The Chicago Cubs are hunting for pitching help, and they may have a significant internal answer on the horizon.
According to USA Today’s Bob Nightengale, left-hander Justin Steele is expected to begin throwing off a mound in the first week of August. Nightengale also reported that Cubs manager Craig Counsell said it would be too late in the season for Steele to get back into the rotation, but that he could be used out of the bullpen in September.
“Chicago Cubs ace Justin Steele, who hasn't pitched since April 7, 2025, is expected to start throwing off a mound the first week of August, but Cubs manager Craig Counsell said it will be too late in the season for him to rejoin the rotation and instead would be used in the bullpen in September,” Nightengale writes.
Steele has been on the injured list all year and has been working his way back from an elbow issue. The mound work in August marks a meaningful step in that process, even if a return to the majors still appears to be a September possibility.
That timing lines up with the MLB trade deadline on August 3, which leaves the Cubs still free to look outside the organization for help while also waiting on Steele’s progress. If he does make it back, even in a limited bullpen role, it would give Chicago another arm for the stretch run and, potentially, the postseason.
The 3.30 ERA All-Star left-hander has been out since April 7, 2025, but this latest update suggests he is moving closer to rejoining the club. For a Cubs pitching staff dealing with injuries and uneven production, that’s the kind of news they’ve been waiting to hear.
In Other News...
Pirates Player Calls Out Pat Murphy After Ugly Brewers Sweep
The Brewers final series before the All-Star break left plenty of bad blood behind, and Ryan OHearn was at the center of it. Pittsburgh finished off a three-game sweep in Milwaukee, and OHearn took a pitch to the body in all three games, including both ends of Saturdays doubleheader and again on Sunday, making for a bruising few days against Brewers pitching.
OHearns frustration went beyond the hit-by-pitches themselves. He said he was upset about being plunked repeatedly and took issue with Pat Murphy after one of the incidents, adding another layer to an already ugly series between division rivals who wont have to wait long to see each other again. [Read more 🡒]
Brewers Fans Wont Love How One 2022 Deadline Miss Just Aged
The Brewers 2022 deadline haul has already been judged mostly through the lens of what Milwaukee got back for Josh Hader, but the lesser-noticed move involving Tristan Peters has aged in a way that stings a little more now. Peters was one of the pieces sent out as the front office tried to reshape the roster for that stretch run, and while the returns on that deadline were mixed at best, the outfielders path since then has kept moving in the opposite direction.
Now in Chicago after a chain of trades, Peters has turned into a real big-league story, the kind that makes old deadline decisions look sharper in hindsight. He has put together a strong season and earned an All-Star nod in 2026, which is the sort of development Brewers fans cant help but notice when they look back at how that summer unfolded and how little Milwaukee ultimately got from the moves around it. [Read more 🡒]
Brewers Prospects Just Made Milwaukees Infield Future Feel Very Real
The 2026 Futures Game offered a tidy reminder of why the Brewers infield future has become such a talking point. Jesus Made and Luis Pea both took part in the showcase, and each left a mark in different ways. Made went 1-for-3 with an RBI, while Pea showed the kind of all-around skill set that has made him one of the most closely watched young players in the organization.
Made also produced the hardest ball of the day at 106.9 mph, a loud swing that fit the buzz around a player already viewed as MLBs top prospect. Pea added a defensive play and three flyouts with strong bat speed, another sign that Milwaukee may have more than one answer waiting on the left side of the infield. With the trade deadline approaching, those performances only made the Brewers long-term picture feel more immediate. [Read more 🡒]
