Cubs MLB Roster

Cubs Organizational Depth Chart
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, and eight players are on OPTIONAL ASSIGNMENT to minors, four players are on the 15-DAY IL, and two players is on the 10-DAY IL

Last updated 4-28-2024
 
* bats or throws left
# bats both

PITCHERS: 13
Yency Almonte
Adbert Alzolay 
Javier Assad
Colten Brewer
Ben Brown
* Shota Imanaga
Mark Leiter Jr
* Richard Lovelady
Hector Neris 
Daniel Palencia 
Jameson Taillon 
Keegan Thompson
Hayden Wesneski 

CATCHERS: 2
Miguel Amaya
Yan Gomes

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

OUTFIELDERS: 4
* Pete Crow-Armstrong 
# Ian Happ
Seiya Suzuki
* Mike Tauchman 

OPTIONED: 8 
Kevin Alcantara, OF 
Michael Arias, P 
Jose Cuas, P 
Brennen Davis, OF 
Porter Hodge, P 
* Luke Little, P 
* Miles Mastrobuoni, INF
Luis Vazquez, INF 

10-DAY IL: 2
* Cody Bellinger, OF  
Seiya Suzuki, OF

15-DAY IL: 4
Kyle Hendricks, P 
* Drew Smyly, P 
* Justin Steele, P
* Jordan Wicks, P    

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





Minor League Rosters
Rule 5 Draft 
Minor League Free-Agents

Cubs @ Mets: Series Thread (Games 113-115)

The Cubs went 5-2 on a homestand that landed them in a tie with the Reds for second in the Central and for the last NL Wild Card spot. They turn around with no off day to begin a six game road trip that takes them to New York and Toronto. They leave Chicago having taken two of three from the best team in the NL. They also taxed their primary bullpen arms heavily in the process. (No backup cacthers were called on to relieve in the course of that series.) They may have to patch things together to cover high leverage innings before the next day off on Thursday. See below for matchups against the Mets.


Game 113, Monday, August 7, 6:10 pm central
CHC: LHP Drew Smyly (8-7, 4.71 ERA)
NYM: RHP Kodai Senga (7-6, 3.25 ERA)


Game 114, Tuesday, August 8, 6:10 pm central
CHC: RHP Jameson Taillon (6-6, 5.36 ERA)
NYM: RHP Carlos Carrasco (3-6, 6.60 ERA)


Game 115, Wednesday, August 9, 6:10 pm central
CHC: RHP Kyle Hendricks (4-6, 3.98 ERA)
NYM: LHP David Peterson (3-7, 5.65 ERA)

 

[Edited to reflect correct game numbers.]

Comments

cubs are dead serious about benching suzuki while they "work on his swing."

another game with tauchman in RF...

we lasted until the 3rd inning before girardi went into "if/when i was managing..." mode

did they call up killian for any specific reason?  bases loaded, 0 out, smyly's 6th after 5 runs already in.

tarp goes on the field.  switch to CIN game to see them immediately win.  switch to MIL game to see them take the lead with a 2r HR...sigh.  terrible past 5 minutes of baseball.

dbacks have signed tyler chatwood to a minor league contract.  a decade from now this dude is gonna be 43 years old, throwing 6.00 ERA 1.70 WHIP baseball and still find someone to sign him.

Former Cubs 2019 first round pick Ryan Jensen claimed off waivers by the Mariners.  
 

Possibly broke the pitching lab?

[ ]

In reply to by First.Pitch.120

I get the upside with Nwogu as a power speed combo. But he needs breakthroughs in his swing, approach, and defense for it to work. Kind of silly, but not the worst gamble in the third round (excepting of course that maybe he could have been had with a later pick). Missing on Jensen in the first round is definitely more of a head scratcher.

[ ]

In reply to by Dolorous Jon Lester

Could be both... can think of a # of reasons why those populations might have different characteristics.  Maybe having made MLB correlates to a higher & more solid floor from which the lab can build.   Perhaps having made the MLB & then looking at the specter of being done makes a person more receptive to coaching?  More & better video on MLB players?

[ ]

In reply to by First.Pitch.120

Although some pitchers spend more time in it than others, all Cubs pitchers (major league and minor league) are assigned to the Pitch Lab while they are in Mesa (MLB Spring Training, minor league camp, Extended Spring Training, ACL, and Instructs). It's part of the process.

