To be clear, my post wasn't at all directed at you(I hadn't even scrolled down that far), mostly at Dave Cameron, who has whiffed on pretty much every article on the Cubs this postseason(micro-analysis really isn't his forte). But since you brought it up, I'm not saying that the Cubs haven't been missing at breaking pitches, I'm lashing out at the 'continuing curveball crisis' or the incredulity that Trevor Bauer has enough command and confidence in his curve to use it at will. The Cubs lineup has always been spearheaded by the top half, Fowler, Bryant, Rizzo, and Zobrist. Those guys are incredibly patient, do not often chase, and have no holes exploited as simply as 'throw an off speed pitch!'. Really good pitchers get those guys out more often, because they're really good pitchers. Kluber, Shaw, Allen, and Miller have thrown 25 of the 44 innings in this series, so that's going to bring the number of chases up by default. Speaking of which, the other part of this is the back half of the Cubs lineup, which has largely featured Baez, Russell, Contreras, and Heyward. Heyward has been broken the entire playoffs, so the pitches used to get him out are largely irrelevant(and ironically enough, not curveballs/breaking pitches). The other 3 are high K right handed hitters facing an inordinate amount of talented right handed pitchers, beating them with breaking pitches is not a novel concept. The key, at least for Russell and Contreras, is that you have to get ahead of them and/or make really good breaking pitches, because those guys are patient enough to take their walks and have power to punish fastballs if you have to catch up in the count. If you have one bad at bat to the back half and succumb to the top half a couple times, all of a sudden you're giving up about a run each time through the order and you lose 5-2. Since I'm rambling, this is also the time to point out that the Cubs have a 3.04 ERA in the playoffs(3.40 in this series, 3 games of which were <= 2 runs), so the Cubs don't need to put up 7 to have a very high chance of winning. So yes, the Cubs are swinging at more breaking balls out of the zone, this is a function mostly of facing really good pitchers/pitches, and the back half of their lineup being RH hitters that strike out a fair bit. I cannot express enough how much this is not new or novel information though. You have to make good enough pitches to get those hitters out, those same pitches might not be good enough to get the top half of the order out(which now also includes Schwarber), and we're talking about a series that has been 5 games and has 2 to go. It's small sample size navel-gazing to make this out to be some secret sauce to exploiting the Cubs offense, it is baseball as usual.