If you're a Milwaukee Brewers fan, it's time to savor the moment. The Brewers are making waves in the MLB, and Friday's game was a testament to the team's potential for an exciting season ahead.
The Brewers were the talk of the town last year, setting a franchise record with 97 wins and generating buzz as a strong contender for Milwaukee's first World Series title. However, the postseason didn't go as planned, with the team falling to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League Championship Series.
Fast forward to 2026, and this Brewers squad is showing signs of being even more formidable. On Friday, they set a new franchise milestone by becoming the fastest team in Brewers history to reach 50 wins, achieving this feat in just 79 games.
Milwaukee launched into a three-game series against the Chicago Cubs with a commanding 6-2 victory, thanks in part to Jacob Misiorowski's stellar performance on the mound. This win brought the Brewers' season record to 50-29, giving them a comfortable 7 1/2-game lead over the Cubs in the National League Central.
Both teams entered the series on hot streaks, each winning four straight and seven of their last ten games. But it was Milwaukee who emerged victorious, delivering a win as satisfying as it was historic.
Misiorowski made headlines by breaking his own record for the fastest pitch thrown by a starter since the pitch tracking era began in 2008. His 105.5 mph fastball against the Cubs tied for the third-fastest pitch ever recorded in MLB history. Only Aroldis Chapman has clocked faster pitches, holding the top two spots with speeds of 105.8 and 105.7 mph.
It was nearly a perfect day for Milwaukee, capped off by the Dodgers' loss, which nudged the Brewers to within half a game of the best overall record in baseball.
The Brewers are on track to surpass their previous franchise record of 97 wins, with projections pointing to a 102-win season. That's an impressive leap from last year's pace, where the team stood at 43-36 after 79 games.
This year's Brewers have the makings of a team that could go the distance and secure a championship title. With the best farm system in the league, Milwaukee is well-positioned to make strategic moves before the trade deadline, potentially adding a big bat or an ace to their roster.
Success like this doesn't come around often, and the Brewers seem ready to seize the moment.
In Other News...
Cubs May Already Have A Carson Kelly Backup Plan Brewing
Carson Kelly has given the Cubs exactly what they hoped for this season, settling in as a reliable force behind the plate and making himself one of the more appealing catchers headed toward free agency. The problem for Chicago is that a strong year from Kelly only sharpens the next question, because the front office is juggling more than one roster need and cant treat catcher as the only item on the list.
If Kelly prices himself into a different tier this winter, the Cubs may need a cleaner backup plan than simply hoping everything works out. The organization has internal options it can sort through if he departs, but it is also keeping an eye on the future at the position, where the 2026 draft could offer a long-term answer and help shape what Chicago looks like behind the plate in the years ahead. [Read more 🡒]
Cubs Just Sent Another Message To The Brewers And The Central
The Cubs kept rolling with another tight win over Milwaukee, outlasting the Brewers 4-3 in extra innings and backing up Sundays victory with a second straight statement against the division leader. Chicago has now won 8 of its last 10, and the timing matters, because the club is trying to turn a strong stretch into something more meaningful in the NL Central race.
The pitching staff did its part again, piecing together 10 innings with 12 strikeouts and just two earned runs allowed while the offense found enough late to push ahead. Seiya Suzuki came through in the 10th with a clutch two-run single, and the Cubs even had to manage a late Brewers push before finally closing the door, a reminder that this kind of momentum only counts if they can keep stacking nights like this. [Read more 🡒]
Cubs Fans Are Running Out Of Patience With Alex Bregman
Alex Bregmans first season with the Cubs has been short on the kind of impact Chicago expected, and the unease around his bat has only grown as the summer has worn on. He has struggled to produce in big spots, especially with runners in scoring position, where the numbers have sunk well below what a middle-of-the-order hitter is supposed to provide.
The frustration is not just about missed chances at the plate, either. In a recent game against the Brewers, Bregman drew heat for the way he handled a ground ball in the box, a moment that fit the broader concern around his season: the Cubs are still waiting for the version of him that changes games, not the one who keeps leaving fans wanting more. [Read more 🡒]
