The Chicago Cubs needed a response on Saturday, and they got one in a 5-3 win over the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park.
That result snapped a chance at a third straight loss, pulled Chicago back to .500 in the series, and set up a Sunday rubber match before the All-Star break. The Cubs can still head into that pause 12 games over .500, which is a pretty strong place to be for a club that dropped 10 in a row two months ago.
They also picked up some ground in the standings over the last two days. Chicago gained 1.5 games on the Milwaukee Brewers and now sits six games back with a 1.5-game lead in the top Wild Card spot.
The biggest swing of the day came from Alex Bregman, whose first season in Chicago has drawn plenty of criticism because the offense just hasn’t matched the contract. The Cubs gave him a five-year, $175 million deal, but the bat has lagged behind the glove. He entered Saturday hitting .236, with a .156 mark in July and just .200 in June.
Then came the moment Chicago needed.
With one out and a runner aboard in a tie game, Bregman launched a two-run homer into the left-field seats to put the Cubs ahead. It was his eighth home run of the season, and his first go-ahead home run since August 11, 2025 - before he ever donned the blue pinstripes.
Javier Assad did the heavy lifting early. With injuries thinning out the pitching staff, every start has felt like a stopgap assignment for Cubs arms, and Assad has handled that job well. He came in with opponents hitting just .125 against him in high-leverage spots, according to Baseball Reference, and he backed that up with another escape act.
The Reds threatened right away in the first, putting runners on the corners with nobody out. Assad didn’t blink.
He struck out J.J. Bleday, then got a ground ball for a double play to end the inning.
Cincinnati was back at it in the third after back-to-back singles from T.J. Friedl and Elly De La Cruz gave the Reds two on with nobody out.
Sal Stewart followed with a soft flyout, and then Assad and Michael Busch teamed up to pick off De La Cruz at first. Bleday then flew out, and Assad was out of trouble again.
He finished five innings, allowing two earned runs on seven hits while striking out four. His ERA is 4.11, but over his last seven outings he has been much sharper, posting a 2.80 ERA and a 1.02 WHIP across 35.1 innings.
The bullpen had to finish the job from there, and Craig Counsell used five relievers to do it: Drew Pomeranz, Caleb Thielbar, Jacob Webb, Ryan Rolison and Trent Thornton.
Pomeranz, who was claimed back by the Cubs on July 3 off waivers, has had a rough return to Chicago with an 8.10 ERA in 3.1 innings. He gave up a home run on his first pitch of the day, but that was the only damage as he settled in to get through an inning.
Thielbar and Webb each turned in scoreless frames. Rolison, working on his birthday, then took over for his second save of the season. Tyler Stephenson opened the inning with a single, and Rolison got two quick outs before a walk to De La Cruz forced another move.
That brought Thornton in to face Sal Stewart, and he needed just three pitches. Stewart rolled an 0-2 pitch to Nico Hoerner, who had an easy play, and Thornton celebrated the save.
Sometimes it takes a village, and that’s been the Cubs’ formula in this bullpen all season: next man up, next man delivers.
The Cubs wrap up the first half on Sunday at 12:40 p.m. CT, with Matthew Boyd (4-1, 4.31 ERA) set to start against Reds left-hander Andrew Abbott (5-5, 3.92 ERA). Chicago returns July 17 to host the Minnesota Twins in a rare Friday night opener at 7:05.
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