File Photo.. | Matthew Grotto~Sun-Times Media
Wrigley the goat walks with a group of men along Scott St. Friday, May 25, 2012, in Joliet. The group was walking around 2,000 miles to raise money for cancer research as well as to attempt to break the curse on the Chicago Cubs. | Matthew Grotto~Sun-Times Media
Marcellus, Michigan, resident Kyle Townsend takes a break with Wrigley the goat along Scott St. Friday, May 25, 2012, in Joliet. Townsend was with a group of men walking around 2,000 miles to raise money for cancer research as well as to attempt to break the curse on the Chicago Cubs. | Matthew Grotto~Sun-Times Media
After making a donation, Joliet resident James Smith (center) gives Memphis, Tennessee, resident Phil Aldrich, (left) and Coos Bay, Oregon, resident Matt Gregory (right) pointers on their travel route along Scott St. Friday, May 25, 2012, in Joliet. A group of five men was walking around 2,000 miles with Wrigley the goat to raise money for cancer research as well as to attempt to break the curse on the Chicago Cubs. | Matthew Grotto~Sun-Times Media
Philip Aldrich, Memphis, Tenn., plays with Wrigley the goat as they take a break during their walk along Route 66 north of McLean, Ill., Monday, May 21, 2012. Aldrich and four other Cubs fans are on their way to Chicago's Wrigley Field. The diehard Cubs fans have walked almost 2,000 miles in 87 days, after their quest that began on Feb. 27. They hope to take Wrigley onto the field, this time to bring a little good luck to the Cubs and raise money and awareness to fight cancer. (AP photo, The Pantagraph, David Proeber)
With their mascot, Wrigley the goat, in tow, from left, Blake Ferell of Marcellus, Mich.; Matt Gregory, Koos Bay, Ore.; Philip Aldrich, Memphis, Tenn.; Kyle Townsend, Marcellus, Mich., and P. J. Fisher, Prescott, Ariz., walk along Route 66 north of McLean, Ill., Monday, May 21, 2012, on their way to Chicago's Wrigley Field. The diehard Cubs fans have walked almost 2,000 miles in 87 days, after their quest began on Feb. 27. They hope to take Wrigley onto the field, this time to bring a little good luck to the Cubs and raise money and awareness to fight cancer. (AP Photo/The Pantagraph, David Proeber)
Wrigley the pigmy goat got plenty of attention on his three-month journey from Mesa, Arizona to Wrigley Field. ``A guy in Las Cruces, New Mexico put us up for three days,’’ said Philip Aldrich, one of the four men who decided to make Wrigley the …