Cubs MLB Roster

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40-Man Roster Info

40 players are on the MLB RESERVE LIST (roster is full), plus two players are on the 60-DAY IL 

26 players on MLB RESERVE LIST are ACTIVE, twelve players are on OPTIONAL ASSIGNMENT to minors, one player is on the 15-DAY IL, and one player is on the 10-DAY IL

Last updated 4-18-2024
 
* bats or throws left
# bats both

PITCHERS: 13
Yency Almonte
Adbert Alzolay 
Javier Assad
Colten Brewer
Ben Brown
Kyle Hendricks
* Shota Imanaga
Mark Leiter Jr
Hector Neris 
* Drew Smyly
Jameson Taillon 
Keegan Thompson
* Jordan Wicks

CATCHERS: 2
Miguel Amaya
Yan Gomes

INFIELDERS: 7
* Michael Busch 
Garrett Cooper
Nico Hoerner
Nick Madrigal
Christopher Morel
Dansby Swanson
Patrick Wisdom

OUTFIELDERS: 4
* Cody Bellinger 
# Ian Happ
Seiya Suzuki
* Mike Tauchman 

OPTIONED: 12 
Kevin Alcantara, OF 
Michael Arias, P 
Pete Crow-Armstrong, OF 
Jose Cuas, P 
Brennen Davis, OF 
Porter Hodge, P 
* Luke Little, P 
* Miles Mastrobuoni, INF
* Matt Mervis, 1B 
Daniel Palencia, P 
Luis Vazquez, INF 
Hayden Wesneski, P 

10-DAY IL: 1 
Seiya Suzuki, OF

15-DAY IL
* Justin Steele, P   

60-DAY IL: 2 
Caleb Kilian, P 
Julian Merryweather, P
 





Minor League Rosters
Rule 5 Draft 
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Game 74 Recap: Cubs 4, White Sox 3

Daylight Drama

W - Wood (4-1), back-to-back jack winners, Aramis Freakin' Ramirez, A day's worth of bragging rights, listening to stunned silence of Hawk and DJ

L - Linebrink (2-2), Blithering idiocy, Hawk Harrelson, listening to blithering idiocy, listening to three hours of Hawk Harrelson's blithering idiocy

Box Score, Photos

Things to Take from This Game

1. Quality starts by the lefties

Lilly continued to have problems with the Home Run ball, giving up a solo shot to Dye in the second and a two-run blast to Pierzynski in the third.  Those wound up being the only runs the Cubs gave up, as  Lilly worked out of trouble in both the fifth and sixth.  Danks had a stronger game, striking out five and walking none, and left with a 3-1 lead.  He only gave up a run-scoring GIDP to Lee in the first.  However...

2. No Contest in the Battle of the Bullpens

Dotel came in for the seventh, and promptly surrendered back-to-back jacks to Lee and Ramirez.  Howry by contrast got the last out of the seventh and had an easy eighth, while Wood survived a near-miss home run that only registered as a leadoff double, and got out of the ninth without damage.  That set up the bottom of the ninth, where... 

3. Ramirez Walks Off

Aramis hit his second home run of the game, this one off of Linebrink and to dead center into the juniper bushes. Cubs win a great game, 4-3.

 

 The "why did you miss this game, and need to rely on my thrilling recap?" details, below.

Game Recap

Inning 1 - Top

  • Cabrera with a lazy fly to Fukudome in center.
  • Pierzynski with a soft pop towards teh very shallow left field foul line that Theriot runs out for, catching it a few paces behind Ramirez.
  • Quentin hits one well into the right-center gap, but DeRosa makes a nice running catch.

Inning 1 - Bottom

  • Fukudome with a swinging bunt a third of the way up the third base line. Danks makes a poorly advised and more poorly executed throw to first, Swisher makes a fantastic save. Fukudome safe, either way
  • Theriot hits one into the right-center gap. Anderson races over to keep Theriot to a single. Fukudome to third.
  • And Danks almost throws one away on the pickoff at first.
  • Lee has a 1-2 count, checks his swing on a pitch that looked pretty close on the inside corner. Gets the ball call, and the checked swing call. Phew. 2-2 count. Backed off by another pitch for a 3-2 count. Nice job coming back from 0-2.
  • Lee with a hard-hit ball right at Cabrera, 6-4-3 GIDP, but run scores.
  • Ramirez also goes from 0-2 to 3-2, before K's swinging.

