Cubs MLB Roster

Cubs Organizational Depth Chart
40-Man Roster Info

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


28 players are on the MLB ACTIVE LIST, plus seven are on OPTIONAL ASSIGNMENT to minors, two are on the 10-DAY IL, and three are on the 15-DAY IL


Last updated 9-22-20239
 
* bats or throws left
# bats both

PITCHERS: 14
Javier Assad
Jose Cuas
Kyle Hendricks
Mark Leiter Jr
* Luke Little
Julian Merryweather
Daniel Palencia
* Drew Smyly
* Justin Steele
Marcus Stroman
Jameson Taillon
Keegan Thompson
Hayden Wesneski
* Jordan Wicks

CATCHERS: 2
Miguel Amaya
Yan Gomes

INFIELDERS: 6
Nico Hoerner
* Miles Mastrobuoni
Christopher Morel
Dansby Swanson
Patrick Wisdom
* Jared Young

OUTFIELDERS: 6
* Cody Bellinger
Alexander Canario
* Pete Crow-Armstrong
# Ian Happ
Seiya Suzuki
* Mike Tauchman

OPTIONED: 7
Keven Alcantara, OF 
Ben Brown, P  
Brennen Davis, OF 
Jeremiah Estrada, P
Caleb Kilian, P 
* Matt Mervis, 1B 
Michael Rucker, P

10-DAY IL: 2
Jeimer Candelario, 1B
Nick Madrigal, INF

15-DAY IL: 3
Adbert Alzolay, P
Brad Boxberger, P 
Michael Fulmer, P 

60-DAY IL: 4
Nick Burdi, P
Codi Heuer, P
* Brandon Hughes, P
Ethan Roberts, P
 


Minor League Rosters

Rule 5 Draft 
Minor League Free-Agents

Cubs vs. Rockies: Series Thread (Games 127-129)

The Cubs will be working to break a 13-game home losing streak as they take on the Colorado Rockies. See below for the 3-game matchups.


Game 127, Monday, August 23, 7:05 pm central

CHC: RHP Kyle Hendricks (14-5, 4.04 ERA)

COL: RHP Antonio Senzatela (2-9, 4.58 ERA)

Hendricks bounced back from a horrendous start, and end of his undefeated streak, to pitch six innings and allow only one earned run in Cincinnati. He remains the Cubs' only bonified MLB starting pitcher.

The 26-year-old Senzatela has been coaxing groundballs at the major league level since 2017. He took a step forward in the shortened season and has continued to progress in 2021. He misses few bats, but he also limits the walks and keeps the ball on the ground pretty effectively.


Game 128, Tuesday, August 24, 7:05 pm central

CHC: LHP Justin Steele (2-2, 3.22 ERA)

COL: RHP German Marquez (11-9, 3.80 ERA)

Steele showed off some decent heat and a sharp slider in his last start, collecting five strikeouts in four innings. He walked three as well, however, and could not go past the fourth inning.

Marquez got blasted in San Francisco a couple starts ago and allowed three earned runs in 6.1 innings in his last start. Before that he'd had about a month-and-a-half of solid starts.


Game 129, Wednesday, August 25, 1:20 pm central

CHC: RHP Zach Davies (6-10, 5.04 ERA)

COL: LHP Austin Gomber (9-7, 4.15 ERA)

Is Zach Davies having the worst season of his career? Yes. Is he still better than most of the other options currently available to the Cubs? Apparently.

Gomber has struggled to miss bats for a couple starts in a row and has allowed eight earned runs in his last nine innings pitched. That's come on six walks and thirteen hits. His velo is also down a tad since the height of the season, so he may be showing some signs of weariness.

