The Chicago Cubs’ bullpen keeps taking hits, and the latest one is right-hander Ethan Roberts landing on the injured list with right forearm inflammation.
Roberts was part of the chaos in the Cubs’ series against the Milwaukee Brewers. He couldn’t finish off the 10th inning Sunday after Chicago had pushed across a 4-1 lead, and Jordan Wicks had to come in to clean up the mess.
Roberts faced three hitters, allowed two singles and a walk, and was pulled after nine pitches with the bases loaded. Two days earlier, in Friday’s opener, he gave up a two-run homer and then another run on a triple in the same sixth inning after coming in behind Colin Rea.
The injury designation is another frustrating turn for Roberts, who was already on the injured list earlier this season after a freak accident while working out.
On paper, his season line doesn’t look disastrous: a 4.21 ERA over 25.1 innings. But the recent stretch has been rough.
Since May 31 against the St. Louis Cardinals, Roberts has given up 11 earned runs in 10.2 innings, good for a 9.28 ERA, with seven strikeouts and seven walks in that span.
The Cubs will turn to Gavin Hollowell to fill the spot. The 28-year-old right-hander has already been called up from Triple-A three times this season, and his big-league sample with Chicago is still tiny: four games and 4.1 innings. In that brief run, he’s allowed three runs on five hits, including two home runs.
Roberts is the third Cubs reliever to hit the injured list in the past week. Phil Maton went down first with the same knee issue, and veteran left-hander Hoby Milner was sidelined over the weekend with appendicitis. Chicago has also been without closer Daniel Palencia since June 15.
That leaves the Cubs piecing together a bullpen that looks nothing like the one they opened the season with. The current group includes Tyler Ferguson, Gavin Hollowell, Trent Thornton, Bryse Wilson, Jacob Webb, Jordan Wicks, Ryan Rolison and Caleb Thielbar. Of those eight, only Thielbar and Webb were on the Opening Day roster.
The message is hard to miss: the Cubs have already burned through a huge chunk of their pitching depth, and the season is still barely past the halfway point.
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