Today’s Reflections
Plenty has been written below about Matthew Boyd’s stellar performance Tuesday night. Not much was made about the team effort from the offense in the 5-2 game. Not a lot of glitz, but it needs to be mentioned.
Alex Bregman, PCA, Dansby Swanson and Miguel Amaya each had two hits in the game. Bregman, PCA and Swanson all had at least an RBI (Bregman had two). Amaya scored three of the five runs. Michael Busch walked twice and had an RBI-sacrifice fly.
PCA has a seven-game hit streak going (with four multi-hit games). Bregman is quietly producing, having hits in five-of-seven games (three multi-hit) with seven RBI in that period. Swanson is also five-of-seven with four multi-hit games. Amaya has very quietly had a hit in six-of-11 games (three multi-hit). He scored in four of those games, two runs once and three twice.
A couple of honorable mentions: Since a four-game hitless string in May, Busch has had at least one hit in 29 of the last 47 games (62 percent). Unfortunately, that hasn’t led to many runs scored or RBI yet, but he’s putting himself out there to be driven in. And Nico Hoerner, who went 1-for-4 with a single, stolen base and run scored, has hit safely in eight of his last nine games.
That was all to say — while it’s fun to watch a guy play out of his mind for a week or two, it’s these quiet, unspectacular, yet steady, levels of production team-wide that helps consistent winners.
And helps pitchers like Boyd feel comfortable enough to pitch six scoreless innings, strand five runners and strikeout seven. It looks like he’s back — just stay healthy, please.
*means autoplay on, (directions to remove for Firefox and Chrome). {$} means paywall. {$} means limited views. Italics are often used on this page as sarcasm font. The powers that be have enabled real sarcasm font in the comments.
Tuesday Night’s Game Story:
- Jordan Bastian (MLB.com): Boyd back to vintage form against O’s after injury-riddled season. “Boyd gave the Cubs six scoreless innings in a 5-2 victory over the Orioles in his third start since returning from the injured list.”
- Meghan Montemurro (Chicago Sun-Times): Matthew Boyd — after 6 shutout innings in 5-2 win — shows he could be key to Chicago Cubs’ 2nd-half success. “The Chicago Cubs know what a healthy Matthew Boyd can give them.”
- Patrick Mooney (The Athletic {$}): Matthew Boyd is trending in the right direction as Cubs consider trade-deadline possibilities, “Boyd found it in Tuesday night’s 5-2 win over the Baltimore Orioles, throwing six scoreless innings at a rain-soaked Oriole Park at Camden Yards.”
- Jordan Bastian (MLB.com): PCA ignites Cubs’ offense once again from leadoff spot. “The Orioles got a firsthand look at the kind of offensive catalyst that Chicago has in its leadoff spot right now.”
Trade, Acquisition and Injury Talk:
- Jordan Bastian (MLB.com): With penchant for drafting position players, Cubs aim to invest more in pitching. “What the Cubs have struggled to do in recent years — even stretching back before the team’s previous playoff-caliber group — has been creating a deep pipeline of pitching prospects.”
- Elias Schuster (Chicago Sun-Times): Cubs Prepared to Change Their MLB Draft Strategy to Fill Obvious Void. “The Chicago Cubs have targeted pitching less than the vast majority of teams in recent years, and it’s come back to hurt them.”
- Tyler Edmunds (OnTapSportsNet): It’s Now Or Never For Jed Hoyer And The Chicago Cubs. “For the last few seasons, we’ve heard the same old spiel from Jed Hoyer around this time of year. “Well, we’ll wait and see what happens these next few weeks,” in reference to whether he plans to make any moves by the annual trade deadline. Jed CANNOT do that this season.“
- Cory Sparks (North Side Baseball): 3 Affordable Pitchers Who Just Might Save the 2026 Cubs. “We know the Cubs have already fired most of their bullets when it comes to spending and prospect capital. We also know they still need pitching help. Who fits through the eye of the needle they’re trying to thread?”
- Mike Axisa (CBSSports.com): MLB rumors: Astros narrowing trade deadline targets; Cubs eyeing pitching help. “The trade deadline is less than a month away.”
- Jordan Campbell (Cubbies Crib): Crippling Pirates injury creates less complicated trade deadline path for Cubs. “Konnor Griffin’s injury could reset the Pirates’ deadline expectations, making life easier for the Cubs.”
- Jake Meisner (Cubbies Crib): Cubs could take a chance on a veteran reliever the Athletics just jettisoned. “This guy fits the mold we’ve seen the Cubs hone in on in recent weeks as they search for help.”
