Usa news

Skid reaches nine as Cubs fall 2-1 in Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH — The uniformed cop came out of the visitors’ clubhouse shortly after the game ended Monday. Turns out he was on routine business.

At last check, the Pittsburgh PD hadn’t received an urgent request from Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts to open an investigation into his team’s missing bats.

Would anyone blame him if he did? This is not exactly the bang for his buck — tens of millions of them — Ricketts envisioned this season, especially after the Cubs ran off two 10-game winning streaks in the first 40 games.

The Cubs now have lost nine in a row after falling 2-1 to the Pirates before a Memorial Day crowd of 22,174 at PNC Park. The worm has turned and is lying in a hammock.

The Cubs’ only run came on a solo home run by Michael Busch in the fifth inning. They had only five other hits, all singles. Dansby Swanson chased a sweeper by Carmen Mlodzinski that was well off the plate with the bases loaded to end the second. Michael Conforto flied to left with two on to end the third.

Those were the Cubs’ only two at-bats with runners in scoring position. Meanwhile, Brandon Lowe doubled in a run against Cubs starter Ben Brown in the third, and .139-hitting catcher Henry Davis hit a tiebreaking homer against Trenton Thornton in the seventh.

The last 10 Cubs went down in order.

‘‘We’ve got to play better, we’ve got to pitch better, we need more guys contributing to good stuff and, as a coaching staff, we’ve got to figure out a way to get the players there,’’ manager Craig Counsell said. ‘‘Offensively, we are equipped to be way more consistent than this and way better than this, and we need to show it.’’

Counsell has shuffled the lineup, most notably by putting Pete Crow-Armstrong in the leadoff spot. He has benched regulars in the name of giving them a ‘‘mental reset.’’ It was Nico Hoerner’s and Seiya Suzuki’s turn Monday, although they pinch-hit in the ninth. He has played two recent call-ups from the minors, Kevin Alcantara and Pedro Ramirez. Except for an encouraging five runs crossing the plate in a loss Sunday to the Astros, nothing has stuck.

About the only thing Counsell hasn’t done is ask to borrow Mike Vasil’s magic wand from the White Sox.

How long can this go on?

Maybe, Crow-Armstrong suggested, we were all a bit misled by those big winning streaks.

‘‘I mean, it’s kind of felt like that all year, even with the 10-game winning streaks, like no one’s been hot at the same time, you know?’’ he said. ‘‘Like, we’ve relied on Nico for a good bit here. We relied on Ian [Happ] earlier in the year. [Busch] has been the one who is kind of solo-driving the bus. He changed today’s game with one swing.

‘‘We’ve got a lot of guys that are capable of doing that, but it’s kind of felt like that all year. Once every guy in this lineup is feeling like themselves, yeah, it’s a dangerous team.

‘‘We’re not used to putting up zero to five runs every game. We expect to have that game where we put up at least 10 once a week. We’re always on the verge of clicking at any moment.’’

There is truth in what Crow-Armstrong, who hit three balls faster than 100 mph Monday and came up empty, is saying. Hoerner and Happ were hot early, while he, Busch and Alex Bregman were struggling. Bregman just now is swinging his way out of a slump. Moises Ballesteros had a productive few weeks, then vanished, his great start lost in a horrific 3-for-51 slump. Suzuki was hurt early and has been up-and-down since. Happ is on a 200-plus-strikeout rate.

‘‘It’s all mental,’’ Crow-Armstrong said. ‘‘It’s always starting upstairs. A lot of the time, it doesn’t have to do with the game itself, as you saw [last week] with me. I think that’s an example of all of the outside factors that can affect somebody in the box that are just really naturally hard to battle with when you’re trying to hit 95 [mph] every at-bat.

‘‘But everybody in this clubhouse has a real strong mentality, and that’s just another reason we’re not ever far off from just being our true identity at its whole, at its best, at its fullest form.’’

Exit mobile version