Cubs First Half Reckoning Captures A Season Defined By Total Chaos

The roller-coaster first half of the 2026 Chicago Cubs season sees the team navigating wild swings in performance, from leading the league to struggling in the standings, but with promising signs of resilience.

The first half of the 2026 season has given Cubs fans just about everything: a slow start, a scorching surge, a brutal collapse, and then another strong push right before the All-Star break. Through all of it, Chicago has stayed near the top of the league and put itself in position to be active at the trade deadline, even while dealing with pitching injuries that seemed to show up constantly and an offense that went hot and cold by the month.

The standings tell the story in sharp swings. From March 26 through April 11, the Cubs went 7-9 and sat last in the NL Central.

Then came the explosion: from April 12 through May 8, they went 20-3, climbed to 27-12 overall, took first place in the division, and owned the best record in MLB. That was followed by a rough stretch from May 9 through June 10, when they went 7-22 and dropped to 34-34, fourth in the NL Central.

Since then, from June 11 through July 12, they’ve gone 20-8, improved to 54-42, moved into second place in the division, and posted the fifth-best record in MLB.

That early hot streak was as wild as it gets. The Cubs’ 20-3 run included two separate 10-game winning streaks, with a three-game losing streak in between.

After that, they went 2-4 over their next six games and then lost 10 straight. They did sweep a four-game home series against the Cincinnati Reds on May 7, but they didn’t win another series until June 13, when they took the first two games on the road against the San Francisco Giants.

The latest stretch has been much steadier. Chicago entered the All-Star break having gone 20-8 over its last 28 games, the best record in MLB during that span.

The Cubs have only lost one series in the past month, with the St. Louis Cardinals taking two of three at Wrigley Field over 4th of July weekend.

The offense has mirrored the team’s overall season in dramatic fashion. As of May 8, the Cubs had the No. 1 offense in baseball, with 215 runs in 39 games, or 5.5 runs per game.

Over their next 29 games, that number fell to 3.2 runs per game, and they scored two or fewer runs in 15 of those contests. But the bats have flipped back in a big way: over their last 28 games, the Cubs have again been near the top of the league, scoring 176 runs for an average of 6.3 per game.

Walk-off wins have been part of the chaos too, and the Cubs lead MLB with 10 of them. The most recent came on June 29 against the San Diego Padres.

The pitching side has been even more chaotic. Chicago has used 33 different pitchers this season, the most of any team in MLB. That total is three more than the Minnesota Twins and Tampa Bay Rays, who are tied for second.

All the injuries, role changes, minor trades, waiver pickups, and Triple-A call-ups have left the Cubs with just one qualified starting pitcher, Shōta Imanaga, and four qualified relievers: Jacob Webb, Ryan Rolison, Trent Thornton, and Hoby Milner.

And then there’s Pete Crow-Armstrong. During the roughest part of the season, he carried the team while being the youngest starting player on the roster. PCA not only found his swagger again, but has also emerged as one of the best players in the sport.

It’s been a wild first half for the Cubs, and the second half figures to bring even more twists.

In Other News...

Bulls Veteran Suddenly Looks Like A Major Trade Piece

The Bulls are heading into a stretch where the roster could keep shifting around the edges, and Tre Jones has emerged as one of the names worth watching. Chicago has a few young pieces it wants to sort through, but Jones fits the profile of a veteran who can draw interest from teams looking for help, especially as the front office weighs how to balance development with any chance to reshape the roster.

Josh Giddey is a different kind of decision, and one that figures to get more attention if rival teams start calling. The Bulls are expected to hear inquiries on him, even if moving him would take a significant return and come with more layers than a simple deadline deal. With Tiago Splitter likely to lean into development next season, the Bulls have to decide which players are part of that long-term picture and which ones become movable pieces as the market takes shape. [Read more 🡒]

Pete Crow-Armstrong Just Proved His Bears Bond With Caleb Runs Deeper

Pete Crow-Armstrongs connection to Caleb Williams goes beyond the kind of casual crossover that usually comes with two young Chicago athletes sharing a city. The Cubs outfielder has built a real friendship with the Bears quarterback, and his affection for the Bears traces back to growing up with a Chicago-born father and to the kind of highlight-reel memories that stick with a kid around the game. It is the sort of local bond that makes Chicago sports feel smaller, and a little more interconnected, than it does on most nights.

Crow-Armstrong and Williams now give the city a fresh version of the old athlete-friendship formula, the kind fans remember when different teams and different eras start to overlap. For the Bulls, it is another reminder of how much Chicago still loves its crossover stars, especially when one of them is openly tied to the Bears and the other is trying to become the face of the franchise. The friendship is already real enough to matter, and it carries the kind of future intrigue that Chicago always seems willing to embrace. [Read more 🡒]

Caleb Wilson Sends A Message Bulls Fans Will Love

While the Wizards and Jazz have already shut down top rookies AJ Dybantsa and Darryn Peterson before the end of Summer League, Caleb Wilson has taken a different approach. The Bulls No. 4 overall pick has stayed on the floor, showing the kind of energy and athleticism that made him such an intriguing prospect in the first place while giving Chicago fans a longer look at what he can do.

Wilson also made clear he wants as many reps as possible, and that mindset will play well in Chicago. Beyond the highlight plays, he has talked about sharpening the outside shot that could determine how quickly his game translates, which is part of what makes his continued Summer League run worth watching even with the bigger payoff still ahead. [Read more 🡒]