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Mitch Widmeier

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  1. Cade Horton continues to dazzle on the bump for the Cubs. Is Kyle Tucker waking up? The schedule remains light for Chicago moving ahead. Can they capitalize? Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
  2. Cade Horton continues to dazzle on the bump for the Cubs. Is Kyle Tucker waking up? The schedule remains light for Chicago moving ahead. Can they capitalize? Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  3. Image courtesy of © Jonathan Hui-Imagn Images Sandwiched between wins on Friday and Sunday against the Los Angeles Angels was another dazzling outing from Chicago Cubs rookie starting pitcher Cade Horton. Pitching on regular rest after leaving his last outing with a blister, Horton shoved, to the tune of six scoreless innings. He allowed just three hits and registered seven strikeouts. On Monday morning, Horton became the favorite to win the National League Rookie of the Year Award, according to DraftKings. He's earned that spot in the driver's seat. Of all pitchers who have logged at least 30 innings since July 1, nobody in baseball has a lower ERA than Horton (1.11). For the season, Horton has a brilliant 2.88 ERA. In his last seven starts (dating back to July 20), Horton has allowed just two total runs. That includes outings against a then-scorching Boston lineup, a red-hot Milwaukee offense and a Toronto lineup led by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. None of it has fazed the Cubs rookie. To slap some perspective on how good that stretch is, per Marquee Sports Network, Horton's two runs surrendered in a seven-start span is the fewest in Cubs history, dating back to 1901. Who remembers the poetry in motion that was Jake Arrieta's 2015 campaign? A Cy Young Award. A no-hitter in Los Angeles, against the Dodgers. That complete game mastery over the Pirates in the NL Wild Card Game. Via Wrigley Wire, in that historic 2015 season, Arrieta had a 1.43 ERA with 25.4% strikeout rate in his first seven starts after the All-Star break. Horton, in his first seven since the Midsummer Classic, has a 0.49 ERA, with a 24.8% strikeout rate. He's given off some of that Arrieta swagger we all remember seeing every fifth day. That process has worked wonders for Horton. It's great, too, to hear his intense dedication to improvement and to sustaining this newfound excellence. Top prospects don't always work out. It's never a sure thing. The sample size is small with Horton, but it screams of a guy who's figuring it out. It would be fairly surprising to see him not slot in at the top of the rotation in the years to come for Chicago. Horton's stuff is that good. His moxie is that contagious. The Cubs found a gem. Now, let's pivot to the part that could burn the Cubs. If Horton finishes first or second in Rookie of the Year voting, he will be credited with a full year of service time. The same applies for Matt Shaw, who's currently fourth in the odds on DraftKings. On top of that (and just to pile on, because why wouldn't it?), if Horton wins the award, the Cubs would NOT receive a draft pick through the Prospect Promotion Incentive that was implemented in 2022, because Horton hasn't been up for a full service year. So, if he wins the award or finishes second, boom: Horton's free agency would move up from (most likely) the end of the 2031 season to that of 2030. However, no draft pick would be awarded to the Cubs, because they didn't call him up proactively. The Cubs don't need to worry about that, of course. In fact, they should welcome it. They didn't manipulate his service time. If anything, they called him up sooner than they'd wished to, after Shota Imanaga became the third key member of their projected rotation to go down with an injury by the sixth week of the season. The circumstances were beyond their control, and if Horton does finish off an award-worthy rookie campaign, he'll be worth plenty to the team to make the small extra pain of an earlier bump in his pay palatable. Nor should Cubs fans sweat that rule. The Cubs didn't do anything to pursue the incentive, so not getting the draft pick is fair. If Horton does earn the Rookie of the Year, it'll be because he helped captain the team's rotation down the stretch and into October. Well worth it, and besides, this front office could use a nudge to act on a young player's contract status sooner, now and then. Next stop, a postseason start? Time will tell if that comes to fruition. For now, Horton will continue to go out every fifth day and try to mow down one lineup after another, while having his workload scaled back by the Cubs. That delicate balance is more important than whether or not hardware awaits him in November. View full article
