2003 was worse. Because of the 1908 thing, 1984 wasn't exactly just happy to be there, but it was the first Cubs playoff action in 39 years. 2003 had all the weight and ramifications that 1984 did, on top of the hope that it could make up for 1984. Plus, 2003 was a better team and had a better position than 1984 did, given who was starting the final two games. The amount of negative variance the Cubs have experienced is just truly, truly staggering when you stop and think about it. From 1909 to 1983, they were an awful franchise, but they also lost seven consecutive playoff series. Stuff like 1969 and 2004 happen to all franchises once in awhile. But the Cubs playoff performance? Since 1909: 1-13 in playoff series Since leading 2-0 in the 1984 NLCS: 8-23 in playoff games 0-6 in pennant-clinching games Since leading 3-2 in 2003 NLCS 8 consecutive playoff losses, all by at least two runs, for a total run differential of -33. There's just no good reason why teams good enough to make the playoffs should have a collective pants-pooping like that. The Cubs were already the worst franchise, but in the last three decades they've become the unluckiest as well.