CHICAGO - The volume was pumped up considerably Thursday night at the start of Game 2 of this National League Division Series at Wrigley Field, after Wednesday's crowd sat on its hands most of the night.
"I thought it was a corporate crowd (Wednesday) night," manager Lou Piniella said. "Playoffs."
It may have been a different type of crowd that came out to Wrigley Field for the first two games against Los Angeles, but it definitely was the same old Cubs.
Carlos Zambrano and the infield defense fell apart during a five-run second inning of a 10-3 loss to the Dodgers, putting them in a 2-0 hole as the series heads to Los Angeles for Saturday night's Game 3.
"I don't think you can win 97 ballgames playing that way," Piniella said. "That wasn't good baseball. In fact, the last two games were probably the two worst games we played all year, from a walking and errors standpoint. It wasn't fun to watch, I can tell you that."
Zambrano lasted 61/3 innings, allowing seven runs on six hits, leaving to a standing ovation from the crowd of 42,136. Russell Martin's three-run double on a 3-1 pitch in the second broke the game open, after Mark DeRosa and Derrek Lee errors opened the door to the big inning.
The Cubs have lost eight straight playoff games dating back to the 2003 NL Championship Series, when they took a 3-1 lead over Florida before losing the final three games.
Before the start of Thursday's game, DeRosa called it a "do-or-die" situation for the Cubs.
"You don't want to get on that 4<SUP>1</SUP>/<SUB>2</SUB>-hour flight down 0-2," he said. "(But) you can't go out and put undue pressure on yourself."
But the players looked tight as a drum from start to finish, and all four starting infielders committed an error as the Cubs tied a Division Series record. DeRosa fumbled a potential double play ball and Lee muffed a grounder in the second before Zambrano grooved a pitch to Martin with the bases loaded.
Aramis Ramirez booted one in the fourth and Ryan Theriot made an errant throw in the ninth.
Though Zambrano wasn't completely at fault, he served up Manny Ramirez's 450-foot, center-field home run over the Batter's Eye restaurant in the fifth, adding to the nightmare.
Piniella disputed DeRosa's "do-or-die" theory, trying to keep the team as loose as possible.



