PITTSBURGH – The hot, young talent. The emerging ace with electric stuff. The relentlessly upbeat manager. The giddy relief that comes with washing away years of futility.
Yeah, Andrew McCutchen has seen this script before.
Two years ago, it was Pittsburgh's star center fielder and the rest of the Pirates who found themselves as baseball's new darlings when they crashed the playoffs for the first time in two decades.
Now it's the Chicago Cubs, whose rebuilding project hit warp speed somewhere between Joe Maddon's hire last winter and rookie slugger Kris Bryant's arrival in April.
"They've opened a lot of eyes," McCutchen said. "We were the hype in 2013. … Now it's 'Let's talk about the Cubs.' "
The Pirates can change the subject quickly Wednesday night in the NL wild-card game. The winner gets the St. Louis Cardinals in the Division Series starting Friday.
The clubs that combined for 195 wins both believe they can make a run provided they can survive baseball's version of a high-wire coin flip.
Pittsburgh is making its third consecutive playoff appearance. The Cubs hope to end their World Series drought at 107 years.