Cubs’ skid reaches 10 as Pirates score early and often

PITTSBURGH — Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer flew into town Tuesday.

It wasn’t because he suddenly developed a craving for pierogi washed down by an Iron City. (The locals pronounce it ‘‘Arn.’’)

As any veteran Cubs watcher can tell you, the only time Hoyer usually pops in on the team on the road is when things are going bad.

Bad, of course, doesn’t begin to describe this. And it didn’t get any better just because he showed up.

The Cubs lost their 10th game in a row Tuesday, a 12-1 loss to the Pirates. It was their most one-sided defeat in a streak that back home is evoking equal parts bafflement and aggravation.

Actually, judging by the lurid commentary heard on the airwaves and seen in cyberspace, aggravation is ahead by a wide margin.

The Pirates led 5-0 after the first inning. They led 8-1 after five, 9-1 after six, 10-1 after seven, 12-1 after eight. Cubs manager Craig Counsell was ejected in the ninth.

Before the game, Hoyer offered measured words of support for his beleaguered team.

‘‘I’m sure at some point in my career we had hot streaks and cold streaks within the same season like this, but definitely not in the first third of the season,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s really been the antithesis of last season with the same group of players. We won five in a row the first week of the season when we came back from Japan and never won five in a row again.

‘‘But we never got swept [in a series] until August and never lost four in a row until after we clinched [a playoff spot]. We were kind of a metronome all summer, never hot, never cold, and basically the same group of players has been exactly the opposite [this season].’’’

How to explain it? Hoyer elects to focus on the randomness of baseball.

‘‘I think it speaks more to the randomness of our game than it does any characteristic of our players because these same players were amazingly consistent last year. . . . We just have to play better baseball and realize that, literally, we’ve played 33% of the season. We’ve got a long way to go, and we’ve got to have a lot more hot streaks than these streaks the rest of the way.’’

You can just imagine how ‘‘randomness of the game’’ plays in those precincts that would prefer to rage at the manager, castigate the roster as a bunch of overpaid millionaires and are ready to offer anybody short of Pete Crow-Armstrong in a trade. And the only reason he’s not on their imaginary block is their kids would kill them.

‘‘Everyone’s frustrated, everyone’s searching, everyone’s trying to be find solutions,’’ Hoyer said. ‘‘I think trying to ask those questions, but also lending support. Certainly, that’s why I’m here right now.

‘‘It’s frustrating, especially when we got off to such a great start, [only] to follow it with this. Like, everyone [in the clubhouse] knows we’re going to play better. It’s just a matter of when and how it’s going to shake out.’’

The Cubs’ overall numbers, Hoyer said, aren’t far from internal projections before the season.

‘‘I think right now we have really everyone slumping,’’ he said. ‘‘This is what happens when everyone goes into a pretty deep slump at once.

‘‘I think right now there’s a hyper-awareness of our struggles and our situation. . . . When you’re hitting with runners in scoring position, you look fantastic. When you’re not. You look terrible.’’

Final score, RISP division: Terrible 1, Fantastic 0. The Cubs were 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position Tuesday.

Injury updates

Left-hander Matthew Boyd is scheduled to make a rehab start Sunday at Triple-A Iowa, Counsell said. Left-hander Justin Steele was examined by Dr. Keith Meister and will continue his strengthening program. He isn’t expected back until well after the All-Star break.

Target practice

Crow-Armstrong hit a line drive in the third inning Monday that was caught by Pirates first baseman Spencer Horwitz. It had an exit velocity of 105.2 mph.

He hit another line drive in the fifth that Horwitz caught. That one came off the bat at 101.3 mph.

In the seventh, he scorched a 100.9 mph ground ball that Horwitz snagged.

‘‘I might have given Spencer Horwitz the Gold Glove,’’ Crow-Armstrong said. ‘‘I couldn’t miss him, man. . . . I just think it’s important after a day like [that] to remind myself that eventually those turn into hits.’’

Players take time to celebrate; four more Cubs will reach milestone in July.
The former pitcher managed only 33 singles in 373 at-bats over his 12 seasons.
Michael Busch hit a home run, but that was pretty much it for the dormant offense.
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