#9: Cubs Put Game at Ease With Three-Run Fifth
Why on the list? - Going into the fifth, the Cubs did hold a 2-0 lead (and Arrieta had a no-hitter going), but the game was tense, and you felt like the Cubs should have been ahead by more. Bauer was out of the game at this point, and the Cubs teed off on McAllister and Shaw. Rizzo started things off with a four pitch walk, followed by a clutch Ben Zobrist double (this is said a lot this postseason) that is misplayed into a triple by Chisenhall that scores Rizzo standing to make it 3-0. Schwarber followed with a sharp single to center off Shaw to score Zobrist, then advanced to second on a wild pitch during a Baez strikeout. With two outs, Contreras hit a routine grounder to second, but hustled it out of the box to beat the throw to first after Kipnis juggled it (for the Indians' first error of the postseason, another example of why errors are meaningless and stupid stats, as you see what Chisenhall just did prior). Shaw then lost the ability to throw strikes, as both Soler and Russell walked to drive in the 5th and final run for the Cubs, putting the game away.