Comments

"It's been determined that Nico Hoerner did not aggravate his oblique injury during a rehab game Sunday."

neet.

he's going to take "a couple days off" and then resume baseball activities...no idea if that means getting back into games immediately or just doing drills to make sure he's okay.

heyward sits tonight.  he's started the last 3 games and has a walk to show for it.

he had a hot start to july until the allstar break .333/.385/.375 (26 PA)

it's not stellar, but i'll take anything positive from heyward at this point.

since the allstar break he's been hitting .149/.171/.243 (76 PA)

The Cub offense tonight thru 5 innings has 3 hits, one by Kyle Hendricks. The other two hits are by someone still hitting under .200 even after the hits (guessing allowed since the lineup features three hitting below the Mendoza line).

edit- I may have jinxed the lack of offense. Happ now has 3 hits

edit 2- Tied 4-4 in the 8th. I'm happy that Kyle Hendricks was taken "off the hook". 

edit 3- Walkoff Win!  Ortega two run HR in 9th.

Nice comeback win - the guys seemed very pumped celebrating that walk-off W which is nice to see. 

Rockies home/away splits are insane. 

Home:  43/22

Road:  14/46

Beating the Rockies when they are on the road is maybe the lowest bar of MLB achievement this season.  Good to see the guys were up to the challenge last night!

not cubs related...

...but if someone could break the f'n hands of whoever the asshole is playing the xylophone (or whatever that is) at oakland home games this season...that would be great.

only day game going on and this dude has his noisemaker again.

[ ]

In reply to by JoePepitone

very simple patterns, very small amount of "notes"...repeated over and over and over and over and over...and very loud.  they got a crew of drummers out there every game that doesn't come close to the volume of the xylophone (or whatever it is) dude.

he's only occasionally at games, but he's been there a good amount this season.

it might be a glockenspiel or vibraphone or some kinda wood block thing...whatever it is, it's too loud for the venue and dude isn't funky enough to work it properly.

yadi 1 year extension.  if they can manage to bring wainwright back that would be killer.

STL sucks and all that, but that duo has been working together for 17 years (wainwright did miss 1 of those seasons with injury, though).  that's insane rare in this era.

wainwright turns 40 in a few days and he's basically been awesome the past 2 years.  dunno if STL wants to throw money at that even with the history.

Question for AZ Phil and others...if the Cubs end up,with the 5th or 6th draft pick, will their second round pick be high enough to discourage the team from signing an UFA who will require compensation?

[ ]

In reply to by azbobbop

azbobbop: It would be the height of Cubbery malpractice to flush the roster at the trade deadline in part to get a high draft slot (and accompanying bonus pool space) in the 2022 draft, only to sign a Qualified free-agent and lose a high second round pick (and the accompanying bonus pool space). 

That said, I do expect the Cubs to be active in free-agency and sign a handful of non-Qualified free-agents to premium short term contracts who can be flipped at the 2022 trade deadline if the Cubs are not in contention. In other words, the deals would be for only one or two years (MAYBE three in certain cases), but with a relatively high AAV that the Cubs could offset with cash in a deadline trade. 

Non-qualified free-agents the Cubs might target would probably be a 1B (like Anthony Rizzo or Brandon Belt), a LF who could be the DH (like Kyle Schwarber or Joc Pederson), a veteran journeyman SS (like maybe Jose Iglesias), a LHSP (like maybe Alex Wood or Robbie Ray if they don't get a QO), and a couple of veteran relievers (like maybe Andrew Chafin and Ryan Tepera, or maybe even Kendall Graveman if the Cubs want a veteran closer to help provide stability to the pen while the young guys grow into high-leverage roles). 

I also believe the Cubs will actively shop both Willson Contreras and Kyle Hendricks once the new CBA is signed, trading them for prospects and then replacing them with free=agents.     

Today is a big start for Zach Davies, in so far as making him more-attractive to a contender in a potential Outright Assignment Waiver claim this weekend or early next week.  

I could see the Padres, Giants, and Dodgers (especially the Padres) as three teams who would have at least passing intetest in adding Davies as SP depth for September and the post-season, but for Davies to be eligible to pitch in the post-season, he would have to be claimed no later than next Tuesday (8/31).  

