No matter which team wins the World Series, one of the most unbelievable streaks in all of sports will come to an end this year. The Cleveland Indians have not won the World Series in 68 years, and the Chicago Cubs have been waiting 108. It is a matchup between perpetual underdogs, and while one will celebrate the end of a championship drought, the other will go home empty-handed one more year.
The Indians defeated the Toronto Blue Jays in 5 games to win the American League Pennant. The Indians were 7-1 going into the World Series and dominated basically every game during that run. They silenced the loud of bats of the Boston Red Sox and beat a hot Toronto team in easy fashion. The Cubs were the favorite to win the World Series before the season started and are the champions of the National League. They had the best record in Major League Baseball this season, and if you weren’t predicting all season that the Cubs would win the World Series, you were backing another team just to be different. All year they’ve performed the best of any team and have the best roster in all of baseball.
My prediction before the series started was Chicago over Cleveland in 5 games. Cleveland has played great this postseason, overachieving and playing quite possibly the best baseball they are capable of playing. But they have not played a complete team like Chicago. In Game 1 of the World Series, Cleveland beat Chicago 6-0. Cleveland threw their ace Corey Kluber and star Andrew Miller out of the bullpen in their win. Basically everything Cleveland has, they used in their Game 1 win. Game 2 had no Kluber or Miller involved, and the Cubs won 5-1. I don’t believe there is any coincidence in that. How Cleveland is having the success they are having this postseason is beyond me. I think the Cubs are too talented of a team to lose four out of seven games to Cleveland. Chicago’s pitching staff is the best in baseball, its lineup is filled with young and veteran talent, and their bullpen has gotten progressively stronger this postseason lead by Aroldis Chapman. With the World Series being a 2-3-2 format, the next three games are at Wrigley Field. I believe that, with the way the Cubs looked in game 2 and their sheer talent, the series won’t be going back to Cleveland for a game 6.
This past Friday, the Curry 3 was unveiled in San Francisco, set to release on October 25th. Under Armour’s popularity has skyrocketed along with the Curry shoes over the past few years. Stephen’s first signature model, the Curry 1, retailed for $120. The Curry 2 retailed for $130, the 2.5 $135, and the upcoming 3 will be $140. The Curry line is one of the best-selling players’ sneaker lines out right now. Presumably, the popularity of the brand will only increase when the Golden State Warriors, seemingly the most overpowering team in basketball history, begins its season on October 25th. Stephen will receive more press than ever and should drive up the stock of Under Armour substantially.
The Hanover High golf team has had tremendous success over the past two seasons. The team had a strong roster of upperclassmen in 2014 and 2015 and finished each season with a 15-1 record. But this season, the team only has three veteran players. Despite its youth, the
The sectional playoff, which will be held next Tuesday, consists of 10 teams; the two schools with the lowest scores move on to the state final. 
Led by senior captains Meaghan Raab, and Haley McCusker, and junior Captain Taylor Scott, the team has had some great games against tough competition. They won a set in a challenging 3-1 loss against a strong Quincy High School team, which not every team can do. They pushed the match against Silver Lake to 5 sets, making their opponents sweat before losing 3-2, and they played well in Monday’s 3-0 loss to Pembroke.
One of the team’s biggest celebrations this season came Sept. 12, when Coach Dave Jakub had a great victory. He reached 200 wins in his volleyball coaching career with a 3-1 win over Norwell.
