The Cubs are back at Wrigley after a road trip that changed the tone around the club, and now the test gets a little more dangerous. Chicago won six of seven away from home, and if that run is going to mean something, it has to carry over against a Padres team that has shown plenty of fight.
That starts with the lineup, where Craig Counsell is rolling out a familiar group again. Pete Crow-Armstrong leads off, followed by Alex Bregman in the two-hole, Michael Busch, Seiya Suzuki, Ian Happ, Nico Hoerner, Michael Conforto, Miguel Amaya, and Dansby Swanson.
Bregman’s spot remains the biggest talking point. Even with the rough stretch he’s been in, the Cubs are keeping him near the top.
He was in the middle of some scrutiny during Sunday’s win after not running full speed to first base, and the numbers have only made the conversation louder. He is hitting .204 over his last 15 outings, has two hits in his last six games, and has been especially ineffective with runners in scoring position.
Still, Counsell is staying with the same general look for now.
There’s no change elsewhere in the batting order from Sunday. Suzuki remains in the cleanup spot after a bounce-back series, Conforto is back in right field, and Carson Kelly is out again with Amaya behind the plate.
Conforto’s playing time figures to stay heavy. Matt Shaw was placed on the IL Monday after being pulled from Sunday’s game, and he’ll be replaced on the roster by Kevin Alcantara for now. The Cubs may turn to The Jaguar at some point, but Counsell has been reluctant in the past because of Alcantara’s strikeout rate.
On the other side, the Padres arrive after losing two straight to the Dodgers, but they were on a strong run before that. They had won six of eight and swept the Braves, which is a good reminder that this is not a club Chicago can treat lightly.
San Diego’s lineup features Fernando Tatis, Jr. at the top, with Samad Taylor, Manny Machado, Miguel Andujar, Ty France, Jackson Merrill, Xander Bogaerts, Freddy Fermin, and Jake Cronenworth following.
The Cubs will hand the ball to Shota Imanaga, who is coming off a rough outing against the Mets. After back-to-back strong starts, he was tagged for four runs on three homers in 5.1 innings.
It has been that kind of season for him: plenty of chase, few baserunners, but too much damage when hitters square him up. He has allowed the third-most home runs in baseball.
That’s not a great setup for a warm night at Wrigley with the wind blowing out. The Padres haven’t exactly been a home-run machine this season, ranking 23rd, but they do own a 40.2 percent hard-hit rate.
San Diego is starting Griffin Canning, and the Cubs should have chances if they’re patient. Canning has had a rough season over his ten games, carrying a 7.38 ERA and a walk rate of 13.2 percent. Opponents have also done damage against him, with both his barrel rate and hard-hit rate sitting in the 14th percentile or above.
He mixes a deep arsenal, leaning on his slider, fastball and change-up, while right-handers also see his sinker. The idea is to coax ground balls, which means Chicago’s hitters will need to stay disciplined and look for pitches they can lift.
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 🡒]