Also, there will be approximately $2M left in salary for Davies if he were to be claimed, so any club making a claim might want to have a separate side-deal worked-out in advance with the Cubs involving minor league players (who can be traded up until one week is left in the MLB regular season) and cash where as part of the separate side minor league deal the Cubs include $1M in cash to offset half of Davies remaining salary.

EXAMPLE: Padres call the Cubs and say if you put Davies on Outright Assignment Waivers we will claim him, but then there needs to be a separate side minor league trade where the Cubs send (let's say) CF Ismael Mena and INF Yeison Santana (two of the players the Cubs received in the Darvish trade) back to SD along with a $1M in cash, and then the Cubs get a SD top 10 prospect (TBD) who is not on the MLB 40-man roster (because players on an MLB 40-man roster or MLB 60-day IL -- as well as players who were outrighted to the minors from the MLB 40-man roster -- cannot be traded or be a PTBNL in a minor league trade after the MLB Trade Deadline has passed).    

Same thing if it's the Dodgers or Giants (or some other contender) promising to make the claim. 

Veteran MLB guys at AAA Iowa like LHRP Tony Cingrani, RHSP Joe Biagini, and OF Ian Miller will also likely be available in minor league trades (even if it's just a five-figure cash return) in the coming days.

Also, LHRP Rex Brothers, C Robinson Chirinos, INF Matt Duffy, LHRP Adam Morgan, SS Andrew Romine, and C Austin Romine should be placed on Outright Assignment Waivers in the coming days, if nothing else to receive the $50,000 waiver claim fee and get out from under the player's remaining salary if the player is claimed. (Brothers and Morgan are not post-2021 free-agents, but they are arbitration-eligible post-2021 so they are likely to be non-tendered on 12/2, if not released sometime prior to December if their slots on the 40 are needed for prospects).      

Besides the six post-2021 MLB Article XX-B free-agents (Chirinos, Davies, Duffy, Lobaton, and the two Romines) and Brothers and Morgan, other players currently on the Cubs MLB 40-man roster or MLB 60-day IL who will likely by dropped after the season (even before contracts are tendered) include P. J. Higgins, Jonathan Holder, Jake Jewell, Ryan Meisinger, Adrian Sampson, and Kohl Stewart. 

Likely 12/2 non-tender candidates are players eligible for salary arbitration who are coming off injuries (Rowan Wick, who could be a "Super Two") or a disappointing season (Ian Happ), and "on the bubble players" who are out of minor league options in 2022 (Sergio Alcantara, Michael Hermosillo, Dillon Maples, Rafael Ortega, and Brad Wieck) and who therefore cannot be optioned to the minors next season.

In the case of Alcantara, Hermosillo, Maples, Ortega, and Wieck, the idea would be to non-tender the player on 12/2, and then re-sign the player (after the conclusion of the Rule 5 Draft) to a pre-arranged 2022 minor league contract for "40-man roster money" (maybe even a bit more) with an NRI to MLB Spring Training. If the player indicates he is not willing to accept the offer, the player would (if possible) likely get traded for a player not on the 40 prior to the 11/19 roster filing deadline. (The roster filing deadline is usually 11/20, but it is moved up a day in 2021 because 11/20 falls on a Saturday this year).   

Of the players I believe will be non-tendered,  Dillon Maples would probably be the one least-likely to accept a minor league deal after being non-tendered. David Ross clearly has zero confidence in him, and I would think Maples sees that and would want to get a fresh start elsewhere. So I expect Maples will get traded prior to 11/19 (could even be that day), with a return similar to what the Cubs got back for Duane Underwood Jr (minor league 1B Shendrik Apostel) and James Norwood (minor league RHRP Dauris Valdez) earlier this year. 

