Your other random fact of the day by Chris Jaffe August 16, 2009 The Cubs currently haven’t won a series against a team with a winning record since early May. (Based on current record, not record at the time of the series). Over the season, they have a .660 record when playing teams with a losing record, but only .403 versus teams .500 or better. Well, then again all teams should do worse against better teams. How does Chicago’s .457 gap (.660 minus .403) compare to the rest of the NL? 1. CHC .257 2. DCN .211 3. FLO .185 4. PHI .139 5. CIN .125 6. HOU .125 NL AVERAGE .123 7. STL .122 8. ARI .118 9. LAD .111 10. MIL .104 11. COL .096 12. SDP .095 13. NYM .074 14. PIT .062 15. SFG .058 16. ATL .041 In the previous 32 seasons, 34 teams have had a split of .257 or worse. The biggest gap belonged to the 1994 Indians (.333 against winning teams, .701 against lousy ones).