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    Shota Imanaga is Back: Takeaways from Cubs Ace's Triumphant Return

    Fans hate hearing this, but the odds of the Cubs acquiring a starting pitcher better than Shota Imanaga before the trade deadline are lousy. Thus, it was a huge relief to see Imanaga return to the mound in fine form Thursday.

    Matthew Trueblood
    Image courtesy of © Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

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    The Cubs certainly hope they can find and acquire a solid starting pitcher to supplement their rotation before the trade deadline arrives on July 31. For now, though, Shota Imanaga is their unquestioned ace, and they missed him dearly during his nearly two-month stint on the injured list. Happily, they welcomed him back Thursday, and he fired five shutout innings against the potent Cardinals offense, handing off a 2-0 lead to the bullpen.

    Early in the outing, Imanaga was extremely fastball-heavy, trying hard to establish that pitch and force hitters to sit on it. By the end of it, though, he'd done what he usually does: gradually increase splitter usage, sprinkle in the sweeper against lefties, and mix his stuff well enough to keep hitters off-balance and frustrated. Of his 77 pitches, Statcast read 12 as splitters, 11 as changeups, and 6 as sweepers. It can be hard to distinguish the multiple flavors of offspeed pitch Imanaga throws in real time, but he certainly did deploy both his signature splitter and the more traditional change throughout the outing.

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    This wasn't Imanaga's best day, in terms of sheer stuff, but nothing in that regard raised a red flag, and for this one start, that's all the Cubs asked. He allowed just one hit and one walk, and he struck out three. He got seven whiffs, forced lots of mishit balls with his heater, and induced weak contact across the board. His fastball only sat around 90.5 miles per hour, but he touched 92, proving his arm is back up to speed.

    It was particularly fun to watch Imanaga work opposite Cardinals starter Andre Pallante, who has exceptional fastball movement characteristics, just as Imanaga does—but in the opposite way.

    Pallante's unusually high arm angle and funky, catapult-like delivery yields a heavy heater with lots of relative cut. Imanaga's rising heater not only comes at hitters on a singularly flat vertical plane, but runs more to the arm side than almost any fastball otherwise similar to it. The contrasting styles made for an interesting early pitcher's duel.

    That the Cubs had the advantage in the bout when each fighter retired is a credit, in part, to Michael Busch, who worked a superb at-bat against Pallante and hit a 3-2 fastball out of the park to right field, putting the Cubs on the board first. 

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    A long Cubs rally in the fourth failed to produce a crooked number, but a bases-loaded walk from Ian Happ did double their cushion. The Cubs are in position to escape St. Louis with a split after dropping the first two games of the series, and with Imanaga's return in the center of the narrative there, that's cause for extra optimism.

    Join our game thread, below, to talk more about Thursday's action.

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    Featured Comments

    chibears55

    Posted

    Great job by Imanaga, hes likely done if hes on a pitch count.

    Hopefully we have the good bullpen today and the bats can add on a few more.

    squally1313

    Posted

    76 pitches, 5 scoreless innings from Shota. Pretty much all you can ask for (besides more Ks). Thinking he starts the 6th but we'll see. 

    Outshined_One

    Posted

    3 minutes ago, squally1313 said:

    76 pitches, 5 scoreless innings from Shota. Pretty much all you can ask for (besides more Ks). Thinking he starts the 6th but we'll see. 

    I'd be inclined to pull him if he were struggling or had long at bats in the 5th, but dude's cruising.  I hope they let him start the 6th.

    DrCub

    Posted

    1 minute ago, Outshined_One said:

    I'd be inclined to pull him if he were struggling or had long at bats in the 5th, but dude's cruising.  I hope they let him start the 6th.

    Agreed.  At least see what he does with the first batter or two.  Have someone warming up. 

    BigSlick

    Posted

    the baseball gods demand more runs.... they demand it.... provide it for them.

     

    do not let our king down.

    We Got The Whole 9

    Posted

    Shaw swings at some really ****** pitches. His approach has been terrible.

    Bull

    Posted

    Just tuning in in the bottom of the 6th. 

    Obviously I missed all of Shota's start, but 1 hit, one walk through 5: I don't even need to ask how he looked. 