[ ]

In reply to by Arizona Phil

Something to keep in mind about Ian Happ with regard to post-2021 salary arbitration is that because he was awarded a 2021 contract by an arbitration panel, he will - NOT - be subject to the maximum 20% salary cut post-2021. He can be cut in excess of 20% (that is, in excess of $820K from his 2021 $4.1M salary), although obviously Happ would not accept that much of a cut and would certainly take it (once again) to an arbitration panel. And once it goes to an arbitration panel it is a total "crap shoot" for both sides. 

[ ]

In reply to by George Altman

he's been doing well the past 2 weeks, but this last month of play might be his most important as a cub as far as his future.

thankfully for him, he's got no competition because the system is bare up top because we traded all our stars for zach davies, 2 dozen 17 year olds, and a no-power no-walking 2nd baseman who's not going to show up until 2022.

1- patrick wisdom hits homer #21 in 261 PA

2- partick widsom Ks #102 in 261 PA

this is awesome and terrible.

HAPP!

Today (Tuesday 8/31) is the deadline for MLB clubs to acquire players off Outright Assignment Waivers so that the player would be eligible to play in the MLB post-season, so I would expect a flurry of waiver claims as well as a few trades involving players on minor league reserve lists who were not outrighted to the minors to be announced later today. 

Today is also the deadline to sign a free-agent to an MLB or minor league contract so that the player would be eligible to play in the MLB post-season, so I would expect a number of free-agents to be signed today as well.

Players can still be claimed off Outright Assignmment Waivers in September. It's just that a player claimed off waivers after 8/31 cannot play in the post-season. And players on minor league reserve lists who were not outrighted to the minors can be traded up until seven days prior to the conclusion of the MLB regular season. The reason this might happen is that a contending club who is not sure of making the playoffs might suffer an injury or multiple injuries during the month of September, and acquiring reinforcements just to get to the post-season might become necessary, even though a player acquired or signed after 8/31 cannot play in the post-season. 

In addition, today (8/31) is the end of the waiver period that commenced an hour after the MLB Trade Deadline. Outright Assignment Waivers secured during this expiring waiver period were in effect ("good") for the entire waiver period. The new waiver period begins tomorrow (9/1) and will extend through the 30th day of the 2022 MLB regular season. Outright Assignment Waivers secured during this waiver period expire after seven days.

Also, a player claimed off Outright Assignment Waivers during the waiver period that begins on 9/1 and extends through the 30th day of the MLB regular season cannot be placed back onto Outright Assignment Waivers again for at least seven days if the player is claimed during the period of time starting on the day after conclusion of the MLB regular season and extending up until the first day of MLB Spring Training (the day pitches & catchers report). Then beginning on the first day of ML:B Spring Training and extending through the final day of the MLB regular season, a player claimed off Outright Assignment Waivers cannot be placed back onto Outright Assignment Waivers again for at least 48 hours or until the player has spent at least one day on the claiming club's MLB Active List (whichever comes first).  

Also, the MLB Active List roster limit will expand from 26 to 28 starting tomorrow (9/1).

And then a bit further down the line, all players on Optional Assignment to the minors must be recalled no later than the day after the conclusion of the MLB regular season, and all MLB and minor league players on an MLB or minor league 60-day IL must be reinstated no later than 5 PM (Eastern) on the 5th day after the final game of the World Series. 5 PM (Eastern) on the 5th day after the final game of the World Series is also when MLB Rule 9 (formerly MLB Rule 55 ) minor leaguers eligible to be a minor league 6YFA or second-contract free-agent are automatically declared free-agents. The minor league Domestic Reserve List limit is expanded from 180 players to 190 at this same time.

The 5th day after the final game of the World Series is also the deadline to place an MLB Rule 6 "Draft-Excluded Player" on Outright Assignment Waivers. A "Draft-Excluded Player" is defined as a minor league player who has accrued less than three years of MLB Service Time in his career and who would have been eligible for selection in the MLB Rule 5 Draft if he was on a minor league reserve list, but who had his contract selected and was added to an MLB 40-man roster after August 15th. At present, the Cubs have four Draft-Excluded Players (Scott Effross, Michael Hermosillo, Alfonso Rivas, ansd Adrian Sampson) on their MLB 40-man roster. These four players cannot be outrighted to the minors any later than 14 business days after the final game of the World Series and then extending up until 20 days prior to MLB Opening Day. They can be traded, released, or non-tendered. They just can't be outrighted to the minors during that period of time.    