  4. Sandwiched between wins on Friday and Sunday against the Los Angeles Angels was another dazzling outing from Chicago Cubs rookie starting pitcher Cade Horton. Pitching on regular rest after leaving his last outing with a blister, Horton shoved, to the tune of six scoreless innings. He allowed just three hits and registered seven strikeouts. On Monday morning, Horton became the favorite to win the National League Rookie of the Year Award, according to DraftKings. He's earned that spot in the driver's seat. Of all pitchers who have logged at least 30 innings since July 1, nobody in baseball has a lower ERA than Horton (1.11). For the season, Horton has a brilliant 2.88 ERA. In his last seven starts (dating back to July 20), Horton has allowed just two total runs. That includes outings against a then-scorching Boston lineup, a red-hot Milwaukee offense and a Toronto lineup led by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. None of it has fazed the Cubs rookie. To slap some perspective on how good that stretch is, per Marquee Sports Network, Horton's two runs surrendered in a seven-start span is the fewest in Cubs history, dating back to 1901. Who remembers the poetry in motion that was Jake Arrieta's 2015 campaign? A Cy Young Award. A no-hitter in Los Angeles, against the Dodgers. That complete game mastery over the Pirates in the NL Wild Card Game. Via Wrigley Wire, in that historic 2015 season, Arrieta had a 1.43 ERA with 25.4% strikeout rate in his first seven starts after the All-Star break. Horton, in his first seven since the Midsummer Classic, has a 0.49 ERA, with a 24.8% strikeout rate. He's given off some of that Arrieta swagger we all remember seeing every fifth day. That process has worked wonders for Horton. It's great, too, to hear his intense dedication to improvement and to sustaining this newfound excellence. Top prospects don't always work out. It's never a sure thing. The sample size is small with Horton, but it screams of a guy who's figuring it out. It would be fairly surprising to see him not slot in at the top of the rotation in the years to come for Chicago. Horton's stuff is that good. His moxie is that contagious. The Cubs found a gem. Now, let's pivot to the part that could burn the Cubs. If Horton finishes first or second in Rookie of the Year voting, he will be credited with a full year of service time. The same applies for Matt Shaw, who's currently fourth in the odds on DraftKings. On top of that (and just to pile on, because why wouldn't it?), if Horton wins the award, the Cubs would NOT receive a draft pick through the Prospect Promotion Incentive that was implemented in 2022, because Horton hasn't been up for a full service year. So, if he wins the award or finishes second, boom: Horton's free agency would move up from (most likely) the end of the 2031 season to that of 2030. However, no draft pick would be awarded to the Cubs, because they didn't call him up proactively. The Cubs don't need to worry about that, of course. In fact, they should welcome it. They didn't manipulate his service time. If anything, they called him up sooner than they'd wished to, after Shota Imanaga became the third key member of their projected rotation to go down with an injury by the sixth week of the season. The circumstances were beyond their control, and if Horton does finish off an award-worthy rookie campaign, he'll be worth plenty to the team to make the small extra pain of an earlier bump in his pay palatable. Nor should Cubs fans sweat that rule. The Cubs didn't do anything to pursue the incentive, so not getting the draft pick is fair. If Horton does earn the Rookie of the Year, it'll be because he helped captain the team's rotation down the stretch and into October. Well worth it, and besides, this front office could use a nudge to act on a young player's contract status sooner, now and then. Next stop, a postseason start? Time will tell if that comes to fruition. For now, Horton will continue to go out every fifth day and try to mow down one lineup after another, while having his workload scaled back by the Cubs. That delicate balance is more important than whether or not hardware awaits him in November.
