Cubs rally past Cardinals to end slide

June 2nd, 2017

CHICAGO -- 's heads-up baserunning allowed him to score on 's sacrifice fly in the eighth inning, which lifted the Cubs to a 3-2 victory over the Cardinals on Friday afternoon at Wrigley Field, ending their losing skid at six games.
"It's good to come home," Rizzo said after the Cubs' 0-6 trip to Los Angeles and San Diego. "The atmosphere with the fans was unbelievable today, especially after a six-game skid. To get this win was nice to let everyone loosen up a little bit. We beat a good team."
Facing with the game tied at 2 in the eighth, Rizzo doubled over the head of rookie left fielder and advanced on 's groundout. Rizzo had hesitated, then sprinted to third after threw to first. Rizzo scored on Heyward's fly ball to center.

"We're not fast, but I think we run the bases well as a group," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "He's not afraid to make mistakes. That's what we're looking for."
The Cubs welcomed back to Wrigley Field, presenting him with his World Series ring, and then he showed them how much they miss him. Fowler smacked his 23rd career leadoff home run, and second this year, to open the game for the Cardinals.

"The ring ceremony was cool -- it's good to see his smile," said Rizzo, who presented Fowler with his ring. "The fans here are accustomed to that smile. It's good to see him get that ring."
Fowler, who was the leadoff man the past two seasons for the Cubs, launched a 3-2 pitch from Chicago starter into the right-field bleachers for his eighth homer of the season. According to Statcast™, the exit velocity registered at 107.5 mph, Fowler's hardest-hit homer of the season.
"I know John; John knows me," Fowler said. "I know he's going to come after me from the beginning. It was just about finding a good pitch to hit."

The Cubs' offense continued to scuffle despite a shakeup in the lineup in which rookie Ian Happ was inserted into the leadoff spot and was dropped to seventh. belted his 12th home run, a solo shot, with two outs in the third and Heyward tied the game at 2 with an RBI double in the sixth.
"We haven't been playing badly, we just have not been hitting," Maddon said of the Cubs, who totaled five hits on Friday. "You can't say we killed it today on offense, we just pitched well enough. You have to pitch better than good pitching to win some days. And we played good defense."
Cardinals' miscues prove decisive
The Cardinals missed an opportunity in the eighth when they loaded the bases on three walks by , but struck out to end the inning.

"We could have used a big hit, no question," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "We were in a good spot. We just weren't able to get the hit we needed."
MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
Just in time: Sierra arrived just in time for the Cardinals. singled to lead off the St. Louis second, moved up on a wild pitch and scored one out later on Sierra's single to center. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Sierra's eight-game hitting streak ties Homer Smoot (1902) for the longest by a Cardinal to start his career since 1900. Sierra was called up while is on paternity leave.

Start me up: Cardinals starter limited the Cubs to two hits over 5 1/3 innings, including Bryant's home run, but he departed after walking Rizzo and Zobrist with one out in the sixth. Heyward greeted lefty with an RBI double to tie the game at 2, and pinch-hitter was intentionally walked. then got pinch-hitter to ground into an inning-ending double play.
"It's a lefty and they're going to try to make pitches and try to get you to chase some and you have to try to pick a good one to hit," said Heyward, who leads the Cubs with a .293 average with runners in scoring position.

QUOTABLE
"Those are memories, memories that you never lose and I can say getting a ring is like completing another chapter in my life."
-- Fowler, on how he looks back on the Cubs' championship run last year
"We needed a win. It doesn't matter if it's versus the Cardinals or a college team. I really think the home crowd lifted us a little bit today." -- Rizzo

SOUND SMART WITH YOUR FRIENDS
The Cubs have given up 14 first-inning home runs, tied for the most in the Majors with the Reds and Angels. In 2015, the Cubs gave up 19 first-inning home runs; and last year, they served up 20.
WHAT'S NEXT
Cardinals:Mike Leake looks to continue his strong start to the season Saturday at Wrigley Field. The right-hander leads the National League in ERA (2.24) and has recorded a quality start in nine of his 10 outings. Leake is 9-6 with a 3.50 ERA in 24 career starts against the Cubs, but he was 0-3 last season. First pitch is 1:20 p.m. CT.
Cubs: will try to get back on track on Saturday in the second game of this series against the Cardinals at 1:20 CT. In his last outing, the lefty gave up a pair of three-run homers against the Dodgers and lasted just 3 1/3 innings. He's 3-0 with a 1.80 ERA in six home starts this season.
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