-79 with a 42 percent shot.
And yet, from where I sit, even those numbers seem low. The Cubs are absolutely poised to contend for not only a wild-card spot but the NL Central crown. Some of that optimism stems from considering their competition. Despite winning 90 games last year, the Cardinals outscored their opponents by only 16 runs all season. The tragic death of Oscar Taveras10 deprives them of their best prospect, and while new right fielder Jason Heyward gives them everything Taveras would have, he came at the cost of no. 3 starter Shelby Miller. The Pirates, meanwhile, lost Martin, who was worth 5.5 bWAR last year, and that stat doesn’t even account for his pitch-framing skills. Both teams are likely to be good; neither team is likely to be great. The Reds and Brewers aren’t even likely to be good.
But the main source of my optimism is that this isn’t an ordinary youth movement. For one thing, Bryant isn’t an ordinary prospect. He isn’t even an ordinary no. 1 overall prospect. His minor league performance is almost unprecedented; in particular, his .666 slugging average as a pro is higher than any minor league prospect’s in the last 30 years.11 In 174 professional games, Bryant has hit 52 home runs. And not that it means anything, but he leads the world in home runs this spring, with nine.
A good blueprint for Bryant’s rookie season is fellow third baseman Evan Longoria, who was the no. 3 pick in the draft in 2006, hit .299/.402/.520 between Double-A and Triple-A in 2007, and hit .272/.343/.531 in 2008 for the Rays, making the All-Star team and winning Rookie of the Year honors. Bryant could very well earn some MVP votes as a rookie, like Longoria did. (Bryant is so good that his downside is probably Alex Gordon, who was also a college third baseman drafted no. 2 overall, and who’s the only player other than Bryant to win Baseball America’s College Player of the Year and Minor League Player of the Year in consecutive seasons. When Gordon is your downside, you’re doing something right.)
And as with Longoria, who started his rookie season in the minors but was called up on April 12, the controversy over Bryant’s service-time status has more implications for the CBA than for his team. Whether or not the Cubs are within their rights to have Bryant start the year in the minors in order to gain an extra year of club control, the debate is a tempest in a teapot in terms of how it affects their ability to win this season.
Bryant may not be in the lineup when the Cubs host the Cardinals on Opening Night on April 5, but, barring injury, he’ll be up almost immediately after the requisite 12 days have passed.12 He’s probably going to play 140 games for the Cubs, and he’s probably going to win Rookie of the Year. And if he doesn’t, Soler might; Baseball Americaprojects Bryant and Soler as the game’s top two rookies this year.13
While Bryant and Soler are as safe a bet as rookies go, none of the other young players the Cubs plan to open the season with is quite that can’t-miss. However, the Cubs have so much prospect depth that if their first wave doesn’t succeed, they can simply throw more out there until one sticks. Baez is still having swing-and-miss issues in spring training, and may return to Iowa for a refresher course. But if he does, Alcantara will simply fill the breach instead. And if Alcantara fails, Russell will likely be ready for his close-up by June.
Russell, Baez, and Alcantara all came up as shortstops, and all have the defensive chops to move around the infield, or even the outfield — Alcantara started 48 games in center for the Cubs last year and graded out well above average defensively even though he had never played the position before 2014. The trio’s defensive skills may eventually push Bryant, hardly a poor defensive third baseman himself, to left field.14
The defensive versatility of the Cubs’ roster makes hiring Maddon, a coup under any circumstance, particularly beneficial. While in Tampa Bay, Maddon would seek matchup advantages as aggressively as any manager in baseball, engaging in multi-position platoons by shifting someone like Ben Zobrist between second base and right field as needed. The Cubs’ roster is perfectly suited to this Team Pretzel concept, and Maddon is the perfect guy to take advantage.
If Olt, a former top prospect15 who is getting one more chance at third base in Bryant’s absence, starts hot, we might see Bryant play left field against left-handed pitchers — moving Coghlan to the bench — and third base against righties. Montero and Ross both have huge platoon splits, and you can be sure that Maddon will use them accordingly. The linchpin to this whole strategy is Alcantara, whom Maddon has already compared to Zobrist for his defensive versatility, and who might start at four or five different positions — at second base most of the time, but in center or right if Fowler or Soler needs a day off, or at third base if Maddon decides the Cubs need an extra left-handed bat against a particularly tough right-handed starter.
