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    Pete Crow-Armstrong Is Becoming The Player Cubs Fans Dreamed On


    Brian Kelder

    After early-season struggles, the Cubs' centerfielder is rounding into form.

    Image courtesy of © Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports

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    The story of August is that the Cubs are in a bit of a hot stretch. Entering the day off on Thursday, August 29, the Cubs have won nine of their previous twelve games, beating up on the Pirates, Marlins, and Tigers. For the month, the team is 17-8. Take away a three-game sweep by the playoff-leading Guardians, and a 17-5 record is exactly what fans should have hoped for this month, given the competition. But what this individual month means for 2024 isn't the most exciting part of this stretch.

    Pete Crow-Armstrong has done what Cody Bellinger did in 2023: Performed as a star would and carried the offense for an extended stretch. For August, check out this stat line:

    Month
    G
    GS
    PA
    AB
    R
    H
    2B
    3B
    HR
    RBI
    SB
    CS
    BB
    SO
    BA
    OBP
    SLG
    OPS
    TB
    GDP
    HBP
    SH
    SF
    IBB
    ROE
    BAbip
    tOPS+
    sOPS+
    August
    24
    24
    90
    79
    16
    26
    4
    2
    4
    14
    6
    1
    8
    12
    .329
    .398
    .582
    .980
    46
    1
    1
    2
    0
    2
    0
    .349
    189
    168

    Prorated to 162 games, Crow-Armstrong is on pace for 108 runs and 95 RBI from this month's data. The pace is even more impressive when one factors his position in the eight spot of the lineup. Twenty-seven doubles, 14 triples, and 27 home runs would also be a fantastic season-long result. He still is not walking at an impressive clip, but cutting his strikeouts to a season pace of 81 is great. Forty-one steals are just gravy on this potato of a stat line.

    For comparison, here are his monthly totals from the rest of the season. All stats are from Baseball-Reference.

    Month
    G
    GS
    PA
    AB
    R
    H
    2B
    3B
    HR
    RBI
    SB
    CS
    BB
    SO
    BA
    OBP
    SLG
    OPS
    TB
    GDP
    HBP
    SH
    SF
    IBB
    ROE
    BAbip
    tOPS+
    sOPS+
    April/March
    7
    5
    19
    18
    2
    5
    1
    0
    1
    4
    0
    0
    0
    4
    .278
    .278
    .500
    .778
    9
    0
    0
    1
    0
    0
    0
    .308
    126
    118
    May
    18
    14
    50
    43
    3
    10
    1
    1
    0
    5
    5
    0
    3
    10
    .233
    .306
    .302
    .608
    13
    0
    2
    1
    1
    0
    0
    .294
    85
    78
    June
    26
    19
    75
    69
    3
    10
    0
    2
    0
    4
    10
    0
    3
    27
    .145
    .192
    .203
    .395
    14
    1
    1
    2
    0
    0
    0
    .238
    19
    11
    July
    20
    19
    69
    66
    6
    13
    4
    1
    2
    7
    5
    0
    3
    13
    .197
    .232
    .379
    .611
    25
    0
    0
    0
    0
    0
    0
    .216
    79
    64

     

    This came almost out of nowhere. Ol' Pete was scuffling along, casting doubt on himself, his future, and whether Jed Hoyer should be fired today or tomorrow. Then, boom. August came, and he looked even better than the biggest prospect fan in Cubdom would have projected.

    Under the hood, hard contact has been a significant driver of his success. For August, he raised his exit velocity to 91.7, which would rank him in the top 35 in baseball for the entire season. He also makes hard contact 48% of the time, and 10% of swings are barrels. This is an improvement from an 88 mph exit velocity, 25% hard contact, and a doubled barrel rate from 5% for the season before August. His contact is the same; he's just doing it more often. And, of course, walking more and striking out less.

    The trade of Javy Baez for Crow-Armstrong in 2021 already has been a win for the Cubs to avoid the Baez contract, although he probably would have been better had he stayed in a city that adored him. This month, though, has to be eye-opening. This kind of a month is exactly what you would want to see from a top 20 prospect as he adjusts to major league pitching. Factoring his speed, flair, and penchant for the big moment, Cub fans should look to enjoy their new center fielder for at least the next six seasons.

    In the long term, this will validate Jed Hoyer and his patient strategy of building this team from the ground up. The Cubs would certainly approach this offseason differently had PCA not gone on this run. How will they now approach lineup building in the offseason?

    There are already numerous reports that the Cubs are out on Juan Soto. Assuming these aren't smokescreens, and assuming the Cubs share the sentiment around baseball and have studied team construction in baseball history, the Cubs are counting on their next big bat to be a homegrown one. Crow-Armstrong has had a massive August; Jed will use this to justify his patience with prospects. Don't look for the team to spend big on the lineup.

    Jed Hoyer said that near the trade deadline, improvements on offense would have to be made internally. He will bank this offseason on baseball variance balancing out: Dansby Swanson doesn't hit like a shortstop from the 70s again, Nico Hoerner's hand/hamstring issues are resolved, Seiya Suzuki doesn't hurt himself, Isaac Paredes not being Cinderella's stagecoach only to become a pumpkin as his Cubs career begins, and of course the prospects. Pete Crow-Armstrong will be heralded as the linchpin of this offense; we will hear much hype about 2025 debuts for Matt Shaw, Moises Ballesteros, and Kevin Alcantara, not to mention newly drafted Cam Smith. Hoyer will be emboldened by Crow-Armstrong and, to a lesser extent, Miguel Amaya's fine play to continue down this path he has charted.

    Hopefully, and the above assumes Bellinger is back, the money would be used to add some arms to the front of the rotation and bullpen. Only time will tell what the available funds will be, not to mention the overall budget. We know that in August, Crow-Armstrong was the star Chicago had lacked since 2019. A repeat September would clarify the plans for 2025 and beyond. As the competition heats up again, and the Cubs fancy themselves playoff contenders, Pete will have to lead the way this season and in the next several.

     

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