The Padres head to Chicago this week with a three-game set against a Cubs team that’s been rolling, and San Diego is bringing a different-looking rotation plan with it.
San Diego enters the series at 43-39 after dropping two of three to the Dodgers, a response that followed a sweep of the Braves. Now the challenge gets no easier.
Chicago is 46-38, fresh off a series win over the Brewers, and has won six of its last seven games and eight of its last 10 overall. The Cubs also took two of three from the Padres when the teams met at Petco Park in April.
The opener Monday, June 29, will feature RHP Griffin Canning against LHP Shota Imanaga. Canning is set to make an actual start rather than work behind an opener, and that matters given how uneven his recent stretch has been.
His last two appearances came behind openers, and after handling the first one well, he was tagged in a rough outing last week against Atlanta, recording just two outs while giving up four runs. For the season, Canning is 1-5 with a 7.38 ERA over 42.2 innings, and his roster spot could be in jeopardy if the results don’t improve soon.
Imanaga comes in at 5-6 with a 4.40 ERA in 92 innings, though he’s been hit hard lately, allowing four or more runs in five of his last seven starts.
Tuesday, June 30 brings a left-on-left matchup with JP Sears facing Matthew Boyd. Sears will be making just his second start of the season for the Padres after getting an unexpected turn last week when Lucas Giolito landed on the injured list.
He delivered exactly the kind of outing San Diego needed, working 5.2 innings, allowing two runs and striking out five. Another strong showing could put him in line for a bigger role.
After that start, manager Craig Stammen said, “The way he threw the ball today is what he’s capable of doing in the big leagues and what he has shown he did in the big leagues before we traded for him,” manager Craig Stammen said of Sears after his start. “Exciting that he came up.
We needed him big. He stepped up to the plate and just did an amazing job for us.”
Boyd, meanwhile, owns a 5.02 ERA across 28.2 innings with 35 strikeouts and 10 walks. He missed nearly two months before returning this past week and threw 4.2 shutout innings against the Mets. The last time he saw the Padres, in late April, he gave up five runs on eight hits in four innings.
Wednesday’s series finale on July 1 matches RHP Walker Buehler with RHP Colin Rea. Buehler has been on a tear, coming off 5.1 innings of one-run ball against the Dodgers and now having allowed just one run in each of his last five starts.
That run has dropped his ERA to 1.71 over that span. He faced Chicago in April as well and gave up two runs in 4.2 innings.
Quietly, he’s become the Padres’ best pitcher, and he’ll try to keep that going in the finale.
Rea enters with a 4.80 ERA over 84.1 innings, though he’s been sharper in his last two outings, allowing one run across 10.1 innings. The series finale will also come with an early start time, as the Padres and Cubs wrap things up Wednesday morning in Chicago.
In Other News...
Padres Suddenly Have A Bigger Randy Vasquez Problem Than One Loss
The Padres did not just drop the second game of their series against the Dodgers, they watched a promising night spiral into a 15-3 loss when Randy Vasquez was hit hard in the sixth inning. What had been a manageable game quickly got away, and the right-hander ended up taking most of the damage as Los Angeles piled on and turned the matchup into a rout.
Vasquez pointed to his pitch location as the problem afterward, a frustrating answer for a pitcher trying to stabilize his place in the staff. He is still lined up to start the next game in the series, but after an outing like this, the scrutiny around every inning he works is going to get a lot sharper. [Read more 🡒]
Jake Cronenworth Just Made The Padres Infield Question More Urgent
Jake Cronenworths road back to the Padres started in encouraging fashion at Triple-A El Paso, where his rehab assignment opened with a home run in his first at-bat and a seven-inning stint at second base. It was the kind of first step San Diego wanted to see after clearing him medically, even if the club is clearly more interested in how he looks over a stretch of games than in one loud debut.
The bigger question is whether Cronenworth can use this assignment to show hes ready for everyday major league work again and leave behind the struggles that had already made his return a delicate call. San Diegos infield picture has been in flux, and his readiness matters not just for the lineup, but for how the club handles the middle infield and the players who have been waiting on the other side of this opening. [Read more 🡒]
Padres Need Their Ace To Answer In Season-Shaping Dodgers Finale
The Padres spent Saturday night getting buried by a Dodgers lineup that turned one inning into a rout, with nine runs coming across in the sixth on the way to a 15-3 loss. It was the kind of game that left little for San Diego to hang onto, as all five Padres pitchers were tagged for at least one run while Los Angeles starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto handled the other side of the matchup cleanly enough to keep the pressure on.
Now the focus shifts to the series finale, where Michael King gets the ball for San Diego opposite Emmet Sheehan. The Padres need King to steady a staff that was pushed around badly in the opener, but there is at least some reason for optimism after his recent rebound against Atlanta, when he delivered seven shutout innings and looked more like the top-of-the-rotation arm San Diego has been counting on. [Read more 🡒]
