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    Oh No: Cade Horton Leaves in 2nd Inning of Cubs Game Against Guardians

    Arguably, the best reason to believe the 2026 Cubs can overcome the Milwaukee Brewers to win the NL Central—and, indeed, to make a deep run in October—is the presence of Cade Horton at the top of their rotation. On Friday, Horton felt something and left his start abruptly. Yikes.

    Matthew Trueblood
    Image courtesy of © Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

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    The Cubs amassed pretty good starting rotation depth this winter, all things considered. They entered the season with a fully healthy group of five: Matthew Boyd, Cade Horton, Shota Imanaga, Edward Cabreras and Jameson Taillon. Behind them, as depth, the team has Colin Rea and Ben Brown in the big-league bullpen and Javier Assad waiting in the Triple-A Iowa rotation. You can't be much better-positioned to withstand an injury than that, in the modern game, especially given that the team will get Justin Steele back after his 2025 Tommy John surgery, sometime this summer.

    Take the best arm out of any pitching staff, though, and it looks a lot weaker, immediately. That might be what the Cubs are facing now. On Friday, Cade Horton departed in the middle of an at-bat in the bottom of the second inning, feeling obvious discomfort and calling the trainer to the mound before leaving. His fastball velocity nosed down sharply immediately before he left, too.

    We'll update when we know more about what's happening, but it's not too early to harbor deep concerns here. Should Horton miss significant time, the Cubs would be without their ace and the rest of the rotation would immediately seem stretched and strained—just as they were around this time last year, when they lost Steele.

    UPDATE: If you were hoping the issue was a simple blister or that Horton was dealing with a lingering cold or flu, you'll have to let that hope go. The issue is in his forearm, the team announced.

     

    Now, the question is of severity. A trip to the injured list is virtually guaranteed, any time a pitcher leaves a game with a forearm problem. Presumably, Horton will be sent for imaging, and much of the Cubs' upside for this season will hinge on the outcome thereof.

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    Mason McGwire

    South Bend Cubs - A+, RHP
    The 2022 8th-round pick was named to the Futures Game Roster. After missing the 2025 season, he is 3-3 with a 3.00 ERA in 15 games (9 starts) between Low and High-A. He has 64 strikeouts in 48 innings.

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    gflore34

    Posted

    21 minutes ago, Tryptamine said:

     So, Cade underwent surgery not to far off the time line of Steele and they both supposedly had the brace, so why is Steele expected back toward the end of May of the following year while Horton isn't even a sure thing to appear at all in the following year?

    His injury history might be a contributing factor.

    Rcal10

    Posted

    45 minutes ago, gflore34 said:

    I hope you're right.

    Me too😅And I am not saying what you suggest can’t happen. It absolutely can. Just really too early to write the guy off. 

    javy knows my name

    Posted

    1 hour ago, gflore34 said:

    I think it best to forget about Cade Horton altogether, with the surgery, chances of re-injury.  He should be removed from the equation of the Cubs future.  Which, of course, is unfortunate and really sucks, it's the price teams pay for velocity.  He'll more likely end up as one of those guys who never pitches again because he can't keep of the injured list.  Than someone who makes it all the way back.

    Thus is unnecessary gloom in a very gloomy thread. Holster your gloom boner son

    Tangled Up in Plaid

    Posted

    6 minutes ago, javy knows my name said:

    Thus is unnecessary gloom in a very gloomy thread. Holster your gloom boner son

    agreed. if he was 28-29 I would get it but he's still 24

    Stratos

    Posted

    Did we get any clarification about Taylor's report vs CC?

    Illiterate Scholar

    Posted

    Not having access to team facilities from Dec to at least March next year probably isn't ideal either. If that's how that works.




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