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CHICAGO, IL - AUGUST 31: Manager Joe Maddon #70 of the Chicago Cubs shakes hands with Aroldis Chapman #54 after a win over the Pittsburgh Pirates
at Wrigley Field on August 31, 2016 in Chicago, Illinois. The Cubs defeated the Pirates 6-5. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)
CHICAGO, IL - AUGUST 31: Manager Joe Maddon #70 of the Chicago Cubs shakes hands with Aroldis Chapman #54 after a win over the Pittsburgh Pirates at Wrigley Field on August 31, 2016 in Chicago, Illinois. The Cubs defeated the Pirates 6-5. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Joe Maddon Responds to Aroldis Chapman's Comments on World Series Usage

Joseph ZuckerDec 17, 2016

Chicago Cubs manager Joe Maddon defended himself Saturday after Aroldis Chapman criticized his usage in the World Series.

"Would I do it differently? No," Maddon said in an interview with the New York Post's Kevin Kernan. "There is no Game 7 without winning Game 6. And there is no Game 8 if you don’t win Game 7. That’s why you do what you have to do."

Chapman appeared in Games 6 and 7 of the Fall Classic. His inclusion in Game 6 was surprising considering the Cubs were up 7-2 at the time. The four-time All-Star had also thrown a season-high 42 pitches two days earlier.

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By the time Chapman took the mound in the eighth inning of Game 7, he looked gassed. He allowed an RBI double to Brandon Guyer and then a game-tying home run to Rajai Davis.

"The important game was going to be Game 7," Chapman said of appearing in Game 6, per the New York Times' Billy Witz. "We had that game almost won. And the next day I came in and I was tired."

Maddon's position is understandable. The Cubs acquired Chapman exactly for the purpose of pitching in high-leverage situations in the postseason. 

At the same time, Chapman's critique isn't without merit. He was overworked in the playoffs, and it nearly cost the Cubs a title.

Maddon told Kernan that Chapman never raised any issues with his workload in the World Series. Chapman, however, said he felt he wasn't in a position to decline any opportunity to pitch, per Witz:

"

I never told him my opinion about the way he was using me because the way I feel is that, as baseball players, we're warriors. Our job is to do what we need to do on the field. But if they send me out there to pitch, I'm going to go out there and pitch. If I'm healthy, I'm going to go out there and pitch. If I'm tired, I'm going to put that aside and just get through it.

"

Chapman's workload almost certainly would've been a bigger story had the Indians won Game 7. Instead, everything worked out well for him and Maddon.

Together, they helped the Cubs win their first World Series since 1908. Chapman also parlayed his 2016 success into a five-year, $86 million deal with the New York Yankees earlier this month.  

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