The Rundown: Cubs and Rays Reopen Trop, Horton in Chicago for Further Testing, Brewers, Pirates, and Reds Off to Fast Starts

“Two of us wearing raincoats, standing solo in the sun. You and me chasing paper, getting nowhere on our way back home.”Two of Us by The Beatles

I’ll skip the preamble because I’ve been down bad with the flu since Thursday. I’d say I feel about as miserable as the Cubs’ 4-5 record if I had to quantify it. I could be better, but I suppose I could be a lot worse, too. It happens every April, which makes me hate the month despite the beginning of each baseball season. I sure hope tomorrow brings clearer lungs and sinuses, plus a win over the Rays.

Cubs News & Notes

Ball Four

Happy Easter, Bo Naylor. Mercy, mercy me. I love that the stadium sound engineer immediately played “Green Onions” by Booker T and the MG’s.

Central Intelligence

How About That!

In a somewhat subjective piece for ESPN, David Schoenfield named the Phillies as the most fun MLB team to watch. The Cubs were ranked eighth, which is becoming a common number throughout today’s Rundown.

I can’t help but think that baseball is going to make Giants manager Tony Vitello earn the league’s good graces. Vitello was ejected from yesterday’s game and is off to a 3-7 start in his professional career.

Well, Vitello has an inkling of his own.

The Brewers are once again defying their preseason odds by winning seven of their first nine games, while outscoring their opponents 60 to 32. Milwaukee is third in the latest power rankings, right behind the Dodgers and Yankees. Make it go away.

Mike Trout is day-to-day and avoided serious injury after being hit by a pitch on his hand.

The White Sox are 3-0 at home for the first time since 2004 after sweeping the Blue Jays this weekend. Is Ozzie Guillén happy yet?

Angels outfielder Jo Adell robbed three home runs from the Mariners on Saturday night, preserving Anaheim’s 1-0 win over Seattle.

Apropos of Nothing

The Cubs were 3-4 last year before turning it around as the weather warmed up and the distraction of a couple of Opening Day ceremonies passed. I think we’ll see a more consistent team once Chicago’s North Side Baseballers return to the Friendly Confines on Friday.

Putting a Dollar Sign on the Muscle

The Cubs may have gotten a bargain when they extended Nico Hoerner. His value would likely have gone up considerably if teams viewed him as a shortstop. I’m not upset with the full NTC either because Hoerner’s strength will always be defense, so he should age well.

Extra Innings

Alcántara has four homers in eight games and plays solid defense, but the Cubs don’t have any better outfield options than Matt Shaw and Michael Conforto.

They Said It

  • “I [feel] like I do everything the right way to try and stay healthy, and things pop up. Just have to deal with them and move on. I’ve been in this spot before, and I’ve taken the other route, where I keep going. And then it ends up being worse. So, just try to make a mature decision and end it there.” – Horton
  • “You don’t replace people like Cade. But we feel like, at least next time through, we’re gonna have — whoever starts will be a strong option. Then, we’ll go from there.”Craig Counsell
  • “I think it’s bad habits leading to that. If I’m late on heaters, then I’m going to be swinging harder because I feel like I gotta catch up. If I was just on time and taking my normal swing, I’d probably not be swinging as hard.” – Crow-Armstrong
  • “We saw this last year, too. At the very beginning of the year, [Pete’s] bat speeds were through the roof. And then they tapered down. Actually, in his best stretch, they were a little bit lower than they were at the start.” – Dustin Kelly

Monday Walk-Up Song

There’s not a lot to brag about if one-hit wonder Blues Image is the best band to call Tampa Bay its home. I suppose the retirees enjoy them, however.