Rich Pilling/Getty Images Cubs manager Joe Maddon
The Cubs’ depth of young talent will aid them as the season goes on, both directly and indirectly. Directly, in the form of prospects like Russell, who will probably be up after the Super-Two arbitration deadline in June, and has the talent to make an instant impact whether he fills a hole or simply adds to Maddon’s armamentarium of options. And in youngsters like right-hander C.J. Edwards, the no. 38 prospect in baseball and the top arm in the system, who could provide an electric, fresh arm in either the rotation or the bullpen for the season’s second half.
And indirectly, because if the Cubs stay within sight of a playoff spot into late July, they will have an enormous pile of prospects they can dip into to become buyers instead of sellers. Epstein and Hoyer have made it clear that sustained excellence is their primary mission and they won’t hamstring their future for a single playoff run. But the Cubs have so much prospect depth that even one of their second-tier chips could highlight a package for a soon-to-be free agent star. I haven’t even mentioned 18-year-old shortstop Gleyber Torres, the jewel of the Cubs’ massive investment in Latin America; or Jen-Ho Tseng, a right-hander signed out of Taiwan for $1.65 million in 2013; or center fielder Albert Almora and right-hander Pierce Johnson, the Cubs’ first-round picks in 2012. If, say, the Reds fall out of the race early and decide to put Cueto on the market before he reaches free agency, the Cubs will have the talent to get a deal done.
Even if the Cubs choose to play it conservative at the deadline, they’ll easily be able to target role players who fill any pressing needs. They have the payroll space to take on any short-term contract, and to absorb an overpriced contract if it adds talent without surrendering premium prospects. While Maddon is thinking up creative ways to use his young players on the field, Epstein and Hoyer can be creative in how they use their young players to build the strongest possible roster. Ted S. Warren/AP Photo No one knows the future, not even Robert Zemeckis. No one owns a Grays Sports Almanac. But after the Cubs nailed the development process with so many players, unexpectedly got the opportunity to hire the perfect manager, inked the no. 1 starter they had lusted after for so long, and enjoyed every Bryant moon shot this spring, it’s increasingly clear that their run of sustained excellence will begin this year.
No one knows the future, but I’m calling it anyway: The Cubs are going to the playoffs. It may be a brief trip, and they may have to go through Miami in the wild-card game rather than in the World Series. But it looks like the Cubs will have a lottery ticket this October, and the other thing that no one knows is which ticket will be the lucky one.
The waiting is over, Cubs fans. Next year is here. Welcome to the future.
The Chicago Bears took a measured approach after the initial big-money first wave of free agency, and the club's patience may have actually paid off Tuesday with the expected additions of defensive ends Jarvis Jenkins and Ray McDonald.
After spending approximately $31 million guaranteed to land outside linebacker Pernell McPhee, safety Antrel Rolle and receiver Eddie Royal, the Bears continued into the second wave of free agency looking to land bargains as they attempt to fill out the defense for the switch to defensive coordinator Vic Fangio's 3-4 scheme.
With plenty of options at outside linebacker, including McPhee, Jared Allen, Willie Young and Lamarr Houston, the Bears needed to add a couple of interior defenders to play defensive end. The Bears appear to have filled the void at those spots with a couple of steady performers in Jenkins and McDonald.
Jenkins played the run solidly last season at Washington, but has posted just two career sacks. Jenkins told ESPN Redskins reporter John Keim he plans "this offseason to do 100 pass rushes every day on a lineman. I have to work on it if I want to be a dominant player in this league. It's obvious my downfall [is] sacks. [Redskins coach Jay] Gruden explained it to me and said guys like you that are athletic, you're supposed to have sacks. This is a sack league. It will be the main thing I work on, to get my sacks up."
In Fangio's 3-4 scheme, that really won't be necessary, as outside linebackers are charged mostly with the responsibility of netting sacks, while defensive ends serve primarily as run defenders.
That brings us to McDonald, an acquisition sure to stir up some controversy given his recent past. The 49ers released McDonald back in December for what they called a "pattern of poor decision-making" after learning police were investigating the defensive end on suspicion of sexual assault. McDonald was never charged in that case, and the defensive end is suing the woman who accused him of the assault.
"I feel like what I am doing is the right thing because I know that I am not this bad person that people are making me out to be," McDonald told ESPN last week. "I've been fired from my job. I know some teams don't even want to talk to me because of this past accusation. All I am trying to do is clear my name and move on with my life."