Inning 2 - Top

  •  Dye hits an 0-1 pitch onto Waveland.  Looked like a letter-high rolling curve.Tie game.
  • Swisher with a soft blooper to right, DeRosa runs in for the catch.
  • Crede bounces one to his third-base coach, who gives it to a middle-aged guy in the first row who is wearing a two-billed cap.  Facing in opposite directions, he has stitched together a Cubs hat and a Sox hat, so he can flip one bill or the other to the front as needed.  Cute. 
    • Recovering from my moment of gullability, I guess it must be something he bought from a vendor.  Still a cute idea.
  • Long AB by Crede, finally K's swinging at a fastball
  • Alexei Ramirez is very, very slight of stature
    • And of course he immediately turns on one, hitting a double into the left-field well.
    • I mean really, this guy is skinnier than I was in high school.  That's skinny.
  • and Anderson K's swinging, stranding the runner.

Inning 2 - Bottom

  •  Soto grounds an outside fastball through the 6-5 hole.  On the WGN TV broadcast DJ observes that the Cubs are attacking the first-pitch fastball
  • and indeed, DeRosa fouls off the first-pitch fastball.
  • DeRosa fists a weird little blooper towards Ramirez at second.  He's near the bag, but makes this too-soft shovel pass to Cabrera.  Nice job by Cabrera to wait for it, get off the bag, and turn the double play.
  • Murton's huge quads line one to center for a hit.
  • Cedeno lined out to left.

Inning 3 - Top

  • Danks K's looking at a breaking ball on the inside corner
  •  Cabrera rolls a 1-2 pitch up the middle, left of the second base bag for a single.
  • Pierzynski reaches down for a fastball that gets a bit too much of the plateand golfs it into the first row or so of the blechers just right of center.  AJ is very pleased with himself.  3-1 Sox.
  • 3-0 count to Quentin.  Walks after a 3-1 count on a curve that floats high and outside, not unlike the floating curve Dye hit out.
  • Lilly jams Dye, flies out to DeRosa
  • Swisher walks, Rothschild out to the mount.
  • Crede with a weak pop out to Theriot, in front of the second base bag.  Inning over.

Inning 3 - Bottom

  •  Lilly's thrown 60 pitches through three.
  • Lilly K's swinging at a fastball
  • Fukudome misses a breaking ball low and outside, by a foot.  Strikes out.
  • Crede with a nice diving play to his left on a grounder by Theriot.  Gets him at first.
  • Way, way more gloating from Hawk than I can stand in that inning.  Two "he gone"s and a "yes!" on the Crede play.  Glad I also have Pat and Ron going on, via mlb.com

Inning 4 - Top

  •  Alexei Ramirez K's swinging
  • Anderson grounds to Theriot.
  • Danks with a broken bat, soft fly out to Murton.  Quick inning.

Inning 4 - Bottom

  •  Lee hits a 3-1 fastball intot he right field well, Dye makes the catch
  • Ramirez grounds to Cabrera
  • Soto K's looking.

Inning 5 - Top

  •  Cabrera K's swinging through a very nice change up
  • AJ with a soft liner to shallow center, Fukudome gets it
  • Quentin hits one high and deep to just left of center.  Fukudome can't decide if he can make a catch right at the Ivy or not, and gets caught in between.  At the last second decides to play it off the wall.  Probably a good call there.  Ball is maybe a half-foot short of landing in the basket.  Double.
  • Dye promptly grounds to Theriot.

Inning 5 - Bottom

  •  (Missed this inning due to phone call, but DeRosa K'd, Murton grounded out and so did Cedeno.  As far as I can tell, it sounds like it was a very nice 3-1 play by Swisher.  (On replay, Danks' foot beat Cedeno's sliding hand to the bag, by a few inches.)