  5. Some of the critical pieces of the lineup for Craig Counsell have been slumping. Who is the most concerning of the bunch and the least concerning? Is the rotation sustainable for a postseason run? Let’s talk Matt Shaw! Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
  6. Some of the critical pieces of the lineup for Craig Counsell have been slumping. Who is the most concerning of the bunch and the least concerning? Is the rotation sustainable for a postseason run? Let’s talk Matt Shaw! Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  7. Michael Soroka landed on the IL with a shoulder injury after just two innings with the Cubs. How worried should everyone be? Reaction to the trade deadline and what Jed Hoyer did and didn’t do. What’s going on with Kyle Tucker? Let’s take a look at the playoff picture! Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  8. Michael Soroka landed on the IL with a shoulder injury after just two innings with the Cubs. How worried should everyone be? Reaction to the trade deadline and what Jed Hoyer did and didn’t do. What’s going on with Kyle Tucker? Let’s take a look at the playoff picture! Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
  9. Is Ian Happ a victim of bad luck at the plate this year, or are there deeper issues going on? Is Cade Horton figuring it out? Plenty of Cubs trade deadline talk too! Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
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  10. Is Ian Happ a victim of bad luck at the plate this year, or are there deeper issues going on? Is Cade Horton figuring it out? Plenty of Cubs trade deadline talk too! Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  11. Craig Counsell has made a switch at the top of the lineup. What do we think about it? Ben Brown struggled again but what do the numbers say? The division race between Chicago and Milwaukee is just heating up. Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
  12. Craig Counsell has made a switch at the top of the lineup. What do we think about it? Ben Brown struggled again but what do the numbers say? The division race between Chicago and Milwaukee is just heating up. Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  13. The Chicago Cubs faced their gauntlet right out of the gates this season. In the first month, Craig Counsell's club faced the Los Angeles Dodgers seven times, San Diego six times, Philadelphia three times and the Diamondbacks (a bit less formidable now than they seemed then) seven times. Even in early May, the Cubs began the month by facing Milwaukee, San Francisco, and the New York Mets. All three look like playoff teams. Out of the All-Star break, things will change for the Cubs. After boasting a 57-39 record at the break, they're in prime position to capitalize. Per Tankathon, the Cubs are tied with the Houston Astros for the second-easiest remaining schedule in all of baseball. Chicago's remaining opponents have a combined winning percentage of .482. Among the opponents that drove the number down are dates the Cubs still have with Colorado, the White Sox, Baltimore, Washington and 12 combined games left with Pittsburgh and Atlanta. On the flip side of that, the Cubs still have a collective 14 tilts against Milwaukee and St. Louis. However, eight of those 14 will be at Wrigley Field. Those 14 games against the Brewers and Cardinals (and more specifically, the eight against Milwaukee) could very well settle the division. The Cubs have the third-best record in baseball at the break, but are still only a game up on the Brewers. Milwaukee finished the first half on a tear, winning seven in a row—including a sweep of the Dodgers. Despite the slim lead, though, FanGraphs gives the Cubs a whopping 63.5% chance to win the National League Central. Why such favorable odds? While the Cubs have the second-easiest schedule left, the Brewers are tied with Baltimore for the fourth-hardest remaining schedule. Milwaukee still has series left against the Dodgers, Phillies and Padres. All three have shown to be heavy hitters in the National League, and the Cubs have wrapped up all games against those three. The eight games against the Cubs also shoots Milwaukee up the ladder in strength of schedule. All of that leads to FanGraphs giving the Cubs a commanding advantage in predicting who will win the division. If you don't want to consider one outlet to serve as the be-all and end-all, look at Baseball Reference. That site gives the Cubs a 70% chance to win the division opposed to just a 28% shot for the Brewers, though in that case, it's much less about strength of schedule and more about their assessed team strength. By the reckoning of Reference's Simple Rating System (SRS), the Cubs are the best team in baseball (1.2), so although the average quality of their remaining opponents (-0.1) is just 10th-worst in the league, they project to win the most games in the second half. Just keep in mind that (unlike FanGraphs's system) those aren't based on close assessments of each team's player-by-player individual talent, but rather on how they've each played over the last 100 games at a team level. It's flipping forward the Cubs' excellent first half less skeptically than other models would. So which club could the Cubs face, if they make the postseason? Winning the division or falling short of that crown will determine that. If the playoffs started today, the Cubs and Dodgers would receive first-round byes. It would catapult Chicago directly to the National League Divisional Series. However, the margins are razor-thin. Just like the Cubs only have a one-game lead over Milwaukee, they are also only a half game behind the Dodgers for the top spot in the National League. Winning the division and holding off whoever wins the National League East would assure the Cubs of a bye in the playoffs. Get jumped by Milwaukee and snag a Wild Card spot (or struggle enough to let the Phillies or Mets run by) and the bye evaporates. Back to the current moment. Chicago would have the No. 2 seed in the National League if the postseason began right now, and it would face the winner of a series between the Phillies and the Padres. A lot can change between now and the end of September, but FanGraphs gives the Cubs a 94% chance to make the playoffs and a 40.3% shot to earn a bye. Getting that extra rest to set up your rotation is always cherished. A weaker remaining schedule, blended with the vast majority of reports stating the Cubs will be big players at the trade deadline, puts them in the driver's seat to win the division. Eight games against the Brewers will carry a lot of weight, though, and an unorthodox five-game series in the middle of August will speak volumes as to who carries the torch in the division. Thanks to a rainout earlier in the season, the two will play five at Wrigley in four days, including a doubleheader to begin the series on August 18. Regardless of how you believe the final chapter of this Cubs season will be written, 57-39 at the break and leading the division is something everyone would've signed up for back in March. Of all the numbers and all the percentages that can be digested, there's one that sticks out. According to Baseball Reference, the Cubs right now have the highest odds to win the World Series at 15.8%. Right behind the Cubs are the Detroit Tigers, at 13.3%. Wouldn't that be something?