Obviously some pitchers make better use of the experience than others, just like some people benefit from going to college or to a trade school, while others don't. So I would say the Pitch Lab is probably more useful for pitchers who take a more cerebral approach to pitching. 

BTW, the Cubs have a Hitter's Lab, too. As with the Pitch Lab, some benefit from it, and some don't. 

I don't know if the cost of the proprietary equipment and technology gets results consistently enough to justify it. I guess that will be determined eventually.  

It kind of reminds me of when the Kansas City Royals started their Baseball Academy in Florida about 50 years ago, with the intention of teaching baseball to athletes from other sports who had minimal baseball background.

Eventually the Royals used the academy as a standard GCL team, after finding that teaching baseball from the ground up to athletes not that familiar with baseball didn't get the results they hoped it would get and was just not cost effective. 

Keep in mind that MLB Active List rosters will expand from 26 to 28 on September 1st, and clubs are - REQUIRED - to add two players to their active roster at that time, of which only one may be a pitcher (so the maximum number of pitchers goes from 13 to 14 on 9/1).

Also beginning on 9/1, if a player is recalled as the extra man for a doubleheader and then is optioned back to the minors  the next day, the option does - NOT - count toward the maximum five times a player may be optioned to the minors in a given season. 

With five pitchers on the 60-day IL, it's very possible that three of them (Brad Boxberger, Nick Burdi, and Brandon Hughes) might be reinstated to the 40-man roster by 9/1.  

Burdi is supposed to begin an ACL rehab assignment this week, so he could possibly be ready to be reinstated by mid-August.  

I guess Jensen had to go to open up a spot on the 40 for Burdi and Boxberger.

We're at 39 right now, so Jensen leaving makes it 38. Thus, Burdi and Box coming of the 60IL gets it back to 40.

This is just theory, but I believe this makes sense.

With Smyly's issues and Palencia being discussed for a "cool down" session, Jed will need some other arms. Rucker will get another shot. Don't agree with that, but he'll get it. Boxberger offers very little to me as well. He had three good weeks in April, then not much at all. Burdi is the guy here you hope can put it together. But it's all hope there. 

You have to think if Ben Brown was 100% healthy he'd be getting starts and Smyly would get an IL stint for arm fatigue. 

Luke Little, Cam Sanders, Bailey Horn, Chris Clarke, etc., ....... someone make a push for a spot asap!! You have a chance here. I'd say newly acquired Roberson as well, but he's been smoked twice for Iowa.

The last time I watched Jensen in Iowa he was sitting 93-94. They tried shortening that arm motion but it looked pretty long still. Not as much as his days in 2019-2021.

We'll see how this goes.

While I can understand removing Ryan Jensen from the MLB 40-man roster, the idea is to get him through waivers so that you don't lose a former 1st round daft pick who received a $2M signing bonus for $50,000 just four years after he was drafted, and so that he can remain under club control at least until he becomes a minor league 6YFA (post-2025 in the case of Jensen).  

If the Cubs were hoping to "sneak" Jensen through waivers, this week was definitely not the time to try and do it. There has been a virtual feeding frenzy of waiver claims in the last few days (eleven in just the last five days alone). By contrast, there were eight waiver claims in the ENTIRE MONTH OF JULY.   

It was especially odd since the Cubs did not actually need Jensen's 40-man roster slot at this time. 

[ ]

In reply to by seamer

seamer: There is no real savings in terms of 2023 AAV from losing Ryan Jensen off waivers.

Jensen is a pre-arbitration (auto-renewal) player so he has a "split contract," meaning one salary ($720K) if he is on the MLB active list or IL, and a different much lower salary ($120K) if he is on optional assignment to the minors (which he was when he was claimed).

So the Cubs saved $120K toward 2023 AAV when Jensen was claimed off waivers, which will be immediately canceled out once they replace Jensen on the 40.  

[ ]

In reply to by Arizona Phil

The follow up question I’d have on that is of his replacement on the 40 is one of the 60 day IL returnees, wouldn’t they already both be getting paid their salary and count against the salary “cap?”

