A summer of disappointing baseball on both sides of Chicago is over

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As the longtime joke among the evening employees in the MDH newsroom would say, both Chicago baseball teams got first-round byes in the MLB postseason.

There are no byes in baseball, of course, but there are bye-byes for teams like the Cubs and White Sox who weren't worthy of qualifying. One year after both teams ended the regular season as division champions (the Sox needed a game added to their 162-game schedule to outlast Minnesota), they ended up a combined 14.5 games out of first place in baseball's two most winnable divisions.

I probably will watch the playoffs, if for no other reason than they'll undoubtedly be on the newsroom television. And when it's 12 degrees outside and only the Bulls are on television in January, you can bet I'll miss baseball. But I'm sincerely happy that the 2009 season is over, so I don't force myself to watch the Cubs on a daily basis.

With the possible exception of the 2004 season, this was the least enjoyable Cubs season of my lifetime. The Cubs won 83 games, and I've seen several Cubs teams that couldn't come within a Carlos Zambrano season's worth of victories of that total. But given what I expected out of this team, and what it actually delivered, I've never been so disappointed.

You've got to give the St. Louis Cardinals credit. After trading for outfielder Matt Holliday, among others, in late July, they starting kicking tail and won the division. The Cubs were never out of it until about mid August, but they never showed any of the attitude you'd expect from a two-time defending champion. There was no confidence, no arrogance and very little fire. Consequently, there were very few winning streaks of note, nor where there any extended stretches where the Cubs played outstanding baseball.

On the other side of town, the fans had just as much reason to be disappointed. I didn't predict the Sox to win their division in the preseason as I did the Cubs, but I thought they'd be decent. For a while, they were, but it seemed like as the season wore on, and they added part after part, their play regressed.

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