Inning 6 - Top

  •  Swisher hits a double into the left-field well.
  • Crede K's swinging.
  • Ramirez pops up behind home plate.  Soto circles it, makes the catch.  Lilly with two nice outs to keep Swisher on second.
  • Lilly really slowing things down against Anderson.
  • Anderson waves at a pitch low and away for strike 3.  Looked like a change to me, but the gun read 88mph.  Pat and Ron now saying it also looked like a change to them.   Regardless, nice work by Lilly to strand Swisher

Inning 6 - Bottom

  •  Lilly flies to Dye.  Battles the sun, but makes the catch
  • Fukudome singles to left.
  • Danks giving Fukudome a lot of undue attention at first base.  DJ and Hawk even note he's on the edge of balking
  • Theriot bounces into a crisp 5-4-3 GIDP.  gyeh.

Inning 7 - Top

  •  Uribe hits for Danks, dumps a hit into center just in front of Fukudome.  He overruns it a bit, makes an awkard lunge back for it, hopefully didn't strain anything
  • Cabrera pulls one right down the left field line, it actually slices back a bit towards the foul pole, just barely missing it.  Foul ball.
  • K's looking at a curve on the outside corner on the next pitch
  • Pierzynski with a weak pop to Theriot.
  • Quentin walks.  Lilly out, Howry in to face Dye
  • Dye with a soft liner right at Murton, out of the inning

Inning 7 - Bottom

  •  Dotel in for Danks, leaves having thrown 106 pitches
  • Very first pitch, Lee hits one maybe a dozen rows up in straight-away right.  Some Sox fan gets a hole of the ball and throws it back on the field.  3-2 game.
  • Ramirez gets out in front a bit of a breaking pitch, but still manages to drive it into the left field bleachers.  Looks like it almost was one-handed.  Santo is going nuts on the radio broadcast.  WGN still hasn't shown a replay of that homer, jerks.
  • There we go.  A rolling slider.
  • Hawk, your "he gone!" rings a bit hollow when it comes on the heels of back to back home runs that tie up the game against your sorry reliever.  That said, Soto K's.
  • DeRosa drives a liner to right, but Dye makes a nice catch running in on it.
  • Murton rolls a single in to right.  Reached out for a low and away breaking pitch.
  • Hawk says Marmol reminds him of Fausto Carmona
    • Sure.  The only real difference being that Marmol strikes out NINE AND A HALF MORE BATTERS PER NINE INNINGS than Carmona.  Otherwise, they're practically the same guy.
  • Cedeno K's swinging

Inning 8 - Top

  • Heh, Pat points out that we had Back to Back Jacks winners in that silly radio contest that no one ever wins.  Woo.
  • Swisher lines a single in to right
  •  Crede grounds into a 5-4-3 GIDP.  No problem.
  • Ramirez bounces out to Cedeno at second.

Inning 8 - Bottom

  • Hoffpauir to hit for Howry, and with that, Matt Thornton in for Dotel.
  • and Blanco in for Hoffpauir
  • Blanco flies to Quentin in left
  • Fukudome K's swinging at a fastball
  • Theriot dumps a single into right-center.
  • Crowd on its feet for Lee.
  • Thornot paying a lot of attention to Theriot.
  • Lee with a fly out to Anderson in center.

Inning 9- Top

  • Wood in for Howry
  • Anderson smashes one to center, right over Fukudome's head.  I thought it was going out.  But it hits off the ivy, just right ofthe 400 ft sign.  Fukudome gets too close to the wall and it gets past him, but Anderson plays it very cautiously and stays at second.  Second time that Fukudome has struggled with some very tough judgement calls at the wall
  • Thome with a fisted popup to Theriot.  That makes at least four weak pops to short this game, that I count.
  • 2-0 count to Cabrera, Wood buckles him with a curve for a strike.  Next pitch in the dirt, 3-1
  • Cabrera flies to DeRosa in medium right, Anderson holds.
  • Pierzynski up, lots of booing.
  • Pierzynski K's on a check swing.  The appeal declares he swung at it, and Pierzynski, to no one's surprise, is pissed and it's Not His Fault!!!!!!! ~sob~.  Barks all the way back to the dugout.  Pitch was probably a strike, anyway.  Inning over.