- Jordan Campbell (Cubbies Crib): Cubs have obvious opportunity with former Giants pitcher weighing opportunities. “Gregory Santos is far from perfect, but that might not matter to the Cubs right now.”
- Meghan Montemurro (Chicago Tribune {$}): Starter Jameson Taillon on track to rejoin the Chicago Cubs after the All-Star break at the latest. “The Cubs are more inclined to have the veteran make one more minor-league rehab start before coming off the injured list, which would instead set up Taillon to come back when the second half resumes next weekend.”
A Few PCA Stories:
- Ron Luce (OnTapSportsNet): Cubs’ Pete Crow-Armstrong, Michael Busch Among Best Defenders in Baseball. “The Cubs have two of the best at their respective positions, with Pete Crow-Armstrong (+16) leading all centerfielders and Michael Busch (+5) leading all first basemen.”
- Michael Cerami (Bleacher Nation): Pete Crow-Armstrong is on Pace for Some Sammy Sosa-Level Cubs Franchise History. “No matter which way you slice it, the projection models are envisioning another 30-30 season for PCA in 2026. That would give him two, immediately tying Sammy Sosa for the franchise record.”
- Vinnie Duber (Chicago Sun-Times): Years marveling at this version of Pete Crow-Armstrong? ‘It’d be pretty special’ for Cubs. “Following up his spectacular June with a hot start to July, Crow-Armstrong’s teammates are continually wowed by the All-Star center fielder.”
Assorted Stories:
- Matthew Trueblood (North Side Baseball): The Chicago Cubs Are a Contender’s Lineup Stapled to a Rebuilding Team’s Pitching Staff. “If a camel is a horse designed by a committee, the Cubs are a baseball team built by one. That joke should feel less funny, given that Jed Hoyer is a powerful top executive. Instead, it hits too close to home.”
- Vinnie Duber (Chicago Sun-Times): Ups and downs: Hard way to fly — or to win World Series — but Cubs tout ability to move on from highs, lows. “Slamming down and soaring up doesn’t make for the ideal landing to a flight. Nor does it make for the ideal pace of a baseball season. But the Cubs insist they’re built to handle the whiplash that has been their 2026 campaign so far.”
- Jordan Campbell (Cubbies Crib): Cubs starting lineup vs Orioles proves they’re enabling the Alex Bregman problem. “Alex Bregman has been extended a lengthy leash in the Chicago Cubs starting lineup, but that courtesy should be up.”
- Patrick Mooney (The Athletic {$}): Why the Cubs are taking another chance on Drew Pomeranz before trade deadline. “With a slow-moving market for trades and four weeks to go until the Aug. 3 deadline, the Cubs want to see if the 6-foot-5 lefty reliever can still be trusted in big moments.”
- Tyler Courtney (LastWordOnSports): Is Kevin Alcántaras Usage in 2026 Becoming a Concern for Chicago? “Alcántara has often been in the Cubs’ afterthoughts, and now it has become a major concern not only for the rest of 2026 but potentially for the future of the team as well.”
- Gordon Edes (Chicago Sun-Times): Cubs reliever Ryan Rolison has earned the trust of manager Craig Counsell. “The lefty has a 5-1 record and earned his first MLB save last week.”
Food For Thought:
Alex or Aleck Miller (originally Ford, possibly December 5, 1912 – May 24, 1965), known later in his career as Sonny Boy Williamson, was an American blues harmonica player, singer and songwriter. Miller used various names, including Rice Miller and Little Boy Blue, before calling himself Sonny Boy Williamson, which was also the name of a popular Chicago blues singer and harmonica player. To distinguish the two, Miller has been referred to as Sonny Boy Williamson II.
Beginning in the 1930s, he traveled around Mississippi and Arkansas and encountered Big Joe Williams, Elmore James and Robert Lockwood Jr. He was also associated with Robert Johnson during this period. Miller developed his style and raffish stage persona during these years. In 1941, Miller was hired to play the King Biscuit Time show, where they began billing Miller as Sonny Boy Williamson, apparently in an attempt to capitalize on the fame of the well-known Chicago-based harmonica player and singer Sonny Boy Williamson.
In 1949, Williamson relocated to West Memphis, Arkansas, and lived with Howlin’ Wolf. He started his own KWEM radio show from 1948 to 1950. He brought his King Biscuit musician friends to West Memphis—Elmore James, Houston Stackhouse, Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, Robert Nighthawk, and others—to perform on KWEM radio. Williamson married Howlin’ Wolf’s half-sister Maggy and he showed Wolf how to play harmonica.
Please be reminded that Cub Tracks and Bleed Cubbie Blue do not necessarily endorse the content of articles, podcasts, or videos that are linked to in this series.