Cubs Finally Got The Boyd And Bregman Boost They Needed

In their victory over the Orioles, the Cubs saw sparks of brilliance from Boyd's pitching and Bregman's hitting that could be telling for the rest of the series.

The Cubs opened their three-game set in Baltimore with a clean, steady 5-2 win Tuesday night at Oriole Park at Camden Yards, and the formula was pretty simple: Matthew Boyd dealt, Alex Bregman delivered in key spots, and Chicago never let the Orioles fully back into it.

Chicago jumped out to a 3-0 lead and protected it the rest of the way, improving to 51-40. Baltimore dropped to 42-50.

The offense didn’t exactly bludgeon the Orioles, but it kept the line moving. The Cubs finished with 10 hits, with Bregman, Pete Crow-Armstrong, Dansby Swanson, and Miguel Amaya each collecting two. Chicago also managed five runs without a home run, which matters after a rough stretch in which the club scored just seven runs in its series with the Cardinals.

Bregman was at the center of the biggest offensive moments. In the top of the third, he lined an RBI single to bring home Amaya, who scored from second. Chicago later loaded the bases in that inning and came away empty after that, but Bregman had already done damage in a spot that mattered.

He came through again in the fifth. Bregman beat out a possible double play, and Amaya scored on the play to make it 3-0. It was the kind of hustle play that doesn’t always show up as a highlight, but it changed the shape of the inning and added another run to the board.

Boyd’s night was even more important. He worked 6.0 scoreless innings, struck out seven, and allowed just three hits and two walks.

It was his longest outing since coming off the IL, and it was also his fourth win of the season. His fastball was up, touching 96 mph, and six of his seven strikeouts came on swings.

The left-hander’s ERA fell from 5.08 to 4.31, and his FIP sits at 3.26. More than the numbers, though, it looked like a start where Boyd was in command from the jump, attacking the zone and making Baltimore chase his pitch all night.

The biggest test came in the fourth. After Pete Alonso singled and Coby Mayo was hit by a curveball, Boyd responded by striking out the next three batters to escape without damage. Craig Counsell pointed to that stretch after the game.

"The first two guys get on with the single and hit by pitch." Counsell said, talking to the media in the away managers office.

"Those next (three) strikeouts were huge. He just bored down and made some really good pitches."

That sequence stood out because it looked like a normal Boyd start, not a pitcher still feeling his way back from injury. If the Cubs get more outings like that, they’ll take them in a heartbeat.

There was also another rough night for Ian Happ. While Dansby Swanson has been on the kind of heater that makes a lineup look different, Happ is stuck in a cold stretch. He entered the game batting .159 and had struck out 18 times over his last 13 games.

His OPS dipped below .800 against the Brewers last weekend and now sits at .759 after he went 0-for-4 Tuesday. Happ’s been one of the Cubs’ streakier bats, but the broader track record has usually been more stable than this. He hasn’t had a multi-hit game since June 19, when the Cubs beat the Blue Jays 16-2, and he has walked only four times since June 23.

Chicago has five games left before the All-Star break, and Happ will have a few more chances to find something before then. A reset afterward might not be the worst thing for the longest-tenured Cub.

In Other News...

Cubs Deadline Rumors Just Took A Very Familiar Turn

The Tigers have put a pair of familiar deadline names on the board in Tarik Skubal and Casey Mize, and the Cubs are once again being mentioned in the mix as the market starts to sort itself out. For Chicago, the appeal is obvious: rotation help is hard to find in late July, and Detroits willingness to listen gives the Cubs another avenue to explore if they decide the staff needs a boost.

What makes this one worth watching is how the Cubs view their place in the National League Central as the deadline gets closer. If theyre hanging around the Brewers, the front office could be pushed toward a more aggressive approach, but the financial side matters too, and that may shape how far they go in chasing pitching help from Detroit. [Read more 🡒]

Major Pirates Injury May Have Just Changed Everything For Cubs

The Pirates have been forced to absorb another hit in a season already shaped by injuries, and it comes at a moment when every roster decision carries extra weight. Their young shortstop has been one of the more important bats in the lineup, giving Pittsburgh a boost as it has stayed in the mix longer than many expected.

For the Cubs, the timing matters because the trade deadline is never just about who buys and who sells, but how aggressively a division rival feels it needs to respond. If Pittsburgh is suddenly less inclined to push chips in, Chicago could find one more competitor easing off the gas at exactly the wrong time. [Read more 🡒]

Cubs Linked To The Deadline Arm Their Rotation Desperately Needs

The Cubs search for rotation help has pushed them toward the trade market, and Freddy Peralta has emerged as a name worth watching. According to a report from The Athletics Will Sammon, Chicago has interest in the right-handed starter as it looks to reinforce a staff hit by injuries, and Peraltas expiring contract makes him the kind of deadline arm teams can actually move for in July.

There is also a familiar thread here for Craig Counsell, who spent six seasons with Peralta in Milwaukee and knows exactly what the starter can bring when he is right. The question for the Cubs is whether that comfort level, plus the immediate need on the mound, is enough to make Peralta a realistic target as the deadline chatter starts to sharpen. [Read more 🡒]