The Cubs are heading into the second half with the kind of setup that keeps a front office busy and a fan base dreaming. They’re 12 games over .500, sitting on top of the National League Wild Card race, and in position to do real damage at the MLB trade deadline. Help may also be on the way from the injured list, with Jameson Taillon likely back in the coming days, Edward Cabrera expected within the next month, and Ben Brown and Justin Steele potential bullpen options in September.
But the Cubs can’t just wait for reinforcements. If they’re going to turn a strong position into a real playoff push, they need several key players to stop dragging and start producing.
Alex Bregman is the clearest example. He’s been one of the biggest disappointments on the roster so far, but he also remains one of the most important. When Bregman is right, he gives the Cubs the kind of bat that can cover up a lot of problems elsewhere, especially on a pitching staff that still has plenty of questions.
There are signs he may be waking up. Over the last month, Bregman and DK have talked about his bat path being "uphill." Recently, his path has been less uphill and more level at contact.
What this means is the actual bat path changes are resulting from an intentional effort to be more level. pic.twitter.com/uAQMqIgIPu
- Brendan Miller (@brendan_cubs) July 9, 2026
The timing matters. Over the last two weeks before the All-Star break, Bregman started to look more like himself, and that carried into the Reds series last weekend. Since June 30, he leads the Cubs in RBI, and against Cincinnati he went 4-for-14 with two home runs and a double.
Shota Imanaga is another player the Cubs need to hold steady. His return has been fairly close to what could reasonably be expected, and there are some encouraging signs in the profile.
He’s generating more chase this season, sitting in the 97th percentile, and his barrel rate has improved enough to land in the 15th percentile. Even so, the home-run problem hasn’t gone away.
That’s why his 4.17 ERA through 19 starts still feels like a warning sign rather than a clean bill of health. He’s not nearly as unpitchable as he was at the end of the 2025 season, and that’s the good news. The Cubs need that version of Imanaga to stick, because the rotation is still leaking oil and regression from him would be the last thing they can afford, even with a deadline addition.
The bullpen has its own issues, and Caleb Thielbar is part of that story. Injuries have taken attention away from him, and Phil Maton’s struggles have done the same, but Thielbar has been rough in his own right. He owns a 4.23 ERA in 32 appearances, and his 5.27 FIP paints an even uglier picture of how things have gone.
His Baseball Savant page shows regression in plenty of places. He’s missing more bats, but the tradeoff has been command.
His walk rate is up to 10.9% this season, a jump of 5% from last year. The Cubs will likely add bullpen help at the deadline, but they still need Thielbar to find something close to his old form.
Then there’s Nico Hoerner, whose season has taken a bizarre turn. He opened April looking like a legitimate MVP candidate, then fell off a cliff.
There was a brief hint late in June that he might be climbing out of the slump, but that hope hasn’t held up. This month, he has a wRC+ of 1 through 39 plate appearances and an OPS of .374.
What makes it so hard to pin down is that his underlying numbers haven’t changed dramatically from 2025. The biggest difference is that he’s putting fewer balls on the ground, down about 5% from last season.
Even that doesn’t fully explain the collapse. If the Cubs want their lineup to stretch deep enough to matter in October, they need answers from Hoerner fast.
In Other News...
Cubs Just Made A Pitching Move That Could Shape The Deadline
The Cubs latest draft business gives a clearer picture of how they want to balance the present and the future. First-rounder Cade Townsend signed for a reported $3.1 million, an under-slot deal that helps Chicago preserve some flexibility while adding what is now the top pitching prospect in the system. Third-round pick Carson Jasa also came in under slot, and the club kept another arm in the pipeline by bringing back Jake Woodford on a minor-league contract after previously giving him a major-league deal.
All of that matters because the Cubs have already moved past the luxury tax threshold, yet they still have room to maneuver before the second line becomes a real concern. For a front office that has to keep one eye on the deadline and another on the next wave of pitching, the way these deals were structured could end up shaping how aggressive Chicago can be in July. [Read more 🡒]
These 3 Cubs Could Decide Whether Chicago Makes A Real Run
Nico Hoerners value to the Cubs has always been bigger than the box score, because the defense is steady and the at-bats usually play a clean, winning brand of baseball. But Chicagos push in the second half will depend on more than glove work from its infield anchor, especially with the offense needing more consistent production from the spots that are supposed to keep innings moving and pressure on opposing staffs.
Alex Bregman and Edward Cabrera sit on different sides of that equation, but both loom large in how far this club can go. Bregman has shown signs of life after a quiet stretch, while Cabrera remains the kind of arm the Cubs targeted for a reason and still need to become a factor when the roster is at full strength. If Chicago is going to turn a decent position into a real run, it probably needs those two trajectories to keep moving in the right direction. [Read more 🡒]
Cubs Prospect Rankings Suddenly Feel Much Deeper After The 2026 Draft
ESPNs updated Cubs prospect rankings after the 2026 MLB Draft give the farm system a much different look, and not just because of the names at the top. Jefferson Rojas, Josiah Hartshorn and Jaxon Wiggins still anchor the list, but the latest wave of draft picks has pushed the organization into a newer, deeper phase of development, with recent additions suddenly carrying real weight in the system.
Cade Townsend and Caden Sorrell are now part of that conversation, and the overall picture suggests the Cubs have more young talent in the pipeline than they did a year ago. The bigger question is how all of those recent picks will sort themselves out over time, especially with the rankings already showing how quickly the balance can shift when a draft class starts to hit. [Read more 🡒]
