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Chicago Cubs

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The six degrees of Matt Stairs

Stairs & GirardiNEW YORK— It’s hard not to like the guys who can take it as well as they can dish it out. Better yet, a guy like Matt Stairs is into self-depreciating humor in the same way he’s into launching epic homers in clutch moments of a game. He’s a good guy pretty much all the time.

So when I saw Stairs just shooting the bull with Yankees manager Joe Girardi during Tuesday’s workout at Yankee Stadium on the eve of the start of the World Series, it dawned on me…

Those guys were teammates. It had to be so.

A quick spin on Baseball-Reference proved it to be true. In 2001, Stairs and Girardi both played for the Chicago Cubs along with Phillies’ utility man, Miguel Cairo. Back then Stairs was 33 and the Cubs’ starting first baseman. He played in 128 games that year, hitting just 17 homers and splitting time with Fred McGriff.

Girardi, on the other hand, was 36 and winding down his playing career as the backup catcher to Todd Hundley in his second go-around with the Cubs. Five years later Stairs was working on his ninth team prefacing a stint in Toronto and Philadelphia yet to come, while Girardi took his first managing gig with the Marlins.

Cairo, meanwhile, bounced around quite a bit in 2001. Before hooking up with Girardi and Stairs with the Cubs, he was traded by Oakland for current Yankees’ pinch hitter Eric Hinske.

Hinske, of course, was the final out of the 2008 World Series with the Rays, a role he doesn’t want to reprise against the Phillies in 2009.

OK, where does Kevin bacon fit into all of this? Wait, he grew up in Rittenhouse Square. See, it all fits.

Anyway, not even a decade after they were teammates in Chicago, Stairs and Girardi are battling it out for the World Series. Needless to say, this leads to an important question:

Hey Matt, what’s it like playing in the World Series against an opposing manager that used to be your teammate?

“It means I’m really old or he’s extremely young and doing really good,” Stairs said with a hearty chuckle. “No, it’s nice and I’m really happy for Joe. We were teammates in Chicago and he’s done a great job managing here and when he was with the Marlins and now he has the Yankees in the World Series.”

But knowing what he does about Girardi, did Stairs ever imagine a scenario where his old teammate could ever be his boss?

“He’s older than me, right?” asked Stairs, who at 41 is three years younger than Girardi. “I might have a hard time playing for a guy younger than me.”

The way it’s going Stairs very well could play for a manager younger than him one day. Sure, the lefty slugger struggled a bit in 2009, but big bats off the bench are a big commodity in baseball. Just ask Hinske, whose big bat for the bench has him in the World Series for the third straight year with his third different team.

Have bat, will travel.

Regardless, Stairs is pleased to see his old teammate doing so well, though he hopes he’s not doing as well when the World Series ends next week.

“I wanted to be a manager when I was young. How we learn is from watching the game and if you stick around long enough you might pick up some things,” Stairs said. “Joe is smart and he’s been around and he’s a good manager. He does extremely well with all that stuff like the bullpen moves. Sometimes you’re in a no-win situation and he does a great job in blowing it off.”

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Welcome to 'Loserville'

“You go to Wrigley Field, you have a beer, beautiful people up there. People aren't watching the game. It's not serious. White Sox, that's baseball.”

-- Chicagoan Barack Obama

cat_wrigleyCHICAGO – Clearly they were not ready for the digital revolution when they opened Wrigley Field in 1914. As a result all my fancy wireless gadgets and air cards, etc., just didn’t hold up. Nevertheless, I liken the trip to Wrigley kind of like a visit to see the Amish in Lancaster County, Pa. …

They know this is 2009, right? They are aware of inventions like electricity, automobiles and computers, correct?

So if they do isn’t it kind of silly to act like it’s 1914 when it’s really 2009? I don’t know… maybe?

Nevertheless, I’m a big fan of neighborhood ballparks in large cities with little to no parking. Call me a romantic in that sense, and as such, it’s always a treat to go to Chicago, Boston and the Bronx for ballgames. It’s not exactly convenient to work in those places, but they are fun places to be. Hell, the places stink of history. Add Dodger Stadium into the mix, too, since a lot of unique baseball moments occurred there in a comparable short time.

Speaking of which, I contend that there is better history at a place like Dodger Stadium than Wrigley Field. For one, the Dodgers have actually won the World Series as occupants in their home park. Secondly, they have a hosted a bunch of World Series games in their park since 1945.

And that’s pretty much the thing isn’t it? The Cubs are the sports’ biggest losers and the complacency and apathy of much of their fans doesn’t enhance the “lovable” tag.

Imagine that… the Cubs have not been in the World Series since 1945. Really, 1945! The Phillies have been there five times in that span and they have lost more regular-season ballgames than any franchise ever. Hell, the Marlins have won it twice since they started in 1993.

Here’s the other thing – the Cubs last won the World Series in 1908 (they went back-to-back), they hadn’t even broken ground on Wrigley Field yet. Better yet, Frank Chance’s Cubs that won it at the West Side Park featured an outfielder named Jimmy Sheckard, who came from Lancaster, Pa. However, don’t think that it will take another guy from Lancaster to help the Cubs win because they already had Bruce Sutter and he had to go to the Cardinals to win it.

So forget about calling it Wrigleyville, more like “Loserville.” Certainly that moniker was enhanced this week when the Phillies were in town.

Though rightly or wrongly, Philadelphia fans have garnered the reputation of soccer hooligans in the U.S. Yeah, there are a few bad apples out there, but mostly the fans in Philly just want to ballplayers to work as hard as they do. They want them to be accountable and they want them to win.

After all, with victory comes the parades and parties. That’s the proper way to do it.

But in Chicago, at Wrigley Field, it doesn’t work that way. They party before, during and after. The mood is light, and airy like the breeze that flows through the ballpark from Lake Michigan just beyond. They enjoy losing. They really do. In fact, they like to say it was the owner of the famous (and also overrated) Billy Goat Tavern who put the hex on the Cubs in 1945 when the owners of Wrigley wouldn’t allow him to take his goat into the park.

Yeah, that says it all about the Cubs – a guy wanted to take his pet goat to the game.

Speaking of Billy Goats, curses and this silly baseball team and ballpark, look how Cubs fans treat their own:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JoumAUfwnI8&hl=en&fs=1&]

Stay classy, Cubs fans:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6IqTj6g1a0&hl=en&fs=1&]

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