  14. Image courtesy of © Matt Marton-Imagn Images The Chicago Cubs faced their gauntlet right out of the gates this season. In the first month, Craig Counsell's club faced the Los Angeles Dodgers seven times, San Diego six times, Philadelphia three times and the Diamondbacks (a bit less formidable now than they seemed then) seven times. Even in early May, the Cubs began the month by facing Milwaukee, San Francisco, and the New York Mets. All three look like playoff teams. Out of the All-Star break, things will change for the Cubs. After boasting a 57-39 record at the break, they're in prime position to capitalize. Per Tankathon, the Cubs are tied with the Houston Astros for the second-easiest remaining schedule in all of baseball. Chicago's remaining opponents have a combined winning percentage of .482. Among the opponents that drove the number down are dates the Cubs still have with Colorado, the White Sox, Baltimore, Washington and 12 combined games left with Pittsburgh and Atlanta. On the flip side of that, the Cubs still have a collective 14 tilts against Milwaukee and St. Louis. However, eight of those 14 will be at Wrigley Field. Those 14 games against the Brewers and Cardinals (and more specifically, the eight against Milwaukee) could very well settle the division. The Cubs have the third-best record in baseball at the break, but are still only a game up on the Brewers. Milwaukee finished the first half on a tear, winning seven in a row—including a sweep of the Dodgers. Despite the slim lead, though, FanGraphs gives the Cubs a whopping 63.5% chance to win the National League Central. Why such favorable odds? While the Cubs have the second-easiest schedule left, the Brewers are tied with Baltimore for the fourth-hardest remaining schedule. Milwaukee still has series left against the Dodgers, Phillies and Padres. All three have shown to be heavy hitters in the National League, and the Cubs have wrapped up all games against those three. The eight games against the Cubs also shoots Milwaukee up the ladder in strength of schedule. All of that leads to FanGraphs giving the Cubs a commanding advantage in predicting who will win the division. If you don't want to consider one outlet to serve as the be-all and end-all, look at Baseball Reference. That site gives the Cubs a 70% chance to win the division opposed to just a 28% shot for the Brewers, though in that case, it's much less about strength of schedule and more about their assessed team strength. By the reckoning of Reference's Simple Rating System (SRS), the Cubs are the best team in baseball (1.2), so although the average quality of their remaining opponents (-0.1) is just 10th-worst in the league, they project to win the most games in the second half. Just keep in mind that (unlike FanGraphs's system) those aren't based on close assessments of each team's player-by-player individual talent, but rather on how they've each played over the last 100 games at a team level. It's flipping forward the Cubs' excellent first half less skeptically than other models would. So which club could the Cubs face, if they make the postseason? Winning the division or falling short of that crown will determine that. If the playoffs started today, the Cubs and Dodgers would receive first-round byes. It would catapult Chicago directly to the National League Divisional Series. However, the margins are razor-thin. Just like the Cubs only have a one-game lead over Milwaukee, they are also only a half game behind the Dodgers for the top spot in the National League. Winning the division and holding off whoever wins the National League East would assure the Cubs of a bye in the playoffs. Get jumped by Milwaukee and snag a Wild Card spot (or struggle enough to let the Phillies or Mets run by) and the bye evaporates. Back to the current moment. Chicago would have the No. 2 seed in the National League if the postseason began right now, and it would face the winner of a series between the Phillies and the Padres. A lot can change between now and the end of September, but FanGraphs gives the Cubs a 94% chance to make the playoffs and a 40.3% shot to earn a bye. Getting that extra rest to set up your rotation is always cherished. A weaker remaining schedule, blended with the vast majority of reports stating the Cubs will be big players at the trade deadline, puts them in the driver's seat to win the division. Eight games against the Brewers will carry a lot of weight, though, and an unorthodox five-game series in the middle of August will speak volumes as to who carries the torch in the division. Thanks to a rainout earlier in the season, the two will play five at Wrigley in four days, including a doubleheader to begin the series on August 18. Regardless of how you believe the final chapter of this Cubs season will be written, 57-39 at the break and leading the division is something everyone would've signed up for back in March. Of all the numbers and all the percentages that can be digested, there's one that sticks out. According to Baseball Reference, the Cubs right now have the highest odds to win the World Series at 15.8%. Right behind the Cubs are the Detroit Tigers, at 13.3%. Wouldn't that be something? View full article
