what's truly pathetic about that Brewers fans comments is by it's own terms, there was no luck involved in many of those plays, let alone that at least one is factually incorrect. 9/12 - why is the "lame groundout" not a function of skill as opposed to luck? Demp made a nasty pitch to get that grounder. as for the DP, sorry our GG first baseman made that play, but wouldn't letting a game get tied because of one little bobble by said GG first baseman be bad luck? three players made great plays. that's not luck. 9/14 - first off, Izzy came in at the beginning of the inning. perhaps if the Cubs weren't so unlucky that Pie's lazer beam didn't clear the wall, the rest of the inning wouldn't have played out like it did. as for Izzy making 'one mistake,' that's really what hitting is all about. waiting for that one mistake and not missing it. why a fifth crappy hitter in a row not getting a hit is 'lucky' I have no idea, but Theriot made a very good play on a very difficult ball. 9/15 - making a pitcher accumulate 115 pitches while retiring 17 in a row isn't luck. it is a skill rarely displayed by the Cubs called strikezone judgment. I didn't see the game, so I have no idea if the Cubs got a break on a ball three pitch, but if I had a dollar for every generous strike call Franquelis Osoria received yesterday I would treat you and your entire family to banana split. questionable pitches happen all the time, the Cubs quite often coming up on the short end. why Soriano hitting a pitch from a pitcher with a 2.34 ERA, who also happens to be faltering quite a bit lately, is "luck" I have no idea. it really seems to be a matter of skill. 9/19 - perfect throws from 235 feet away are now luck? the Reds third base coach shouldn't have sent Hopper, but the Cubs still had to make a perfect play and they made it. yes, the Cubs scratched across a run. three line drives back to back to back often result in scoring a run.