The Chicago Cubs are heading into the final stretch of the 2026 regular season still in the mix for the division, but the first half wasn’t kind to everyone in the organization. A few players boosted their stock. Others took a real hit.
Moises Ballesteros is near the top of that second group. The 22-year-old opened the year with a real chance to lock down the regular designated hitter job after a strong late-2025 look.
With Owen Caissie traded and Kyle Tucker signing with the Los Angeles Dodgers, the left side of the DH picture was there for the taking. Ballesteros looked ready to seize it, too.
Through April 27, he carried a 1.144 OPS and seemed to be barreling up the ball every other trip to the plate.
Then the bottom fell out. Over his final 34 games, Ballesteros hit .128/.217/.170 with just one home run, one double, a 14 wRC+, and a 50.7 GB%. The Cubs sent him to Triple-A on June 18, and at this point, he doesn’t look like a call-up option unless the active roster takes an injury hit.
Hunter Harvey’s first half was rough in a different way. Chicago gave the right-handed reliever a one-year deal worth $6 million, a meaningful investment for a pitcher who had thrown only 10.2 innings for the Kansas City Royals in 2025 and came with injury concerns.
The Cubs also hold an $8 million option for next season, but there’s no reason to expect that to be picked up. Harvey hasn’t been healthy since the first week of April.
He made just four appearances for the Cubs before the break, and even after the All-Star break passed, he still had not begun a rehab assignment. Right triceps inflammation has kept him out, and with August approaching, the clock is working against him.
The bigger issue may be the training staff and the way injuries have piled up. Every team deals with health problems, but the Cubs are now dealing with their second straight season of an unusually high number of pitching injuries.
In 2026, it hasn’t just been the active roster taking the hits, either. The injuries have spread through the entire organization, all the way down to the lowest level in the minors.
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