  15. After a tremendous first half, Matthew Boyd has been named an All-Star for the first time! Boyd makes it three Cubs selected, but were Seiya Suzuki and Michael Busch snubbed? How good is Daniel Palencia? Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
  16. After a tremendous first half, Matthew Boyd has been named an All-Star for the first time! Boyd makes it three Cubs selected, but were Seiya Suzuki and Michael Busch snubbed? How good is Daniel Palencia? Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  17. Image courtesy of © Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images With the MLB Trade Deadline rapidly approaching, the Chicago Cubs are sitting in a fun spot, where the question isn't if they'll make a trade, but rather how many trades will they make? A lot of the focus is being put on adding a starter to the rotation. Plenty of names have been tossed about. Chicago's bench can't be ignored, though. It's been a dark cloud hanging over the head of what has otherwise been an incredible season for the offense. Eugenio Suarez wouldn't be a bench bat, but trading for him would have a domino effect that impacts the bench. He could be the perfect fit in Chicago. After spending seven years earlier in his career with Cincinnati, Suarez is best known by Cubs fans for being a Cubs killer. Suarez has clubbed 36 home runs to go along with 94 RBI in 132 games against the Cubs throughout his career. His 16 career home runs at Wrigley Field are the most he has at any ballpark that he hasn't played his own home games in. This year in Arizona -- his second season with the team -- Suarez has been showing off that sweet swing that packs quite the punch. Suarez is in the 87th percentile in hard-hit percentage according to his Statcast page. He's also in the 87th percentile in barrel percentage. Both are noticeable improvements compared to his first year with the Diamondbacks in 2024. It'd be a sight for sore eyes at third base for Chicago. Matt Shaw has made some adjustments at the plate since being called back up for a second go-round with the major league squad this year. The leg kick isn't nearly as present, and the glove has been surprisingly superb. Before Wednesday's error in the ninth inning against Cleveland, Shaw had a grand total of zero errors since being called back up in May. Despite that, if there is one weak point in the lineup that could use a jolt, it's been at the hot corner, where Shaw is still riding the rookie roller coaster at the dish. So, how would Suarez be a perfect fit? Bringing in Suarez would allow Shaw to catch his breath and become a bench piece for the Cubs. It's an area that needs a facelift. Jon Berti and Vidal Brujan provide some speed off the bench and Justin Turner has become a vibes guy. That's about it. Shaw would have the luxury of seeing things slow down in a lesser role for the second half, or if the Cubs still wanted the consistent reps, they could send Shaw back to Iowa. A reset could be in the best interest of Shaw, who mentioned on Tuesday how long this season has felt like. Does that sound like someone who's glowing with confidence and ready to hit his stride for a team with big ambitions of making a postseason run? Bringing in Suarez and sending Shaw to the bench would be one part of the equation that would be beneficial for all parties involved. Plus, Suarez is just a rental. The veteran slugger is set to hit free agency in the winter and while Shaw is sputtering at the plate now, certainly the plan is for him to figure it out and be the Cubs' third baseman of the future. Bringing in Suarez, who's on an expiring deal, presents a neat and tidy little bridge for the Cubs with Shaw. So why would Arizona do this? Suarez's hard-hit percentage of 50.7 is currently the highest he's ever had in a season during his long career. His .371 WOBA is the highest he's seen since 2019. Point blank, Suarez's stock is as high as it may reach. An optimist would tell you at 43-43, the Diamondbacks are just three games out of the final Wildcard spot. A realist would tell you that they are fourth in their own division, Corbin Burnes is out for the year, Zac Gallen has struggled mightily on the mound, and Suarez could walk for nothing at the end of the year if they don't trade him at the deadline this year. With his stock as high as possible, Arizona could get a return of a couple nice prospects or one really promising prospect for Suarez. A looming four-game series in San Diego next week against the Padres could seal the fate for how Arizona approaches the deadline. All in all, if there is one area of weakness in the Cubs lineup, it's at third base. The best solution that could hit the market is Suarez. He won't be the best answer for some of the woes Chicago has seen against left-handed pitchers (Suarez is shockingly slashing .176/.266/.485 against lefties), but he will be an incredibly consistent power bat that could serve as the final piece of the puzzle for Chicago's dazzling offense. View full article
