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Over the course of a 162-game season, all 30 MLB teams find themselves tasked with overcoming various levels of adversity. What the Chicago Cubs have been mired in since the end of the first week of May is far more sinister: it's become a complex. By failing to produce in nearly every facet of the game, the Cubs have become their own worst enemies. Despite encouraging signs of life, that hard truth was further reinforced in another underwhelming week of baseball. 

The Cubs' arrival in the Mile High City was the continuation of a much lighter part of the club's schedule. A three-game set with the Rockies was a chance for the team to dig in, shed some of their worst habits, and notch a comfortable win or two. Such was not the case in the opener. Beleaguered starter Colin Rea did little to quell concerns about his viability as a starter. He surrendered seven earned runs in 4 2/3 innings of work. His offense didn't fare much better, stranding eight baserunners in an eight-hit performance wherein Michael Busch deposited a souvenir into the seats of Coors Field. The Rockies prevailed by 7-3.

Not long ago, a start from Shota Imanaga was met with great exuberance. His outing in a losing effort in Game 2 of the series in Denver was actually not far off from the brand of pitching that delivered him to a place of prominence in the big leagues to begin with. The Pitching Philosopher logged five innings of scoreless baseball. Yet again, the game's frustrations belong at the feet of this inconsistent lineup, which only scratched across two runs, one of which came in the form of a game-tying solo shot from Ian Happ. Along with Pete Crow-Armstrong, Happ's frequent heroics have gone a long way in carrying the team on his back, but it's not clear the encumbered team-haulers are getting anywhere. Chicago dropped the middle game and the series by a score of 3-2. 

When this club's offense clicks, good things happen. Well, it clicked in Thursdsy's getaway game, with the visitors exploding for a 10-hit, 9-run performance. A fourth-inning grand slam from the ascending Seiya Suzuki seized the momentum from the home team and offered catharsis to a visiting dugout that had been waiting and pressing to break through. Despite coughing up two long balls, Edward Cabrera held steady in a 5 1/3-inning outing. While this starting rotation continues its search for stability, it needs Cabrera to find the groove that made him an attractive target in trade. The Cubs rolled to a 9-3 victory to escape Coors Field with some pride and hope. 

The squad's westward trek landed them in San Francisco for a three-game weekend series with Willy Adames and the Giants. For the first time since mid-May, the Cubs notched a victory in a series's opening tilt, with their 5-1 triumph over the Giants at Oracle. Spot starter Javier Assad stepped up impressively. His scoreless six-inning performance paved the way for this offense, led by a three-run blast into McCovey Cove from Busch. The bullpen enjoyed one of its quieter outings in some time, with the only trouble being a solo shot surrendered by Trent Thornton to Bryce Eldridge in the home half of the ninth. 

Ben Brown's breakout season remains one of the shining beacons of hope for this Cubs organization in 2026. His series-clinching showing in the middle game of this tilt proved only to reinforce this point. Though his five-inning, seven-hit performance wasn't his sharpest, he still only allowed one run to score, backed up by a superb defense on Saturday night in the Bay Area. Pete Crow-Armstrong led the offensive campaign for his club, launching a first-pitch, opposite-field homer to give his club an early lead. The All-Star center fielder came just a triple away from the cycle. He's not only back to his best form, but showing signs that he might be even better than anything he's shown in the past. If the rest of the team can follow suit, they might just be back in business. 

Slightly eroding all the goodwill from its first series win in ages, Rea and the Cubs faltered on a lazy Sunday in San Francisco. The opener, Ryan Rolison, gave way to Rea, and he was as perplexing as ever. A disastrous, marathon fifth inning dug a hole the offense could not fight its way out of. More stranded runners and empty at-bats kept the North Siders from a much-desired sweep in the series finale.

The Cubs now return to the Friendly Confines for a six-game homestand. First up, they welcome the Rockies to town for a three-game tilt. Their rematch with the Rockies will set the stage for a three-game weekend series opposite Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Toronto Blue Jays. While it's difficult to see the forest through the trees with this frustrating ball club, by earning its first series win in over a month this week, the team showed it has plenty to play for, and plenty of resilience to make the play worthwhile. 


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