There's a good chance that won't be easy in Chicago, at least not initially. According to a source, the Bears, internally, are bracing for the potential backlash likely to accompany the signing of McDonald. But while the accusations concerning McDonald are certainly serious, he hasn't been formally charged in either of the investigations, and according to NFL spokesman Greg Aiello, "the matter is under review" with regard to the defensive end potentially facing league discipline.
Ultimately, though, it's unlikely McDonald would have landed on Chicago's radar anyway without a strong recommendation from Fangio, the defensive end's former coordinator in San Francisco. McDonald played for Fangio from 2011 to 2014, having joined the 49ers in 2007 as a third-round pick out of Florida.
McDonald became a starter in 2011 under Fangio, and developed into a strong run-stopper capable of providing an added dimension as a pass-rusher. McDonald started 14 games for San Francisco in 2014, finishing fifth on the team in tackles. Pro Football Focus rated McDonald No. 12 among 3-4 defensive ends.
So on the surface it appears the Bears landed a couple of solid potential contributors as they look to restore the club's reputation for annually fielding one of the league's toughest defenses.
If Jenkins and McDonald pan out, along with new general manager Ryan Pace's other recent additions, the Bears could be well on their way to turning around last season's 5-11 mark without having to break the bank to make it happen.
MESA, Ariz. – With all due respect to Kris Bryant and his headline-grabbing, star-potential power, the slugging third baseman isn’t the only first-round pick in Cubs’ camp turning heads this spring among the Cubs’ coaching staff.
Not even the only one in his condo.
The best young player in camp that nobody outside the organization seems to be talking about is Bryant’s roommate, Albert Almora, who has quietly put together a strong, impressive spring at the plate while doing something not even Bryant can claim:
Nobody in camp is better defensively at his position than the center fielder who doesn’t turn 21 until next month – and who might yet prove to become every bit as important to any competitive run the Cubs put together over the next several years as Bryant.
“He’s one of the best [outfielders] we have in camp, if not [the best],” said first-year bench coach Dave Martinez, the former Cubs outfielder who coaches the position area for the club. “I’ve known about him. I’ve heard about him. And just watching him play this spring, he’s definitely caught my attention.”
With all the prospect gushing and minor-league glory the Cubs experienced over the last nine months it would seem easy to forget Almora in the sizeable, growing shadows of Bryant, Jorge Soler and newcomers Kyle Schwarber and Addison Russell.
“Trust me, we haven’t forgotten about him,” Martinez said.
Team president Theo Epstein’s first Cubs draft pick (No. 6 overall in 2012) was a consensus top-40 prospect his first two professional seasons before struggling much of the first half of last season in the advanced-A Florida State League.
“I know that supposedly he had a rough year last year, but based on what I’ve seen, he’s got all the ability and talents to play in the big leagues,” said Martinez, who plans to have Almora learn the two other outfield spots, too. “He’s young. He’s super young. But his fundamentals and his work ethic are unbelievable.”
Almora, who battled his emotions as his father battled prostate cancer much of last season, also battled a too-aggressive approach at the plate that he believes he has solved during an 8-for-21 (.381) spring that includes a .409 on-base percentage, .933 OPS and just two strikeouts.
“I wish I had an explanation for why it clicked now [and not last season],” Almora said. “Maybe I misunderstood it or it was explained the wrong way. The point is that now they put it to me in a clear form and I put it into my right terms and it works phenomenal.”
He’s talking about the easier-said-than-done ability to identify a personal “drive” zone within the strike zone and ignore harder-to-drive pitches outside of it (with less than two strikes), even if the pitch is hittable.
“He has such good hand-eye coordination,” farm director Jaron Madison said. “He can put almost any ball in play – and sometimes he tries to do just that.”
It has made him uniquely successful at reaching outside the zone for years; but may also make him especially successful if the new approach sticks if only because it should make him more competitive with two strikes.
“I remember one at-bat [this spring], it wasn’t my pitch, I let it go, and I said, `Oh, well, it’s strike one,’ “ he said. “And the guy never called it. I’m like, `Wow, there it is.’ that’s how I’ll get deeper into counts.’
“It’s been working phenomenal. I’ve been feeling really good at the plate.”