Not that I think the motivation on sneaking Jensen through waivers was at all financial. The point you made just piqued my curiosity. Thanks as always, Phil

[ ]

In reply to by Dolorous Jon Lester

DJL: Yes, if the eventual replacement for Ryan Jensen on the Cubs MLB 40-man roster is one of the pitchers currently on the 60-day IL, then Jensen's salary (and the Cubs AAV savings) would not be offset by selecting somebody to the 40-man roster from the minors or claiming a player off waivers.

BTW, I should have said that the 2023 AAV savings from losing Jensen off waivers was $40,000, NOT $120,000, because there is only about a third of the season left and the Cubs have already paid Jensen $80,000 in salary. 

The Cubs saved much more in 2023 AAV by trading Adrian Sampson and Manuel Rodriguez to Tampa Bay on 8/1 (about $750K in combined salaries between the two was still remaining when they were traded). 

delay of game because mets pitchcom isn't working.  wtf 2023...get your new baseball shit together.

Giving up a two run homer to Alonso in the first inning instead of a three run shot? I guess that’s progress? 😂

Okay, game is now tied 2-2

Let's just walk Alonso

Maddon walked Bryce Harper about a dozen times in a series vs WAS in 2016 or 2017. 

It worked though.

Newly acquired Andrew Chafin just walked in the lead run for the Rockies in the 10th vs Brewers. Now Rocks up 6-3. Looking like a really nice night.

i've seen enough of amaya's lack of arm this season to be concerned.

this wasn't an issue in the past and the issue isn't slightly bigger bases.  he was excellent at holding and throwing out runners prior to his previous injury.  i have no idea what's up, but there's been some weak throws made this year.

After the way the bottom of the sixth started, I can’t believe this game is still within reach for the Cubs. 

Entertaining game - sucks the Cubs lost. After scoring 2, 3 and 3 runs, Cubs are fortunate they weren’t swept. On to Toronto. 

[ ]

In reply to by crunch

They set him up brilliantly. I didn’t see it but Girardi said they did the same thing to Morel yesterday: frozen on a strike right down the middle. 
 

On the other end of the pitching with brilliance spectrum, if you told me before the series that Alonso was going to hit four homers and knock in ten runs … yes, I’d take the 1-2 record.

no cubs, no brews, no reds, no marlins, no giants...only phills play (1st in WC) that matters to cubs fans.

Recent comments

  • crunch (view)

    bleh.

    at least MIL has lost the past 2 nights, too.

  • crunch (view)

    madrigal pinch hitting for matt mervis vs jansen?

    okay.

  • crunch (view)

    surprising amount of cubs fans at the park, too.  HR really brought them out.

  • Cubster (view)

    hmmmm... 

    4-4

    beisbol can be fun

  • crunch (view)

    4 singles and 0 walks (1 HBP) through 7 innings for cubs batters...amazing they even have 1 run.

  • crunch (view)

    nico gets his 5th error on the year...damn.

  • Childersb3 (view)

    Folks, I've known Richard Lovelady since he was an 18 yr old Freshman at East Ga State College in Swainsboro, Ga.

    I was the WBB Coach at EGSC and Richard was their prize recruit from outside of Hinesville, Ga.

    My roommate was the Pitching Coach there.

    Richard showed up a skinny, loose lipped, 83mph Lefty. Pretty good basketball player actually. 

    My roommate became the head coach.

    Richard came back from a minor injury for his Sophmore year a more serious man. He hit 90mph and started mowing GA JUCO hitters down. It was really fun to watch.

    He was the first D1 signee for EGSC baseball (school had only had athletics for five yrs at that point). He went to Kennesaw St and became their closer. One yr later, he hit 100mph and KC drafted him in the 10th Rd. 

    He lost the high velo with a surgery a while back.

    It's so cool to see him in MLB. And now he's a Cub!! It's crazy to realize I actually "know" a Cub.

    He's a legit good guy.

    Easy to root for!!!

     

  • Cubster (view)

    Tim. Thanks for remembering Lee Elia Day. It will always be one of the most epic rants in all sports.  It took about 3 seconds to recognize him from your picture but I  did get it right. 

    Now that Les Grobstein is no longer with us, that might contribute to this grand piece of Cubbery fading.

    Just like fine wine, it should be savored...unedited. 40 years, wow.

  • Dolorous Jon Lester (view)

    Does he have any options left, Phil?

  • crunch (view)

    morel in the lineup and playing 3rd.