Cubs Video
Winning baseball teams don't make you wonder what's coming next; they settle into repeatable rhythms. That's why it feels like the 2026 Cubs have a long way to go to call themselves one, even after a 16-6 streak that has carried them back into playoff position.
Just one week removed from their signature series win versus the Brewers, Chicago made its way back home to 1060 W. Addison for the start of a three-game set with the San Diego Padres. No one in baseball has more walk-off victories than the Cardiac Cubs, and another dramatic offensive delivery from Seiya Suzuki gave them their latest in the opener of this series. Shota Imanaga proved that the best version of this club features him at his best, as well. He went 6 1/3 innings, allowing two earned runs and punching out four. The home team locked up a 3-2 win.
Stability on the mound is one of the glaring shortcomings of this squad. If you're invested in the team's fortunes, that should make Matthew Boyd's five-inning outing Tuesday even more encouraging. The oft-injured veteran scooped up his third win of the season. while his teammates got things going at the plate. Dansby Swanson continued his blistering hot streak with another multi-homer day. Joining him in the round-trip hit parade were Michael Busch, Alex Bregman, and Pete Crow-Armstrong in the squad's 9-7, series-clinching victory.
Tying a franchise record for home runs set just one year ago, the Cubs blasted eight taters in a 23-3 laugher against the Friars Wednesday afternoon, earning their second sweep in the last three series. Swanson went ballistic, launching three home runs. He was joined by pretty much everyone else in the lineup, including stalwarts Michael Conforto and Seiya Suzuki. Days like this occur about as frequently as the city's rogue gator sightings, but they make it fun to dream about what this club could do when firing on all cylinders.
A lousily-timed off day set them back, though. The Cardinals came to town Friday and thwacked the hosts, 17-1. David Peterson was shelled in his second start for the North Siders, failing to go four full innings of work. His colleagues on the offensive side of the ball didn't fare much better, punching in a paltry 1-for-8 with RISP.
Fireworks exploded over foggy Wrigleyville skies for America's 250th birthday, but even the Cubs batters one could make out on TV were virtual no-shows Saturday night. A leadoff home run from JJ Wetherholt saddled Imanaga and his squad with an early deficit. Weather had delayed the start of the game, and it forced a 15-minute intermission late in the contest, too. The Cubs might as well have slipped away in the gloam; they lost 3-0.
With all the resiliency such an inconsistent team needs, the North Siders salvaged the conclusion to their series with the Cards. A decisive sixth-inning rally, punctuated by a clutch, opposite-field single from Nico Hoerner flipped the momentum of the contest, giving the Cubs a 6-3 lead at the time. Two strong relief innings from Jacob Webb picked up a shaky return for Drew Pomeranz. The 6-4 win marked the squad's 50th victory of the season.
If you don't establish some consistent identity, this game and its calendar will force one on you. Now, standing 10 games above .500, the North Siders hit the road to Baltimore and Cincinnati for a pair of three-game contests in the last full week of baseball before the Midsummer Classic. The second half looms, with several fate-altering moves yet to take place. They need to finish the unofficial first half strong, though, to prove that they're not cycling downward again, toward an ugly averageness that doesn't suit the roster or its payroll.







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