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Posted

The A's have cooled off considerably after a surprisingly hot start, this *should* be a time for the Cubs to take advantage, but... you know. The Cubs and all that.

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  THU FRI SAT SUN MON TOT
Trent Thornton 22 0 0 28 0 50
Ryan Rolison 0 0 0 34 0 34
Phil Maton 0 15 0 14 0 29
Jacob Webb 0 0 19 0 0 19
Hoby Milner 21 2 0 0 0 23
Ethan Roberts 0 22 0 22 0 44
Daniel Palencia 0 0 13 0 0 13
Caleb Thielbar 27 0 0 0 0 27

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Posted
1 minute ago, Bertz said:

This will be the Cubs' fifth series of the year against a team that is as of today under .500

Next 7 series (22 games) are against teams under 500, As Giants(2) Rockies(2) BlueJays Mets. Combined 42 games under.

If they cant turn it around completely here, not sure they will afterwards. 

North Side Contributor
Posted
10 minutes ago, Bertz said:

This will be the Cubs' fifth series of the year against a team that is as of today under .500

Fangraphs wrote an article about this today. They highlighted some of the struggles, but also again the pitching the Cubs have faced. They've had a pretty brutal stretch of pitching lately, on top of getting a ton of breaking balls. They made mention that  the Cubs struggle against spin isn't unique to them; it's a league wide issue.

Hopefully an easy stretch here should even things out again.

Posted
2 minutes ago, Jason Ross said:

Fangraphs wrote an article about this today. They highlighted some of the struggles, but also again the pitching the Cubs have faced. They've had a pretty brutal stretch of pitching lately, on top of getting a ton of breaking balls. They made mention that  the Cubs struggle against spin isn't unique to them; it's a league wide issue.

Hopefully an easy stretch here should even things out again.

Pitchers abilities to throw these ridiculous pitches for strikes these days or put em pretty much right where they want them is amazing absurd. We know velocity has exploded but the command of secondary piitches has leveled-up tremendously over the last 2-3 seasons. And this always seems to be the issue that the Cubs face around May and June, when the fastballs start disappearing. Not enough of our guys can punish a curveball IMHO. I also wish we had more guys use the opposite field on sweepers and feel like too many times we pull pitches on the outer edge that can probably be an easy oppo hit. 

 

The approach has been the same against the Cubs for years, but for some reason each year they forget.

 

 

North Side Contributor
Posted
29 minutes ago, We Got The Whole 9 said:

Pitchers abilities to throw these ridiculous pitches for strikes these days or put em pretty much right where they want them is amazing absurd. We know velocity has exploded but the command of secondary piitches has leveled-up tremendously over the last 2-3 seasons. And this always seems to be the issue that the Cubs face around May and June, when the fastballs start disappearing. Not enough of our guys can punish a curveball IMHO. I also wish we had more guys use the opposite field on sweepers and feel like too many times we pull pitches on the outer edge that can probably be an easy oppo hit. 

 

The approach has been the same against the Cubs for years, but for some reason each year they forget.

 

 

Well, to be fair to the Cubs, they have a positive run value against breaking balls this year. It's just that the league is terrible against breaking balls. We have to get used to a norm; we focus so much on the velo that we forget how nasty breaking balls have gotten and how much harder they are to hit.

Are the Cubs good against breaking balls? No. But the league is so bad at them, they hold a positive outcome against them relative to the rest of the league. The issue is that in the May particularly the Cubs have faced a historic amount of breaking balls. So being slightly better than average against them isn't really helping when everyone is just so bad against them.

Fangraphs Link
Mike Petriello's look at Cubs and breaking balls

Posted (edited)

Jameson Taillon's rank amongst qualified pitchers

ERA- 5.37, 71st out of 72

FIP- 6.58, 72nd out of 72, dead last and by over a full run where 71st is 5.44

xFIP- 4.68, 68th out of 72

xERA- 5.27, 70th out of 72

 

Edited by Tryptamine
Old-Timey Member
Posted
3 minutes ago, Tryptamine said:

Jameson Taillon's rank amongst qualified pitchers

ERA- 5.37, 71st out of 72

FIP- 6.58, 72nd out of 72, dead last and by over a full run where 71st is 5.44

xFIP- 4.68, 68th out of 72

xERA- 5.27, 70th out of 72

 

So you're saying he's due

Posted
9 minutes ago, Tryptamine said:

Jameson Taillon's rank amongst qualified pitchers

ERA- 5.37, 71st out of 72

FIP- 6.58, 72nd out of 72, dead last and by over a full run where 71st is 5.44

xFIP- 4.68, 68th out of 72

xERA- 5.27, 70th out of 72

 

Yeah homerun rates are mostly noise but even level-setting that the xFIP you site shows he's still been very bad.

I think he goes on the IL when Boyd is back.  The team shouldn't DFA any warm arm but he clearly can't keep going every 5 days like this.

What's been most interesting to me is he's gotten his 2025 velo back over the last few starts and not only has it not helped it's made things worse.

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