Seiya Suzuki Just Raised The Stakes For These Surging Cubs

As the Chicago Cubs close in on the division lead, Seiya Suzuki's timely resurgence has become a critical factor in their playoff aspirations.

Seiya Suzuki picked a big moment to deliver his latest swing, and he made it look easy.

On Monday night, the Chicago Cubs outfielder came through with a two-out walk-off single against Mason Miller, the hardest kind of pitcher to beat and the kind of finish that sends a ballpark into a frenzy. Suzuki burst around second base with both arms in the air, grinning from ear to ear before getting swarmed by his teammates and soaked in Gatorade after Chicago’s 3-2 win.

It was the second walk-off hit of Suzuki’s Cubs career and his first since 2024. For the Cubs, it was also their MLB-leading 10th walk-off of 2026, another sign that this team is finding ways to win as the All-Star break approaches.

The timing could hardly be better. Chicago has won 13 of its last 17 games entering Tuesday, and the Cubs just wrapped up a 6-1 road trip by taking two of three from the Milwaukee Brewers. That stretch trimmed Milwaukee’s division lead to 5.5 games, while Chicago moved into a tie for first in the Wild Card standings and saw its playoff odds take a major jump.

Suzuki has been a big reason for the surge. Over his last 11 games, he’s 15-for-45 with a .333 average, a .952 OPS, two home runs, four doubles, seven runs scored and 11 RBI. His Milwaukee trip stood out even more, with two home runs - including one off NL Cy Young frontrunner Jacob Misiorowski.

Suzuki went 4-for-12 in the series and drove in six runs. Two of those RBI came on a two-out, bases-loaded single in the top of the 10th, the kind of hit that can tilt a series and give a club real momentum.

June has been a turnaround month for Suzuki. He’s hitting .310/.388/.560 with a .948 OPS this month, a sharp rebound from May, when he batted .190 with an OPS of just .551.

While Pete Crow-Armstrong has been one of the hottest hitters in baseball over the last 30 days, Suzuki has settled in right behind him as the Cubs’ No. 2 heater. His June OPS sits inside the top 25 in the league, and his 20 RBI are tied for 14th-most.

That production is part of why Suzuki’s name had started to surface in trade deadline chatter when the Cubs were struggling. The 31-year-old is in the final season of his five-year, $85 million deal, and he has been linked as a fit for the Philadelphia Phillies, among others. But he also holds a full no-trade clause, so any deal involving him would need his approval.

Now, with Chicago surging, the Cubs look much more like buyers than sellers. If they’re serious about a playoff run, keeping Suzuki in the middle of the lineup makes a lot of sense.

His overall body of work with Chicago backs that up. In 601 games, Suzuki owns a .268/.347/.470 slash line with an .816 OPS. Through 69 games this season, he’s already produced nearly as much bWAR, 2.4, as he did all of last year, when he finished at 2.6.

And with the Cubs dealing with their share of pitching injuries, the offense matters even more. That puts extra weight on bats like Suzuki’s and Crow-Armstrong’s, and when Suzuki is locked in, he looks like one of the most dangerous hitters in baseball.

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