  18. With the MLB Trade Deadline rapidly approaching, the Chicago Cubs are sitting in a fun spot, where the question isn't if they'll make a trade, but rather how many trades will they make? A lot of the focus is being put on adding a starter to the rotation. Plenty of names have been tossed about. Chicago's bench can't be ignored, though. It's been a dark cloud hanging over the head of what has otherwise been an incredible season for the offense. Eugenio Suarez wouldn't be a bench bat, but trading for him would have a domino effect that impacts the bench. He could be the perfect fit in Chicago. After spending seven years earlier in his career with Cincinnati, Suarez is best known by Cubs fans for being a Cubs killer. Suarez has clubbed 36 home runs to go along with 94 RBI in 132 games against the Cubs throughout his career. His 16 career home runs at Wrigley Field are the most he has at any ballpark that he hasn't played his own home games in. This year in Arizona -- his second season with the team -- Suarez has been showing off that sweet swing that packs quite the punch. Suarez is in the 87th percentile in hard-hit percentage according to his Statcast page. He's also in the 87th percentile in barrel percentage. Both are noticeable improvements compared to his first year with the Diamondbacks in 2024. It'd be a sight for sore eyes at third base for Chicago. Matt Shaw has made some adjustments at the plate since being called back up for a second go-round with the major league squad this year. The leg kick isn't nearly as present, and the glove has been surprisingly superb. Before Wednesday's error in the ninth inning against Cleveland, Shaw had a grand total of zero errors since being called back up in May. Despite that, if there is one weak point in the lineup that could use a jolt, it's been at the hot corner, where Shaw is still riding the rookie roller coaster at the dish. So, how would Suarez be a perfect fit? Bringing in Suarez would allow Shaw to catch his breath and become a bench piece for the Cubs. It's an area that needs a facelift. Jon Berti and Vidal Brujan provide some speed off the bench and Justin Turner has become a vibes guy. That's about it. Shaw would have the luxury of seeing things slow down in a lesser role for the second half, or if the Cubs still wanted the consistent reps, they could send Shaw back to Iowa. A reset could be in the best interest of Shaw, who mentioned on Tuesday how long this season has felt like. Does that sound like someone who's glowing with confidence and ready to hit his stride for a team with big ambitions of making a postseason run? Bringing in Suarez and sending Shaw to the bench would be one part of the equation that would be beneficial for all parties involved. Plus, Suarez is just a rental. The veteran slugger is set to hit free agency in the winter and while Shaw is sputtering at the plate now, certainly the plan is for him to figure it out and be the Cubs' third baseman of the future. Bringing in Suarez, who's on an expiring deal, presents a neat and tidy little bridge for the Cubs with Shaw. So why would Arizona do this? Suarez's hard-hit percentage of 50.7 is currently the highest he's ever had in a season during his long career. His .371 WOBA is the highest he's seen since 2019. Point blank, Suarez's stock is as high as it may reach. An optimist would tell you at 43-43, the Diamondbacks are just three games out of the final Wildcard spot. A realist would tell you that they are fourth in their own division, Corbin Burnes is out for the year, Zac Gallen has struggled mightily on the mound, and Suarez could walk for nothing at the end of the year if they don't trade him at the deadline this year. With his stock as high as possible, Arizona could get a return of a couple nice prospects or one really promising prospect for Suarez. A looming four-game series in San Diego next week against the Padres could seal the fate for how Arizona approaches the deadline. All in all, if there is one area of weakness in the Cubs lineup, it's at third base. The best solution that could hit the market is Suarez. He won't be the best answer for some of the woes Chicago has seen against left-handed pitchers (Suarez is shockingly slashing .176/.266/.485 against lefties), but he will be an incredibly consistent power bat that could serve as the final piece of the puzzle for Chicago's dazzling offense.
