The Sunday afternoon crowd of 40,264 at Coors Field was lively and engaged in the Cubs-Rockies game.
But when the Cubs’ Ian Happ launched a three-run homer to tie the game, 5-5, in the eighth inning, the crowd went Savannah Bananas, greeting Happ with a standing ovation. Outmanned Rockies fans had to wear it.
Until Mickey Moniak hit a walk-off triple in the ninth to lift the Rockies to a 6-5 victory, snapping their four-game losing streak and breaking the six-game hex the Cubs held over them.
How good did it feel to shut up the Cubs’ faithful and prevent a three-game sweep?
“That’s what we’re in the business for, quieting the other crowd,” said Moniak, who entered the game as a defensive replacement in the eighth inning before recording the second walk-off RBI of his career.
“They were definitely loud, but it got pretty loud when we hit the walk-off triple,” Moniak continued. “The Rockies fans were here, too.”
Colorado wasted no time rebounding from Happ’s homer. Rookie second baseman Ryan Ritter led off the ninth with a single to left off of Cubs’ right-hander Daniel Palencia. Then Moniak drove Palencia’s 1-1 slider into the right-field corner for the game-winner as Kyle Tucker tried to corral the baseball.
“Once the ball hit the wall and shot hard, I knew there was a chance,” Moniak said. “That right-field corner is tough to play, and once it shot past Tucker out there, it was game over.”
Interim manager Warren Schaeffer wasn’t surprised that Moniak came through.
“It’s a testament to him, how he’s always ready to play,” Schaeffer said after Colorado captured its fourth walk-off win of the season. “He got Palencia there in the ninth. (Palencia) throws a lot of heaters, and I think (Moniak) likes a lot of heaters. So it worked out well for us. Worked out well for Mickey.”
Riding an outstanding six-inning start by rookie right-hander Tanner Gordon, the Rockies cruised into the eighth inning with a 5-2 lead. But when reliever Luis Peralta issued a leadoff walk to Michael Busch, and Kyle Tucker followed with a single, Cubs fans started buzzing.
Peralta got the dangerous Seiya Suzuki to fly out to right, but then Peralta grooved a 95.5 mph first-pitch fastball that Happ hammered for his three-run homer. It was not exactly a surprise that Happ would burn the Rockies. The left fielder went 6 for 12 with three doubles, two home runs, and six RBIs in the three-game series. He’s hit safely in 14 straight against Colorado, batting .382 (21-for-55).
Gordon, who’s been Colorado’s best starter in August, allowed two runs on five hits over six innings and was in line to win his fourth consecutive decision. He struck out nine, a career high and the most by a Rockies pitcher since lefty Kyle Freeland struck out nine on July 10, 2024, at Cincinnati. Colorado had been the only team in the majors that had not had a pitcher strike out at least nine batters in a game this season.
“Those guys are really good hitters, and they are aggressive, so I wasn’t hunting strikeouts, I was just trying to get ahead and execute pitches,” said Gordon, who has a 2.74 ERA over his last four starts.
His only difficult inning was the third when Chicago took a 2-0 lead on singles by Matt Shaw and Michael Busch and a two-run double by Suzuki.
Gordon said his combination of a changeup and fastball worked well. Schaeffer agreed.
“He pitched,” Schaeffer said. “He stacked another good game, like he’s been doing, and against a good lineup. He struck out with heaters away, late in the count, and had a good mix of fastballs and changeups.”
The bottom of Colorado’s order set the table for the win. Kyle Farmer, Braxton Fulford, Orlando Arcia and Ritter combined to go 8 for 14. Fulford was 2 for 4 with an RBI triple in the Rockies’ two-run fourth. He reached third base in 11.36 seconds, the fastest triple by a catcher in the Statcast era (since 2015).
For a moment, it looked like Fulford was going for an inside-the-park home run, until third base coach Andy Gonzalez put up a late stop sign.
“I saw it bounce off the wall, and I know you can run for a while when it bounces off the wall here,” Fulford said. “I was just running hard, and I didn’t really think about it. But after the fact, Andy told me that if I were a step or two farther along, he would have sent me.”
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Originally Published:
Patrick Saunders
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