If there's one thing that makes you think the Cubs would be invested in this, it's that I think Kyle Tucker has the right profile of the kind of player the Cubs shell out the contract for.
Kyle Tucker is a plus fielder based on DRS and a pretty neutral fielder based on OAA - he's not a DH
Kyle Tucker has a great approach. He's someone who has a good hit tool - this has been a hallmark of many Cub offensive finds.,
Kyle Tucker's profile feels like it ages well. He has wonderful barrel control, and fits into that "pure" hitter. He's the kind of guy you could see putting up a 115 wRC+ in the later years of his career still
He's 28. It's not like we're looking at someone well into his 30's.
He could eventually slide to 1b. He's logged some 1b time - it gives him a pathway as he gets older that isn't straight DH
It's never easy to predict anything and it's always more likely that a trade doesn't happen than does. But the quotes from Hoyer are interesting as well:
His comment about changing the offense through trade made it feel less like "we can change it by subtracting" but by adding.
The Cubs remain steadfast in the trade market.
The way Hoyer phrased not going after Soto made it seem like the Cubs would be willing to spend big sometime. You can take that as a cop out (and it probably was more so than anything) but it could fit in with a Kyle Tucker trade - as I said, I think his profile fits. If the Cubs were going to pay a guy, Tuck feels right up the alley.
We'll see. But if you want to tea-leaf read, you can find where maybe it's a good fit. I fully expect Tucker to not end up in Chicago. But it doesn't feel crazy. The Cubs have been fairly insistent, it feels, on moving Bellinger. Perhaps, just maybe, the plan has been to run at Tucker.