  19. How are we feeling about the Cubs after a 13-13 month of June? Michael Busch isn’t getting enough credit for his incredible season. We talk trades and trade ideas and discuss the worrisome nature of Chicago’s bench. Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  20. How are we feeling about the Cubs after a 13-13 month of June? Michael Busch isn’t getting enough credit for his incredible season. We talk trades and trade ideas and discuss the worrisome nature of Chicago’s bench. Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
  21. Image courtesy of Matt Marton-Imagn Images The Chicago Cubs have reached the halfway mark of the season boasting a record of 48-33. That's good for a three-game cushion over the Milwaukee Brewers in the NL Central. It's hard to imagine where the Cubs would be at this point if not for an offense that has dominated for much of the season. When it comes to the rotation, though, it's hard to imagine where things would be if not for the efforts of veteran Matthew Boyd. Boyd has been a machine of sorts for Craig Counsell's club, delivering one quality start after another. In his most recent outing on Wednesday against St. Louis, Boyd shoved to the tune of six innings, allowing just three hits and hanging up a goose egg in the scoring column for the Cardinals. Before that 8-0 win for the Cubs, Chicago had allowed seven or more runs in six consecutive games. Boyd put that streak to rest in emphatic fashion. In a year where the rotation has been somewhat of a roller coaster ride, Boyd has been the glue guy. Shota Imanaga returned to the bump on Thursday, tossing an effortless five shutout innings. It was Imanaga's first start since May 4 when he suffered a hamstring injury against Milwaukee and ended up on the shelf. It's true that Imanaga is Chicago's best starting pitcher, but he's already missed a chunk of the season. Meanwhile, Ben Brown's up-and-down efforts while trying to flourish with a two-pitch mix landed him back in Iowa earlier in the week. Colin Rea has essentially become an arm the Cubs use every fifth day to chew up as many innings as possible before the plug needs to get pulled. Jameson Taillon has been fine at times, but the long ball has plagued him all season long. Cade Horton has shown signs of brilliance but is still a rookie just entering the deep waters of the majors. Then there's Boyd, who, before the All-Star break has even arrived, has already logged his most starts (16) and innings pitched (91 2/3) in a season since 2019. Injuries have been the dark cloud hanging over the head of Boyd in recent seasons, and the Cubs can count their lucky stars that he's been healthy throughout the 2025 campaign. Chicago had sputtered with back-to-back losses in St. Louis before Boyd knocked the Cardinals down a rung or two on Wednesday. Counsell may have best summarized the start from the lefty hurler afterwards. Counsell went on to note that, outside of a start in Cincinnati earlier this season where Boyd struggled with his command, he's been a "super consistent, high level performer" in the words of the manager. Boyd has found success in a lot of ways this year in Chicago, but it's hard to ignore a few specific items. Dating back to 2021, Boyd had used his fastball just 37% of the time in the last four years combined before this season. Like the Cubs have done with many of their starters, that numbers has risen drastically. Boyd has fired the fastball 46% of the time this year while also seeing a slight uptick in his velocity with an average of 93.1 miles per hour. For a nice reference point, and while also recognizing Boyd is 34 years old, that's the highest velocity average in his career. Secondly, Boyd is filling up the zone. According to Boyd's Statcast page, the lefty has a zone percentage of 53.1% this year. That's the highest in his career. His 69.3% rate on first-pitch strikes is his highest mark in that category since 2021 and the second-highest total in his career. Point blank, Boyd is trusting his stuff, pitching with an immense amount of confidence and constantly peppering the zone. It should come as no surprise that with Boyd filling up the zone, doing so early and getting effective results, his walk percentage is in a very comfortable spot. Boyd is in the 84th percentile in walk percentage this year, but to better get a grasp on how that compares to his career, consider that his 5.7% in the walk department is by far the lowest in his career. It's amazing what results you can get when you trust your stuff and don't dance around the outside of the strike zone. Boyd has produced to such a level that it's entirely possible the Cubs have trade deadline plans for a rotation where he is the No. 3 in a playoff series. In fact, it'd be shocking if that wasn't the case at this point. Imanaga is the ace. After that, with all the trade rumors swirling, the Cubs could seek out a deal that gives them a solid No. 2 in the rotation. Then, it's Boyd. The offense gets a lot of the attention for the Cubs and rightfully so. But when canvassing the landscape of why this team is 48-33 up to this point, don't forget about Matthew Boyd keeping the rotation glued together. View full article
