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It took long enough, but the Milwaukee Brewers and Chicago Cubs are finally playing their first series of the 2026 season.
While the Cubs have put the loyal followers at North Side Baseball in a euphoric stage with a pair of 10-game winning streaks, there is also the knowledge that work has only produced a 1½-game lead in the NL Central. As you might know, objects in the rearview mirror may be closer than they appear.
In this case, the Brewers (and somehow the St. Louis Cardinals) are tied for second as the entire NL Central is above .500 entering the three-game series vs. the Cubs at Wrigley Field that runs Monday-Wednesday. The whole division is separated by five games.
Being in first place has been good for the Cubs after the Brewers won a feisty five-game NL Division Series in October, the teams' first meeting in postseason history. Meanwhile, the Brewers have just been doing Brewers things to this point in the season, as they have done en route to three consecutive NL Central championships. Pitching pretty well and getting timely hits. Both teams have dealt with their share of injuries, although the Cubs have gotten the shorter end of that stick.
So what do Cubs fans need to know about the Brewers entering this series? Let's take a look.
Jacob Misiorowski Headlines Excellent Pitching Staff
Despite trading away ace right-hander Freddy Peralta in February, the Brewers have one of the best pitching staffs in all of MLB. The Brewers have a team ERA of 3.29, which ranks third in MLB, a year after finishing second at 3.58. That begins with the emergence of flamethrowing right-hander Jacob Misiorowski as ace material. The Miz has a 2.12 ERA (2.28 FIP) in nine starts and leads MLB with 80 strikeouts. That translates into a remarkable 39.6% strikeout rate (22.2% is the MLB average), while cutting down his walk rate from 11.4% as a rookie to 8.4% in his second year (8.6% is the average).
But it isn't Misiorowski alone. Left-hander Kyle Harrison, acquired when the Brewers traded third baseman Caleb Durbin to the Boston Red Sox in a six-player deal just as players were reporting to spring training, has a slightly better ERA at 2.09 (2.86 FIP), a remarkable improvement from his brief time with the Red Sox and the beginning of his career with the San Francisco Giants. Between the two, Harrison posted a 4.39 ERA (4.43 FIP) in 42 games, all but five starts.
Milwaukee Brewers (@brewers) • Instagram photo
The Brewers' rotation is doing this, at the moment, without veteran right-hander Brandon Woodruff, who went on the 15-day injured list May 1 with what was deemed inflammation in his right shoulder. He had a procedure to aspirate a cyst and remove fluid, then had a bullpen session Thursday as he hopes for a quick return. Currently, the oldest of the Brewers' five rotation members is 26-year-old Robert Gasser, who made his season debut Sunday.
The backbone of the team is the bullpen. The back end has been a bit unsettled with right-hander Trevor Megill, the closer who had 30 saves a year ago, had some rocky outings early and has been in a setup or middle-relief role since. Right-hander Abner Uribe has taken over closer duties, notching four in six chances, but even he hasn't been a lockdown reliever, having yielded nine runs in 17⅓ innings.
Left-hander Aaron Ashby has been the most valuable member of the bullpen. He leads MLB in wins with eight, making 21 appearances and throwing 29 innings for a 2.17 ERA (2.06 FIP). Another left-hander, Shane Drohan, is starting to get a more prominent role. He was another player the Crew acquired in the Durbin trade. Drohan made his MLB debut with a start this season and has flourished in relief, sporting a 3.24 ERA (2.39 FIP).
Lacking Power, Speed Is The Focus Of Brewers' Offense
The Brewers rank dead last in MLB with 30 homers, yet they are eighth in runs scored.
How?
Milwaukee draws a lot of walks (fourth-most), but also is pretty aggressive with its team speed, often using bunts to put pressure on the defense and then taking an extra base whenever possible. This has been an early-season identity carved out of necessity due to injuries to three of their power bats in outfielder Jackson Chourio, designated hitter Christian Yelich and first baseman Andrew Vaughn. Chourio went on the injured list Opening Day and Vaughn a day later. Both returned two weeks ago and have hit the ground running, adding a right-handed presence in the lineup even if they have a combined two homers after Chourio went deep Saturday.
