2006 Chicago Cubs Preview
2005 Overview:
With the departure of slugger Sammy Sosa, the offensive output
for the Chicago Cubs has been replaced by the likes of
superstars Derek Lee (.335 46 107) and Aramis Ramirez (.302 31
92). Both players came into their own in 2005 along with the
help of Jeremy Burnitz (.258 24 87), catcher Michael Barrett
(.276 16 61) and 2nd baseman Todd Walker (.305 12 40). Lee in
particular impressed in 2005, hitting 27 home runs prior to the
all star break and leading the league in hitting by the end of
the season. Starters Carlos Zambrano (14 6 3.26), Greg Maddux
(13 15 4.24), and Mark Prior (11 7 3.67) joined closer Ryan
Dempster (5-3 3.13 35 saves) to provide the pitching depth in
2005 as the Cubs posted a 79-83 record to end the season 21
games behind the division leading St. Louis Cardinals.
Off Season Moves:
GM Jim Hendry traded for Florida Marlin's Juan Pierre (.276 2
47), who will lead off and play center in 2006, both of which
were troublesome spots last year. Hendry also strengthened the
Chicago Cubs bullpen with two free-agent signings: lefty Scott
Eyre (2-2 2.63 - obtained from the San Francisco Giants) and
right hander Bobby Howry (7-4 3.47 - acquired from the Cleveland
Indians). The Cubs spent $23 million to lock those two players
under contract for the next three years.
Pitcher Wade Miller (4-4 4.95) was also picked up from the
Boston Red Sox. The other noteworthy signings were free agent
right fielder Jacque Jones (.249 23 73 from the Minnesota
Twins), who will be looked upon to replace the offense for the
departed Jeromy Burnitz. John Mabry (.240 8 32) was also traded
from the Cardinals to help in the outfield. The Cubs are hopeful
he can return to his 2004 offensive form when he tied a career
high in home runs with 13.
2006 Analysis:
The restructured bullpen should help improve the pitching in
2006. Hendry also did well to pick up Pierre and Jones. Pierre
improves the defense and leadoff position and should spell more
RBI opportunities for Lee and Ramirez. The biggest non-pitching
question remains at shortstop, where veteran Neifi Perez and
23-year-old Ronny Cedeno will be expected to help provide the
answer. Lee and Ramierez will need to continue to provide the
bulk of the offense in 2006.
The starting pitching remains a question mark. If Kerry Wood
can return and pitch more then the 66.0 innings he did last year
and Maddux can improve a bit on his record the pitching might
surprise some fans as a strong point in 2006. If the Chicago
Cubs hope to make it to postseason play they will need to get
more from the starters in order for the recent off season
bullpen moves to work. Hendry hopes the $23 million is spent on
Howry and Eyre will be money well invested. Fans should be
patient in 2006 - if the team is close at the all star break
expect a midseason trade or two to perhaps make the difference.