  22. The Chicago Cubs have reached the halfway mark of the season boasting a record of 48-33. That's good for a three-game cushion over the Milwaukee Brewers in the NL Central. It's hard to imagine where the Cubs would be at this point if not for an offense that has dominated for much of the season. When it comes to the rotation, though, it's hard to imagine where things would be if not for the efforts of veteran Matthew Boyd. Boyd has been a machine of sorts for Craig Counsell's club, delivering one quality start after another. In his most recent outing on Wednesday against St. Louis, Boyd shoved to the tune of six innings, allowing just three hits and hanging up a goose egg in the scoring column for the Cardinals. Before that 8-0 win for the Cubs, Chicago had allowed seven or more runs in six consecutive games. Boyd put that streak to rest in emphatic fashion. In a year where the rotation has been somewhat of a roller coaster ride, Boyd has been the glue guy. Shota Imanaga returned to the bump on Thursday, tossing an effortless five shutout innings. It was Imanaga's first start since May 4 when he suffered a hamstring injury against Milwaukee and ended up on the shelf. It's true that Imanaga is Chicago's best starting pitcher, but he's already missed a chunk of the season. Meanwhile, Ben Brown's up-and-down efforts while trying to flourish with a two-pitch mix landed him back in Iowa earlier in the week. Colin Rea has essentially become an arm the Cubs use every fifth day to chew up as many innings as possible before the plug needs to get pulled. Jameson Taillon has been fine at times, but the long ball has plagued him all season long. Cade Horton has shown signs of brilliance but is still a rookie just entering the deep waters of the majors. Then there's Boyd, who, before the All-Star break has even arrived, has already logged his most starts (16) and innings pitched (91 2/3) in a season since 2019. Injuries have been the dark cloud hanging over the head of Boyd in recent seasons, and the Cubs can count their lucky stars that he's been healthy throughout the 2025 campaign. Chicago had sputtered with back-to-back losses in St. Louis before Boyd knocked the Cardinals down a rung or two on Wednesday. Counsell may have best summarized the start from the lefty hurler afterwards. Counsell went on to note that, outside of a start in Cincinnati earlier this season where Boyd struggled with his command, he's been a "super consistent, high level performer" in the words of the manager. Boyd has found success in a lot of ways this year in Chicago, but it's hard to ignore a few specific items. Dating back to 2021, Boyd had used his fastball just 37% of the time in the last four years combined before this season. Like the Cubs have done with many of their starters, that numbers has risen drastically. Boyd has fired the fastball 46% of the time this year while also seeing a slight uptick in his velocity with an average of 93.1 miles per hour. For a nice reference point, and while also recognizing Boyd is 34 years old, that's the highest velocity average in his career. Secondly, Boyd is filling up the zone. According to Boyd's Statcast page, the lefty has a zone percentage of 53.1% this year. That's the highest in his career. His 69.3% rate on first-pitch strikes is his highest mark in that category since 2021 and the second-highest total in his career. Point blank, Boyd is trusting his stuff, pitching with an immense amount of confidence and constantly peppering the zone. It should come as no surprise that with Boyd filling up the zone, doing so early and getting effective results, his walk percentage is in a very comfortable spot. Boyd is in the 84th percentile in walk percentage this year, but to better get a grasp on how that compares to his career, consider that his 5.7% in the walk department is by far the lowest in his career. It's amazing what results you can get when you trust your stuff and don't dance around the outside of the strike zone. Boyd has produced to such a level that it's entirely possible the Cubs have trade deadline plans for a rotation where he is the No. 3 in a playoff series. In fact, it'd be shocking if that wasn't the case at this point. Imanaga is the ace. After that, with all the trade rumors swirling, the Cubs could seek out a deal that gives them a solid No. 2 in the rotation. Then, it's Boyd. The offense gets a lot of the attention for the Cubs and rightfully so. But when canvassing the landscape of why this team is 48-33 up to this point, don't forget about Matthew Boyd keeping the rotation glued together.
  23. Ian Happ has been the model of consistency in Chicago, and that's no different this year. The Cubs have struggled against lefties in the last month. How concerning is the trend? What will be the corresponding move when Shota Imanaga returns on Thursday? Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
  24. Ian Happ has been the model of consistency in Chicago, and that's no different this year. The Cubs have struggled against lefties in the last month. How concerning is the trend? What will be the corresponding move when Shota Imanaga returns on Thursday? Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball
  25. Chicago used its pitching to take three of four from Pittsburgh over the weekend. What arms stood out? Early All-Star results are in with Pete Crow-Armstrong and Kyle Tucker leading the way in the National League outfield. Is Ryan Pressly back, and we take a look at the Cubs-Brewers series. Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-north-side-baseball-podcast/id1798599313 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75wMGhBwlrDDYPt3kaF453 Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-north-side-baseball-po-268998437/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/eey7h6ih Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@northsidebaseball View full article
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