Inning 9 - Bottom

  •  Linebrink in for Thornton
  • Ramirez hits one into the shrubbery in center field.  Rounds first base with the fist in the air, and Wrigley goes nuts.  Everyone comes out to greet him at home, and does the Group Jump.
  • Dead Silence from Ken "Hawk" Harrelson.
  • Meanwhile, Santo screams his lungs out.

Parachat Recap

 

Inning 1

  • Our bodies are revolting.
    • Er, rebelling.
  • last night's game.
  • Scrap
  • Len references OPS, woo

Inning 2

  • Where is everyone?
  • Kenny and Ozzie's classless comments about the Cubs and Wrigley.
Inning 3
  • Blasting the bark off a tree.
  • Lilly's mental stature.
  • Lilly and Fukudome's swings.

Inning 4

  •  Publishing
  • Oblivious students.
  • Bite-me land.

Inning 5

  •  Cito Gaston
  • Lilly's HR pace
  • How long until we can panic?

Inning 6

  • Lilly's pitch count.
  • Gallagher
  • Carlos, Carlos, Carlos
  • HOF prospects for current pitchers
  • Cito Gaston, again
  • Trade rumors
  • Other Cubs blog message boards.

Inning 7

  •  Jerry Manuel will cut you.
  • State Capitals
  • Greinke rooming with Brett
  • The Recliner Incident
  • Why let Lilly lead off one half inning, then pull him mid-way through the next?
  • Vodka advertisements

Inning 8

  • fending off a gang with a couch.
  •  Danks' bulletin-board quotation about Wrigley

Inning 9

  • Following the game
  • fantasy trades
  •  Pandemonium


Cubs record in games recapped improves to 10-5

 

Tags

Comments

Fab recap, Trans. I missed much of the game, but saw the Ramirez homer in the ninth. My only regret is not getting to experience the silence of Hawk & DJ firsthand (I was watching the Comcast broadcast). A great, great, great, great win.

After Lee hit into the double play in the 1st, I wondered to myself "when are Lee and Ramirez going to show up and start helping out again?" Now I'm wondering when I'm going to win the lottery.

Olney reporting on ESPN that Z will probably miss at least two starts, including a stint on the DL. Additional medical evaluation over the next few days as well.

Hmmmm. If Harrelson was doing the game, then why do you get Len and Bob describing the video highlights on Gameday? Seems odd. Maybe not.

Recent comments

  • Dolorous Jon Lester (view)

    Indeed they do TJW!

    For the record I’m not in favor of solely building a team through paying big to free agents. But I’m also of the mind that when you develop really good players, get them signed to extensions that buy out a couple years of free agency, including with team options. And supplement the home grown players with free agent splashes or using excess prospects to trade for stars under team control for a few years. Sort of what Atlanta does, basically. Everyone talks about the dodgers but I feel that Atlanta is the peak organization at the current moment.

    That said, the constant roster churn is very Rays- ish. What they do is incredible, but it’s extremely hard to do which is why they’re the only ones frequently successful that employ that strategy. I definitely do not want to see a large market team like ours follow that model closely. But I don’t think free agent frenzies is always the answer. It’s really only the Dodgers that play in that realm. I could see an argument for the Mets too. The Yankees don’t really operate like that anymore since the elder Steinbrenner passed. Though I would say the reigning champions built a good deal of that team through free agent spending.

