This became one of the most memorable games in Cubs history.

EDITORâS NOTE: This article is going to look very familiar, as it just ran last month as part of my âwalkoff heroesâ series.
Iâm running it again because, well, John Baker was one of the Cubs position player pitchers in the divisional play era, and he does have a singular distinction: In that era, of the 32 Cubs position players who pitched, he is the only one to record a decision, the victory in this 2014 game.
In the divisional play era, just one other player who is normally a position player but not a pitcher posted a win: Chris Davis of the Orioles, who posted a win by throwing the last two innings of an 18-inning Baltimore victory over the Red Sox May 6, 2012 (this excludes Shohei Ohtani, Rick Ankiel, Brooks Kieschnick and Jason Lane, all of whom are/were two-way players for part or all of their careers). Only eight such players recorded losses: Josh Hamilton, Jeff Mathis, Jose Oquendo, Darwin Barney (for the Blue Jays in 2016), Leury Garcia, KikÊ Hernandez, Roman Quinn and Casper Wells.
Without further ado, hereâs the repost of the John Baker Game article.
The Cubs were in the midst of a pretty dismal season, their third losing year in a row. They were 18 games under .500 at 43-61 and 14.5 games out of first place when they hosted the Rockies in the second of a three-game series under the lights on a Tuesday.
This game started out as a slog. Edwin Jackson started for the Cubs and allowed three runs in the first inning. The Cubs scored one in the first and tied it up in the fourth on a two-run homer by Emilio Bonifacio, the last of two home runs he would hit for the Cubs in 2014.
Jackson only made it through four innings because he threw a ghastly total of 105 (!) pitches to 21 batters over those four innings. Rockies starter Jorge De La Rosa â who would pitch for the Cubs briefly in 2018 â didnât do much better, throwing 118 (!) pitches over just six innings.
Then the teams went through a long, long, long, LONG time without scoring. The Rockies sent Tommy Kahnle, Adam Ottavino, Boone Logan, Matt Belisle, Rex Brothers (another future Cub!), Nick Masset and former Cub LaTroy Hawkins to the mound following De La Rosa. Those seven pitchers combined to throw nine shutout innings, allowing three hits and four walks, striking out seven.
The Cubs bullpen did a bit better than that, though: Carlos Villanueva, Wesley Wright, Justin Grimm, Brian Schlitter, Blake Parker, James Russell and Pedro Strop combined to throw 11 shutout innings, allowing three hits and four walks, striking out 10.
(Two of the above pitchers were still active in 2025 â Kahnle and Ottavino.)
That was a long slog of not very much at all happening.
Then the Cubs, having run out of relievers, sent catcher John Baker to the mound to throw the top of the 16th inning. He was the first Cubs position player to pitch since 2012 (Joe Mather) and just the second since Gary Gaetti in 1999.
Baker issued a one-out walk, then induced a double-play ball to end the inning.
In the bottom of the 16th â itâs now just about 1:30 a.m. â Baker was the leadoff hitter. He walked. Bonifacio sacrificed him to second. That was followed by Arismendy AlcĂĄntara being hit by a pitch. Anthony Rizzo singled, loading the bases.
That brought up Starlin Castro, who hit a line-drive sac fly to right, with Baker sliding across the plate in triumph.
This became the thing of legend. T-shirts and a bobblehead commemorating the event were made. Eventually an event called âJohn Baker Dayâ was organized, with items raffled off for charity. Baker himself participated many times.
Baker didnât hit very well for the Cubs in 2014, just .192/.273/.231 in 68 games, and retired at the end of the season. He spent several years in the Cubs organization, eventually becoming mental skills coach in 2019. In November 2020 he was hired by the Pirates to be their director of coaching and player development.
About a decade ago, Baker wrote an article for Fox Sports about âplaying the game the right way.â When Fox Sports dumped all its columns and commentary, that article vanished, but part of it is quoted here. The âyoung, power-hitting first basemanâ referred to is Rizzo, yet another example of how Baker had a positive impact on the Cubs for years after he played for the team.
Lastly, this game is one of the most famous in recent Cubs history, known to all as the âJohn Baker Game.â Games like this are one of the things baseball has lost with Rob Manfredâs ghost runner.