Yelich returned from the IL Monday following a strained left adductor, but then sat out the final two games of a series vs. the San Diego Padres and the first two against the Minnesota Twins with a back issue, something that has plagued him during his Milwaukee tenure. He was back in the lineup Sunday and hit second homer of the season.
But the speed is real. David Hamilton, who starts at third base or shortstop, is second on the team in stolen bases with eight and is the primary bunt threat, something that works well at the bottom of the order as the big bats come up. Former Platinum Glove-winning second baseman Brice Turang leads with nine steals and has continued the momentum he built last year with six homers thus far. A healthy Garrett Mitchell patrols center field and has six steals, but his offensive contributions are more inconsistent despite being a true power-speed threat.
There are black holes in the Brewers' offense. Shortstop Joey Ortiz and infielders Luis Rengifo and David Hamilton, who split time at third, are batting .198, .203, .225, respectively. Yet the Brewers have the 11th-best team batting average and the third-best on-base percentage.
Who Are The Brewers' Scheduled Starting Pitchers?
The Brewers' rotation sets up very well for the series against the Cubs as right-hander Brandon Sproat, Misiorowski and Harrison will start. All three will be coming off an extra day of rest with the Brewers getting a pair of spot starts over the weekend against the Twins.
Sproat is one of the two players the Brewers got from the New York Mets in the Freddy Peralta trade. Infielder-outfielder Jett Williams, Brewer Fanatic's No. 4 prospect, is the other and currently at Triple-A Nashville. Sproat has bounced back from a pair of subpar outings with two decent ones. Following four shutout innings against the St. Louis Cardinals on May 6, he went 5⅓ innings in Tuesday's series opener vs. the San Diego Padres.
Walks have been a little bit of an issue for Sproat, with a 13% walk rate, much worse than the MLB average of 8.6%, while his 23.4% strikeout rate is about one point better than the MLB average (22.2%). The issue for Sproat thus far has been trying to harness the excellent movement he has on his pitches.
Misiorowski, meanwhile, is coming off two of his finer starts of his not even one-year-old career. One of the things that made baseball fans latch onto Miz as he made a splashy MLB debut was the emotion he carried. He still does that, but he doesn't let the emotion overtake him. That was very evident in his May 8 start vs. the New York Yankees. He limited a potent Yankees lineup to two hits over six innings, walking a pair and matching his season high with 11 strikeouts. He threw 29 pitches that lit up the radar gun at 101 mph or more, which was the second-most since the pitch-tracking era began in 2008. Misiorowski was pumped to face the Yankees as his first-inning velocity revealed. He had the four fastest pitches in the pitch-tracking era and seven pitches that registered at 103 mph, peaking at 103.6, and the two fastest strikeouts.
This chart is from just the first two innings against the Yankees.
Then, Wednesday against the San Diego Padres, he wasn't quite as amped up, but turned in another spectacular performance. Misiorowski struck out 10 over seven innings and gave up four hits, but did not walk a batter for just the second time in his career, both coming this year. This time, he had 30 pitches at 101 mph or better, one better than his previous outing and giving him three of the top five spots.
That is showing some of the maturity that may have been lacking in the second half last year that resulted in him going to the bullpen at the end of the regular season and for the postseason.
Harrison has been very steady in all eight of his starts with the Brewers. He hasn't allowed more than two runs in any start, with strikeout totals at five or above in six starts, with a high of 12 April 26 vs. the Pittsburgh Pirates. Walks were an issue in his start May 9 vs. the Yankees, issuing four. In his last start, Thursday vs. the Padres, Harrison struck out seven over five shutout innings, buoyed by a pair of three-run innings by the Brewers' offense to begin the game.







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