    Man, it's good to have him back. 

    • Like 1
    chibears55

    Posted (edited)

    14 minutes ago, We Got The Whole 9 said:

    Shaw swings at some really ****** pitches. His approach has been terrible.

    Yea, as much as I like Shaw and his glove, I think it will be best for him to go back down and really put some work in with the bat and be ready for 2026.

    Obviously they'll need to go get another 3Bmen beforehand and im really hoping now that Hoyer can get Suarez who could be back tomorrow, sooner rather then later.

    Edited by chibears55
    squally1313

    Posted

    Would prefer more offense at some point here. Hopefully Cardinals are in getaway mode, but 9 more outs with a low strikeout bullpen is just asking for a BABIP disaster, and that's before considering the concept of the Cardinals doing annoying Cardinals things

    Transmogrified Tiger

    Posted

    1 minute ago, squally1313 said:

    Would prefer more offense at some point here. Hopefully Cardinals are in getaway mode, but 9 more outs with a low strikeout bullpen is just asking for a BABIP disaster, and that's before considering the concept of the Cardinals doing annoying Cardinals things

    I agree with the sentiment, although with Keller and Palencia lined up for 5-8 of these last 8 outs there is some swing and miss thankfully.

    mul21

    Posted

    4 pitch walk is a bad way to start, Brad.

    UMFan83

    Posted

    Keller making me very nervous

    UMFan83

    Posted

    This is the opposite of what he did against Seattle.

    UMFan83

    Posted

    PCA

    chibears55

    Posted

    Hot damn, PCA almost overran that

    JHBulls

    Posted

    That almost makes up for PCA’s error the other day. He just saved 2 runs. 

    Chicago Al

    Posted

    What a catch, that sounded like trouble off the bat.

    Geographyhater8888

    Posted

    Even a slumping PCA catches a base clearing 2 out double if anyone else is in center field. 

    Jason Ross

    Posted

    21 minutes ago, chibears55 said:

    Yea, as much as I like Shaw and his glove, I think it will be best for him to go back down and really put some work in with the bat and be ready for 2026.

    Obviously they'll need to go get another 3Bmen beforehand and im really hoping now that Hoyer can get Suarez who could be back tomorrow, sooner rather then later.

    Matt Shaw, in around 240 PA's is rocking a wRC+ over 140 in Triple-A. I'm sorry, but this sentiment that he's going to work through these things in Iowa is pretty wrong. He's dominated the level. I cannot explain to people enough that the gap between Double-A and Triple-A has shrunk massively and the gap between Triple-A and MLB has grown greatly. For a really good example of this, look at how the Cubs have handled Cade Horton and how the Reds have handled Chase Burns. The best arms are essentially skipping the level after a few good starts. What this means is that going to Iowa to face the Kenta Maeda's of the world isn't going to help a rookie make the jump, especially when they've dominated the level. Rookies are not getting exposed to the high level arms in Triple-A they were a few years ago - MLB teams have brought those guys up to not waste bullets before the TJS they will (almost) inevitably have.

    I understand people would like a better option at 3b right now (Shaw's had a nice game offensively today, he's hit the 2nd hardest ball of the day, and has a single already) but this idea that sending him to Iowa is going to be the fix, isn't it. The approach needs to be challenged at the MLB level. This is what rookies do, I cannot stress this enough. 3-4 months of struggle is how rookies get through it right now. 

    There might come a point where the Cubs will have to replace Shaw this year. But when he comes back up, expect more of this. More Iowa isn't the answer to fixing this. It's more MLB.

    • Like 6
    • Love 2
    BKHoo

    Posted

    43 minutes ago, squally1313 said:

    76 pitches, 5 scoreless innings from Shota. Pretty much all you can ask for (besides more Ks). Thinking he starts the 6th but we'll see. 

    Definitely all you could ask for in his first start back. 

    UMFan83

    Posted (edited)

    Dammit Busch, I would have taken a GIDP there to get the run home.

    Edit: ok that accomplishes the same thing.

    Edited by UMFan83
    BKHoo

    Posted

    That third run was ….. weird. 




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