BTW, when a reference is made to the day of the "final game of the World Series," it is the day the game starts, not when it ends. So (for example) if the game runs long and extends past midnight, the day of the "final game of the World Series" is the day the game started, not when it concluded. The one exception would be if the final game of the World Series is suspended prior to completion and then is re-started on another day. In that case, the day the suspended game re-starts is considered to be the day of the final game of the World Series.  

Also, the deadline to file MLB and minor league reserve lists with the MLB office will be November 19th, moved up a day from the usuial 11/20 deadline because 11/20 falls on a Saturday in 2021. 

The MLB contract tender date is 12/2, which is the one and only day of the year when a club can remove a player from its MLB 40-man roster without exposing the player to waivers.   

Recent comments

  • Arizona Phil 09/23/2023 - 09:02 pm (view)

    The deadline for trading players on an MLB Reserve List (40-man roster) and players who were outrighted to the minors after signing a 2023 MLB contract was August 1st, but trades involving players on a minor league reserve list are prohibited beginning at 12 PM (Eastern) on the 7th day prior to the originally-scheduled conclusion of the 2023 MLB regular season (Sunday 9/24) through the last day of the MLB regular season (including a day on which a regular season game is played after the originally-scheduled conclusion of the MLB regular season).   
     

  • Arizona Phil 09/23/2023 - 09:58 pm (view)

    jdrnym: 

    As you know, the abbreviation "DFA" stands for "Designated for Assignment." 

    There are three types of assignments: 

    1. Trade Assignment (when a player is traded from one MLB club to another)
    2. Outright Assignment (when a player is sent to the club's minor league Domestic Reserve List after Outright Assignment Waivers have been secured).
    3. Optional Assignment (when a player is optioned to the minors, subject to being recalled at a later time). 

    So when a player is Designated for Assignment, the player can either be traded, outrighted to the minors, or optioned to the minors. 

    Normally a player is not Designated for Assignment and then optioned to the minors, because the club could just option the player to the minors immediately without a DFA.

    Back in the day It was not that unusual for a player to be Designated for Assignment so that Optional Assignment Waivers could be secured (Optional Assignment Waivers were required before certain players could be optioned to the minors, and just like the old Trade Assignment Waivers, Optional Assignment Waivers were revocable if a player was claimed). Optional Assignment Waivers were eliminated in 2016 and Trade Assignment Waivers were eliminated in 2021, so all revocable waivers have been eliminated. What's left are Outright Assignment Waivers and Outright Release Waivers, and both are irrevocable once requested.  

    With the new five option limit whereby a player can (with a couple of exceptions) be optioned to the minors no more than five times in a given season before Outright Assignment Waivers must be secured (and it - IS - Outright Assignment Waivers that must be secured, even though it is for the purpose of an Optional Assignment), it now might be necessary for a club to DFA a player to clear a spot on the MLB 26-man roster (MLB 28-man roster in September) for another player and to allow for the two days (actually 47 hours) required to run a player through waivers. After the two day Waiver Claiming Period concludes (and presuming the player isn't claimed), the player can be returned to the MLB 40-man roster and optioned to the minors (even after being Designated for Assignment). But for that to happen, the player can - NOT - be replaced on the MLB 40-man roster by another player after being Designated for Assignment.  

    However, in the case of Jordan Luplow, he had - NOT - been optioned to the minors five times in the 2023 season prior to be optioned to AAA St. Paul on 9/18, so the Twins did not need to DFA Luplow in order to secure Outright Assignment Waivers so that he could be optioned to the minors a sixth time. But because he was Designated for Assignment and not replaced on the 40 by another player after the DFA, the Twins could option him to the minors (and return him to the 40) even after he was Designated for Assignment, because an Optional Assignment is one of the three types of assignments.