Almora, who could wind up in the AAA outfield this year, knows he’ll probably be part of the big cut down in camp that’s likely coming Wednesday.
He also knows he accomplished everything he hoped so far in big-league camp – “more than I really expected.”
And it seems no accident that the veteran starting center fielder the Cubs acquired in January, Dexter Fowler, is a free agent at the end of the year.
His confidence is high. His dad is doing well again. And if he has become the forgotten man in the Cubs’ touted inner core of prospects?
“That’s all right,” he said. “That’s nothing I can control. I’m not trying to make a list or anything like that. I’m trying to make a ballclub.”
MESA, Ariz. – From his ideas about how to utilize both Edwin Jackson and Travis Wood to employing three catchers, Chicago Cubs manager Joe Maddon is keeping people guessing on much of the Cubs' 25-man strategy as they head toward the final couple of weeks of spring training.
On Sunday he continued to drop hints about the roster, claiming to have had an “epiphany” the previous day. He was telling reporters to dig deeper.
“Beyond the more obvious stuff,” Maddon said. “What about his defense? How does he run the bases? What does it take to win a ballgame? A lot of answers lie below the surface.”
He wasn’t talking about any player in particular, but is describing what he’s looking for besides the long balls.
“There’s some stuff here I really like that I don’t think is being talked about a whole lot,” Maddon said.
So let’s take a stab and start talking about it:
Mike Olt: Setting Kris Bryant aside for a moment, Olt has to be playing his way onto the team. First off, he’s by far the best defensive third baseman the Cubs employ --- in fact, save Bryant, he’s the only natural third baseman they employ. With Maddon stressing defense, it would be a shock if Olt weren't part of the mix.
“He’s done a nice job,” Maddon said. “Not only that, he’s swinging the bat really well.”
Olt earned his team-leading seventh walk of the spring on Sunday, a huge change in his game from last season. His walks-to-strikeouts are getting better aligned, which would be music to the ears of the Cubs' front office. With Bryant’s situation as is, Olt has earned the right to start the season with the Cubs at third base. After that it’s on him, as the leash should be shorter than last season.
Welington Castillo: I don’t believe the Cubs had any intention of starting the season with three catchers, but that might be changing with the way Castillo is playing, combined with the apparent lack of trade chatter. Castillo is 4 for 8 throwing out runners and while his .375 batting average might be a spring aberration, he’s simply looked very good. Limit his playing time, use him late to shut down the opponent’s run game and find the right matchups for him at the plate. Castillo’s game might be giving the Cubs some new ideas to play with.
Matt Szczur/Junior Lake/Ryan Sweeney: Did you even know Sweeney was around? He’s under contract for one more year, but the former two players have shown much more to their games this spring. It doesn’t mean Sweeney won’t be the right choice as a veteran player, but he’s not the defender that Szczur is and Lake has more to his offensive game – when he’s making contact, of course. Plus, Szczur has shown plenty of pop in the batter’s box, claiming to have found his stroke after years of concentrating heavily on football. Maddon has already expressed how impressed he is with Lake’s baserunning and decisions in the outfield. And we know the athleticism Lake brings to the game. Sweeney might be looking over his shoulder before the end of the month.
Javier Baez: This one is more obvious because Maddon keeps talking about Baez’ baseball instincts away from the batter’s box, including his defense. He made a stellar throw from deep in the hole in Sunday’s game against the San Diego Padres.
“He tags as good as anyone,” Maddon said. “I’m a tag freak. It’s about run prevention.”
Baez is tied for the team lead with three stolen bases in addition to playing good defense. Is it really enough to offset some offensive woes?
“The strikeouts are a product of chase, chase, chase,” Maddon said.
The manager might simply be pumping up the confidence of the Cubs' top draft pick of 2011, as Baez leads the team with 13 strikeouts, though he has the most spring at-bats of any Cubs hitter.
Summary: Defense and baserunning are the two parts of the game that Maddon keeps stressing, but don’t show up much in a spring box score. If other things are equal, or the Cubs believe they might have enough power at the plate, these are the areas that can win or lose jobs.
Lake and Szczur, in particular, have to be giving the Cubs some pause when it comes to Sweeney’s role on the team, at least based on the spring.
“I’m seeing some things differently,” Maddon reiterated mysteriously. “I like defense, man. I like [the] ball being caught. There’s no unilateral decisions being made here.”