Chicago Cubs Information
The Chicago Cubs have played continuously in one city longer than
any other franchise. Originally an amateur club, the team, then
called the White Stockings, played in the National Association's
inaugural season in 1871, but dropped out for two years after that.
After rejoining in 1874, the franchise has continued to the present
day. The National League was formed in 1876 by White Stockings
president William Hulbert after four stars of the dynastic Boston
club were lured to Chicago; Hulbert feared reprisals by the Red
Stockings and the NA. The team won the pennant that year on the
strength of the four Boston stars, especially the pitching of Al
Spalding. Superstar Adrian Anson earned his nickname "Cap" when he
was named manager in 1879. Often less than admirable (he was a major
force in the creation of the color line), he was nonetheless one of
the best players in the NL, winning three batting titles and leading
in RBI four times. He spent 22 years playing in the NL, all for
Chicago, and led the team to pennants in 1880-82 and 1885-86.
After the elimination of competing leagues and the adoption of a
12-team structure in 1892, the team, now called the Colts for their
young players, was frequently below .500. Anson was fired in 1898,
his only non-playing year as a manager. The team was rebuilt by
Frank Selee and came to fruition under playing manager Frank Chance,
"The Peerless Leader." He led the club, finally called the Chicago
Cubs, to ML-record 116 victories in 1906 (against 36 losses) as they
won the first of three straight NL pennants. Featured was the
immortal double-play combination of Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers, and
leader Chance, with a pitching staff starring Three-Finger Brown.
The Chicago Cubs beat the Tigers in the World Series in 1907 and
1908 and won another pennant in 1910. Contending for much of the
following decade, the Chicago Cubs won again in 1918, mostly on the
strength of a rotation of Hippo Vaughn, Lefty Tyler, Claude Hendrix,
and Phil Douglas. The team had been invigorated by the absorption of
much of the Chicago Whales' roster after the Federal League folded
and by the purchase of the Chicago Cubs by Whales owner Charles
Weeghman, who moved them into the Whales' ballpark. Chewing-gum
mogul William Wrigley, Jr., already a shareholder, bought
controlling ownership of the Chicago Cubs in 1921 and renamed the
park Wrigley Field.
The Chicago Cubs were again strong in the late 1920s, and won a
pennant in 1929 under manager Joe McCarthy. A Hall of Famer himself,
McCarthy had three other Hall of Famers on his roster: Rogers
Hornsby, Hack Wilson, and Kiki Cuyler. Wilson set the NL RBI and HR
records of 190 and 56 in 1930, but declined due to poor conditioning
and was out of the majors four years later. Hornsby managed the
Chicago Cubs from the end of 1930 into the middle of 1932, but it
took the relaxed leadership of "Jolly Cholly" Grimm, the team's
first baseman, to bring another pennant in 1932. Wilson was gone and
Hornsby semi-retired, but two other Hall of Famers took up the
slack, Gabby Hartnett and Billy Herman. The Chicago Cubs were swept
in an acrimonious World Series that featured Babe Ruth's "called
shot" off Cub pitcher Charlie Root. That year, William Wrigley died
and Philip Wrigley inherited the team. Another mid-season managerial
change sparked the team to another pennant in 1935, as Hartnett took
over the reins and the team won a NL-record 21 straight games (no
ties). Hartnett won the NL MVP award, and Phil Cavaretta became a
regular at the tender age of 18 and went on to become a Chicago
institution, playing 20 seasons with the Chicago Cubs. Another
pennant came in 1938, when Hartnett delivered his famous "Homer in
the Gloamin' " off the Pirates' Mace Brown in a crucial late-season
game. However, an ominous pattern developed as the club lost another
World Series; they had not had a World Championship since 1908,
despite their many pennants.
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They would have far fewer chances from then on. A freak pennant in
war-weakened 1945 led to another Chicago Cubs WS loss to Detroit, in a
Series that led one reporter to express doubts that either team could
win. The Chicago Cubs started building the losing reputation that is
their latter-day heritage. From 1940 to 1966, the franchise had only
three winning seasons (1945, 1946, and 1963) and finished last six
times; they were lucky that first the Pirates and then the expansion
Mets monopolized the cellar. Even Ernie Banks' consecutive MVP seasons
in 1958 and 1959 could only lift them to sixth place. Banks took over
from Cavaretta and Stan Hack as the Chicago Cubs fans' favorite and
became known as Mr. Cub. His 47 HR in 1958 set the ML record for home
runs by a shortstop and came among four straight seasons of 40 or more
HR.
The Chicago Cubs' desperation led them to the infamous College of
Coaches, a system of revolving managers. Used in 1961 and 1962, it
"helped" them finish next-to-last both seasons. They went 82-80 in
1963, but blundered in June 1964 when they traded Lou Brock to the
Cardinals in a six-player deal in which the best player they got was
pitcher Ernie Broglio.
Leo Durocher took over in 1966, promising that "this is not a
ninth-place club." He proved himself correct by finishing tenth, but
the team contained the nucleus of a contender in regulars Banks, Billy
Williams, Ron Santo, Don Kessinger, Randy Hundley, and Glenn Beckert.
When Fergie Jenkins developed into a great pitcher in 1967, the
Chicago Cubs moved up to third place for two years and looked like
they'd win it all in 1969. Rooted on by the fanatical Bleacher Bums,
they led the league for much of the season, but Durocher overworked
his regulars and they wilted in the stretch, perhaps drained by being
the only team that played all their home games in the day (when the
temperature took more out of them than night games would). The Chicago
Cubs finished second to the Miracle Mets that year, and second to the
Pirates in 1970 and 1972; Durocher was replaced by Whitey Lockman in
mid-1972. A fifth-place finish in 1973 signaled another era of losing
ball. From 1973 through 1983 the Chicago Cubs had no winning seasons
and finished last four times. Philip Wrigley died in 1977 and the
Wrigley family sold the franchise to the Chicago Tribune in 1981.
GM Dallas Green, who came over from the Phillies, raided his old team
for talent and came away with Ryne Sandberg as a throw-in in the swap
of Larry Bowa for Ivan DeJesus. Just before the 1984 season, Green
acquired outfielders Bob Dernier and Gary Matthews, and they combined
with 90-RBI men Ron Cey, Jody Davis, and Leon Durham to put the
Chicago Cubs in contention. A mid-season trade brought pitcher Rick
Sutcliffe, who went 16-1 for the Chicago Cubs and led them to a
division title as the Chicago Cubs beat out the equally surprising
Mets. But the Padres upset the Chicago Cubs in the LCS after Chicago
had won the first two games, and Jim Frey's managing was criticized by
many observers. The Chicago Cubs returned to their losing ways in 1985
and dropped to last place again in 1987. The 1988 season was
brightened only by the installation of lights at Wrigley Field, which
offended baseball purists but may have saved Wrigley as the venue for
future Chicago Cubs games. The talent developed under Green's
administration (Mark Grace, Damon Berryhill, Jerome Walton, Greg
Maddux, Dwight Smith) combined with Frey's acquisition of Mitch
Williams and Mike Bielecki and the unorthodox managerial style of Don
Zimmer to bring an unexpected division title in 1989.
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