Cubs Video
Lately, the Cubs can't seem to get out of their own way. Poor execution at the plate and on the mound doomed this club, in a week that saw the schedule lighten up with sub-.500 clubs visiting Wrigley Field. With the squad slipping further away from its goals, the frustrations bubbled over—not into some cathartic fight, but into a hissing cauldron of disappointment. Another losing week of baseball changed the question from when this club will come around to whether it will.
The week commenced wth the Cubs playing host to the Athletics. Jameson Taillon is a loose brick in the starting rotation, already standing on a shaky foundation. His penchant for surrendering home runs early and often manifested in this contest, coughing up a solo shot to Nick Kurtz. From there, the veteran did manage 6 1/3 innings, but that was not sufficient for Chicago's laboring offense, which scratched just one run across the plate on an RBI groundout off the bat of Alex Bregman. Lacking a clutch gene, the squad went 1-for-7 with RISP in a 2-1 loss in the series opener.
For the Cubs to seriously get back into the division race, they'll need balanced play on both sides of the ball, and that did not come in the middle tilt of their series with the A's. Caleb Thielbar blew a slim, late lead for the home team, giving the Athletics renewed hope. They would use extra innings to cash in on that hope, handing the North Siders an unexpected and demoralizing series loss. The A's won by a final score of 5-4 in 10.
In the third contest against the team from Somewhere in the West, Chicago battled back from a deflating outing from Shota Imanaga to seize a cathartic 7-6 victory. It wasn't just the dramatic, walk-off nature of the triumph, but the fashion in which they did it that made it feel promising and special. While the rest of his teammates falter, the scorching-hot Pete Crow-Armstrong has put the club on his back in a way that has catapulted him back into the All-Star conversation. His walk-off single in the 10th inning elicited child-like glee from not only those in attendance, but Marquee Network's own Cliff Floyd, who exclaimed, "I needed this."
With emotions running high and the iconic Bleacher Bums in their brand-new replica jerseys, Chicago killed the buzz on Friday. A brutal 18-3 rout at the hands of the comically mediocre San Francisco Giants dispelled any hope of carrying momentum from game to game. The contest was Edward Cabrera's first start, returning from a brief stint on the IL due to a blister on his throwing hand. The squad's hard-throwing youngster got pelted, surrendering eight earned runs. As has often been the case, the bullpen provided no answers, with lackluster appearances from all who took the mound, including junk time work from position player Carson Kelly.
It's ghastly to imagine where the team would be without Crow-Armstrong Over the past week, the Gold Glove center fielder is batting .517 with 8 RBIs and a 1.632 OPS. With the Cubs down to their final out Saturday, Crow-Armstrong drilled his second long fly of the game, an absolute no-doubter to right field. Crow-Armstrong's heroics allowed his club to secure a dramatic win on another strong day for breakout starting pitcher Ben Brown. The final 3-2 in 10 innings.
Taking the national stage for the second straight week on Sunday Night Baseball, Chicago seized a gut-wrenching defeat from the jaws of victory. After exiting the game with a strained hamstring, Taillon was replaced by the recently called-up Javier Assad. Cruising through the Giants' lineup like a Ferrari on Lakeshore Drive, Assad was magnificent in 6 1/3 relief innings. It appeared as though the young pitcher's heroics were meant to be rewarded, as his club repeatedly found itself in promising run-scoring scenarios, ultimately squandering all of them. The 2-1 loss in 10 innings was one of the team's most crushing in an endless sea of crushing losses.
So now, with more tilts opposite clubs far less formidable than what lies further down the road, the Cubs hope to take back their narrative. A travel day Monday lands the Cubs in Denver for a three-game set with the Rockies, before jetting out to the Bay Area to face this very same Giants squad. This Cubs team, even with its persistent shortcomings, continues to flash glimpses of the blueprints for a return to sustained success. But the project still suffers agonizing delays, and it might prove too costly or too poorly organized to be completed under this leadership group.







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