The Cubs’ 5-2 loss to the Twins Friday night at Wrigley Field was certainly not the way we envisioned the season’s “second half’ beginning.
The offense (mostly) disappeared. And a long ball by the opposition proved the difference in the game.
Let’s begin at the beginning.
The Cubs took a first-inning lead. Pete Crow-Armstrong led off with a walk and stole second. Then Seiya Suzuki also walked.
Michael Busch’s single made it 1-0 Cubs [VIDEO].
So after 18 pitches, the Cubs had the lead and two runners on with nobody out. Big inning possible, right?
Well… no. Alex Bregman, who ended the first half so well, struck out. Then Ian Happ hit into a double play. Inning over, and already 0-for-2 with RISP. (That would become a theme on this night.)
The Cubs had another good scoring chance in the second. Nico Hoerner led off with a single and Michael Conforto followed with another hit. But again a strikeout (Carson Kelly) and double play (Dansby Swanson) would end the inning. That’s 0-for-4 with RISP if you’re keeping track.
In the top of the third, with a runner on first and nobody out, Tristan Gray hit a possible double-play ball to Busch. Unfortunately, Busch’s throw hit Swanson in the face [VIDEO].
There was a brief delay while Cubs staff tended to Swanson, who stayed in the game. Did this delay bother Colin Rea? He did warm up during the delay, but then allowed a single to Trevor Larnach that tied the game, followed by the pitch alluded to in the headline, a sweeper to Ryan Jeffers. Jeffers hit the ball into the bleachers for a three-run homer that made it 4-1 Twins.
The Cubs got another runner to scoring position in the bottom of the fourth. With two out, Nico had his second hit of the game and went to second on a throwing error. Conforto popped up to end the inning, 0-for-5 with RISP.
Rea settled down after the Jeffers homer and allowed just one further baserunner from the fourth through the sixth. It wasn’t that bad an outing, but I’m sure Rea would love to have that pitch back. From BCB’s JohnW53:
Because one of the four runs he allowed was unearned, Colin Rea earned a quality start.
It was his fourth, in 16 starts, tying him with Edward Cabrera and Jameson Taillon for second most on the Cubs, behind Shota Imanaga’s seven.
Ben Brown has three; Javier Assad and Matthew Boyd, two; and Cade Horton, one, for a total of 27.
The Angels began Friday with 27, which was 23rd most among the 30 teams. The Dodgers had 54; the Red Sox, 45; the Mariners, 44; and the Phillies, 43. No other team had more than 39.
The Angels moved ahead of the Cubs Friday with a very good start from Reid Detmers, who held the Tigers scoreless for six innings with seven strikeouts. I still would love to see the Cubs trade for Detmers before the deadline. (The Tigers won the game off the Angels bullpen.)
Anyway, the Cubs did put another run on the board in the sixth. Seiya Suzuki led off the inning with a double and advanced to third on a ground out. Alex Bregman then walked and while Ian Happ was at bat, Suzuki scored on this wild pitch [VIDEO].
Bregman held at first on that wild pitch but advanced to second when Happ singled. With one out there were more scoring chances but… Hoerner hit into a force play and Conforto flied to center. That’s two more unsuccessful at-bats with RISP.
Drew Pomeranz entered to throw the seventh and walked the first two hitters he faced. A pinch-hit single by Ryan Kreidler made it 5-2. I’m thinking the Pomeranz Cubs Reunion Tour might not have too many gigs left.
The Cubs bats were mostly silent the rest of the way. The only baserunner over the last three innings was a leadoff walk by Happ in the ninth. In the eighth, Suzuki sent a ball to deep left-center, and a hat tip to Twins center fielder Luke Keaschall for this PCA-like sliding catch [VIDEO].
So: Lack of offense, lack of hitting with RISP (1-for-10 on the night) and the one pitch thrown for a three-run homer was what doomed this game. One good thing: Hoerner’s two hits. He hadn’t had two hits in a game since June 28. Hopefully this gets him going.
The Brewers won Friday so the Cubs now trail by six games in the NL Central. The Cubs maintained their lead for the first wild card spot over the Phillies, who were idle on Friday. Speaking of Fridays, from John:
With the loss, the Cubs now are 5-8 in their rare Friday night games at home.
They have lost the last five. The four before last night: 10-2 to the Marlins in June of 2021, 12-4 to the Cardinals in September of 2021, 4-2 to the Pirates in April of 2022 and 8-3 to the Red Sox in July of 2023.
The April 2022 game noted by John was moved from 1:20 to 7:05 early that day due to weather. The others were scheduled. Also, for whatever it’s worth, the Cubs are now 3-5 in 2026 wearing the “Chicago Blues” uniforms; they were 9-4 in them last year.
The Cubs will look to even up the series with the Twins Saturday afternoon at Wrigley Field. Matthew Boyd will start for the Cubs and Taj Bradley goes for Minnesota. Game time is 1:20 p.m. CT and TV coverage will be via Marquee Sports Network.