I maintain my long-held opinion that this team's offense is overrated. Yes I know they led the league in runs scored last year. I mean despite that...
But seriously. Except for the Fukudome-inspired mini-stretch last April when the team showed unprecedented patience at the plate, this is, and has been, an undisciplined hitting team, one that does not out-think the opposing pitchers, does not know how to work counts, and cannot overcome scouting reports compiled against them.
Ultimately, what they are is a collection of
mistake hitters. Which means, they can put up double digits against teams like Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, but against, you know, GOOD teams, they can be handled. Even subdued.
It was not at all surprising they couldn't hit against Arizona in the '07 playoffs, or against the Dodgers in the '08 playoffs. Those teams had good staffs and had time to scout and prepare for them. The Cubs had stretches during both those seasons where they collectively stopped hitting. And it never happened against weak pitching staffs. I still remember posting here last year how the AL pitching staffs exposed them during the stretch of interleague games last year.
This offense will continue to run hot and cold. They will pile up big numbers when they hit stretches of games against bad pitching staffs (witness the renaissance last night vs. Pittsburgh). Then they will go cold again, particularly in the playoffs AGAIN this year, if they make it. Fortunately, the Cubs starting rotation is strong enough to keep the team afloat, and key hitters are easier to obtain in mid-season trades than solid starting pitching.
But to achieve the kind of success the fans demand, changes will need to be made. No matter how hot the team might get between now and October. We keep hearing the Cubs hitters are veterans that have track records. Well, seems to me, here are the track records of these players. Tell me where I'm wrong:
Fukudome has a track record... of being overmatched by MLB pitching
Ramirez has a track record... of getting hurt
Johnson has a track record... of being a 4th outfielder released by Toronto two years ago
Fontenot has a track record... of being a decent backup for one-and-a-half seasons
Bradley has a track record... of being hurt and crazy
Soriano has a track record... of being hot and cold and not a particularly clutch hitter
Soto has a track record... of being a minor league player but for one year when he lost weight
Lee has a track record... of not having more than one spectacular season, and of being on
the downside since his wrist injury
There's your track records. Looks to me like everything is going as expected!