    So Luplow was Designated for Assignment even though he didn't need to be, and then the Twins returned him to their MLB 40-man roster and optioned him to the minors a couple of days later (which they can do, since Luplow wasn't replaced on the 40 by another player after he was Designated for Assignment). What the Twins did (DFA Luplow and then option him to the minors a couple of days later) was within the rules. It's just very odd and doesn't make a lot of sense. 

    So I will offer the most logical reason I can think of to explain why the Twins did this:  

    The Twins DFA'd Luplow because they intended to reinstate Chris Paddack from the 60-day IL, but then Carlos Correa suddenly needed to go on the 10-day IL and so they decided they wanted to keep Luplow on the 40-man roster (and on Optional Assignment to AAA) and didn't want to risk losing him off waivers or by him electing free-agency after being outrighted. Luplow has Article XX-D rights (he has been outrighted to the minors previously in his career), so he would had the right to elect free-agency after he was outrighted. There was also the possibility that he would have been claimed of waivers, and obviously the Twins felt they might need his RH bat after losing Correa and with Royce Lewis having left a game with a hamstring injury that led to an IL assignment. 

    Also, if Luplow was outrighted instead of being optioned, he would no longer be automatically eligible to play in the post-season (except as a possible injury replacement).

    Not only did Carlos Correa go on the IL, Royce Lewis went on the IL, too, two days after Correa went on the IL and two days after Luplow was optioned to AAA, so the Twins did in fact end up needing Luplow after all, and recalled him just a couple of days after he was optioned to replace Lewis on the MLB 28-man roster. 

    So that all I've got. That is the only thing that makes sense. The Twins DFA'd Luplow because they had intended to replace him on the 40 with another player (probably Paddack) and hoped that they would be able to run him through waivers and that he wouldn't get claimed and that he would accept an Outright Assignment, but then they suddenly changed their minds because of the injury to Correa and the possibility that Lewis might also have to go on the IL (which did, in fact, happen the next day).

    So the Twins were able to return Luplow to the 40 because he hadn't been replaced on the 40 by another player after he was Designated for Assignment, then they optioned him to St. Paul, and then they recalled him after Royce Lewis was placed on the 10-day IL (the minimum 10-day optional assignment being waived because Luplow replaced a player (Royce Lewis) who was placed on an MLB IL. 

  • crunch 09/23/2023 - 09:00 pm (view)

    CIN out here blowing a 9-0 lead they built through 3 innings.  9-9 tie in the 7th.

  • crunch 09/23/2023 - 09:05 pm (view)

    boxburger 10d IL, k.thompson back up.  it's his right forearm (again).

  • crunch 09/23/2023 - 09:12 pm (view)

    merryweather got out of it, but he loaded the bases with 1 out.  of course ross got cuas up in the pen...thankfully he didn't need to come in.

    looks like cuas gets the 9th.

  • crunch 09/23/2023 - 09:46 pm (view)

    4ip 2h 0bb 6k, 49 pitches.  no idea why they're giving the pen the last 2 innings when he's out there dealing like this and only threw 49 pitches.  he was supposed to pitch tomorrow and he's fresh.

  • crunch 09/23/2023 - 09:52 pm (view)

    ...and assad is now a pen arm, evidently...odd move given recent success.  i guess wicks starts tomorrow?

  • crunch 09/22/2023 - 09:16 pm (view)

    ARZ, MIA, and CIN all lose.  nice.

  • crunch 09/22/2023 - 09:54 pm (view)

    stroman is now the saturday starter...okay, then.

  • jdrnym 09/22/2023 - 09:52 pm (view)

    Phil,

    Jordan Luplow was DFA'd by the Twins on Monday and was ultimately optioned and then recalled today. I didn't think that was possible since optional waivers were eliminated years ago. How did that work for the Twins?