  • Childersb3 (view)

    The issue is the Cubs are 11-7 and have been on the road for 12 of those 18.  We should be at least 13-5, maybe 14-4. Jed isn't feeling any pressure to play anyone he doesn't see fit.
    But Canario on the bench, Morel not at 3B for Madrigal and Wisdom in RF wasn't what I thought would happen in this series.
    I was hoping for Morel at 3B, Canario in RF, Wisdom at DH and Madrigal as a pinch hitter or late replacement.
    Maybe Madrigal starts 1 game against the three LHSP for Miami.
    I'm thinking Canario goes back to Iowa on Sunday night for Mastrobuoni after the Miami LHers are gone.
    Canario needs ABs in Iowa and not bench time in MLB.
    With Seiya out for a while Wisdom is safe unless his SOs are just overwhelmingly bad.

    My real issue with the lineup isn't Madrigal. I'm not a fan, but I've given up on that one.
    It's Tauchman getting a large number of ABs as the de factor DH and everyday player.
    I didn't realize that was going to be the case.
    We need a better LH DH. PCA or ONKC need to force the issue in about a month.
    But, even if they do so, Jed doesn't have to change anything if the Cubs stay a few over .500!!!

  • TarzanJoeWallis (view)

    Totally depends on the team and the player involved. If your team’s philosophy is to pay huge dollars to bet on the future performance of past stars in order to win championships then, yes, all of the factors you mentioned are important.

    If on the other hand, if the team’s primary focus is to identify and develop future stars in an effort to win a championship, and you’re a young player looking to establish yourself as a star, that’s a fit too. Otherwise your buried within your own organization.

    Your comment about bringing up Canario for the purposes of sitting him illustrates perfectly the dangers of rewarding a non-performing, highly paid player over a hungry young prospect, like Canario, who is perpetually without a roster spot except as an insurance call up, but too good to trade. Totally disincentivizing the performance of the prospect and likely diminishing it.

    Sticking it to your prospects and providing lousy baseball to your fans, the consumers and source of revenue for your sport, solely so that the next free agent gamble finds your team to be a comfortable landing spot even if he sucks? I suppose  that makes sense to some teams but it’s definitely not the way I want to see my team run.

    Once again, DJL, our differences in philosophy emerge!

  • Dolorous Jon Lester (view)

    That’s just kinda how it works though, for every team. No team plays their best guys all the time. No team is comprising of their best 26 even removing injuries.

    When baseball became a business, like REALLY a business, it became important to keep some of the vets happy, which in turn keeps agents happy and keeps the team with a good reputation among players and agents. No one wants to play for a team that has a bad reputation in the same way no one wants to work for a company that has a bad rep.

    Don’t get me wrong, I hate it too. But there’s nothing anyone can do about it.

    On that topic, I find it silly the Cubs brought up Canario to sit as much as he has. He’s going to get Velazquez’d, and it’s a shame.

  • TarzanJoeWallis (view)

    Of course, McKinstry runs circles around $25 million man Javier Baez on that Tigers team. Guess who gets more playing time?

    But I digress…

  • Sonicwind75 (view)

    Seems like Jed was trying to corner the market on mediocre infielders with last names starting with "M" in acquiring Madrigal, Mastroboney and Zach McKinstry.  

     

    At least he hasn't given any of them a Bote-esque extension.  

  • Childersb3 (view)

    AZ Phil:
    Rookie ball (ACL) starts on May 4th. Do yo think Ramon and Rosario (maybe Delgado) stay in Mesa for the month of May, then go to MB if all goes "solid"?
     

  • crunch (view)

    masterboney is a luxury on a team that has multiple, capable options for 2nd, SS, and 3rd without him around.  i don't hate the guy, but if madrigal is sticking around then masterboney is expendable.

  • TarzanJoeWallis (view)

    I THINK I agree with that decision. They committed to Wicks as a starter and, while he hasn’t been stellar I don’t think he’s been bad enough to undo that commitment.

    That said, Wesneski’s performance last night dictates he be the next righty up.

    Quite the dilemma. They have many good options, particularly in relief, but not many great ones. And complicating the situation is that the pitchers being paid the most are by and large performing the worst - or in Taillon’s case, at least to this point, not at all.

  • Childersb3 (view)

    Wesneski and Mastrobuoni to Iowa

    Taillon and Wisdom up

    Wesneski can't pitch for a couple of days after the 4 IP from last night. But Jed picked Wicks over Wesneski.