Austin, 34, has spent the past six seasons with the Yokohama DeNA BayStars in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball. He originally signed in NPB after spending parts of four big league seasons with the Yankees, Twins, Giants and Brewers, during which he posted a .219/.292/.451 slash with 33 homers in 583 turns at the plate.
Chicago began the game by running into a triple play in the opening frame after a bloop single by Seiya Suzuki with men on first and second. Suzuki was thrown out at second base trying for an extra base after Alex Bregman got an excellent jump to go from first to third. Matt Shaw did not get a good read and froze between second and third, resulting in both players standing on third and Bregman being called out.
When you have a semi-dedicated designated hitter on your roster (Moises Ballesteros, for mental planning purposes), you have just four bench spots available on your 26-man roster. And since one of those four spots has to go to your second catcher, you really have just three. On the 2026 Chicago Cubs, we know that one of those three spots is going to go to Matt Shaw. Another is likely, though not guaranteed, to go to Tyler Austin.
According to the Cubs, the first 150 people who find a bobblehead or bobblehead box will win a pair of tickets to a regular season game. In addition to the free tickets, fans can get complimentary donuts and Cubs-branded items at each spot: - 7:30-8 a.m.: Ben Zobrist bobblehead at Chicago Union Station- 8:45-9:15 a.m.: Sammy Sosa bobblehead at Tribune Tower- 10-10:30 a.m.: Kerry Wood bobblehead at 875 North Michigan Avenue
Actual Cubs baseball is only two days away, even if it is just a glorified scrimmage. I'm still trying to find a way to get out to spring training this year, but a pesky jury duty summons is mucking up my plans. Maybe I'll just have to take a little extra PTO and go earlier than initially planned. For some reason, I find it difficult to make time for myself with stuff like this.
Marty Pevey returns as manager of the Iowa Cubs for the 14th consecutive season, extending his franchise-record tenure while his 822 victories are also a franchise mark. Entering his 18th season in the organization, he has over 30 years of professional experience, beginning with 13 seasons as a player. All told, Pevey owns a 1,466-1,511 minor league managerial record and his 1,466 victories are fifth-most among active minor league skippers through 2025. The I-Cubs last year went 74-75 in the International League West Division.
The wait is over, Chicago Cubs fans! The promotional calendar for the 2026 regular season is here with 150th anniversary-themed gate giveaways, an expanded Special Ticket Offer lineup and theme games fans won't want to miss when single game tickets go on sale Friday, February 20. BOBBLEHEADS To celebrate the club's 150th anniversary as a National League franchise, commemorative bobbleheads spotlighting iconic figures in Cubs history will be available starting in April.
The hard-throwing righty has suffered a number of maladies over his career, most recently last summer when he was limited to just 10 2/3 innings with Kansas City with a right teres major strain and later, an adductor injury. But when healthy, Harvey throws in the upper-90s with a nasty splitter and can be a high-end bullpen arm. Paired with Daniel Palencia (who is also pitching in the WBC),
Today, the Chicago Cubs and Marquee Sports Network announced the broadcast schedule for 2026 Spring Training. As had been previously suggested in reports, the number of games is down significantly, and it's just 11 games total getting a Marquee broadcast. Some other games may/will be available via MLB.tv to the extent other teams are generating a broadcast, but it's also possible that, like in the olden days, a lot of games just won't have a live video production.
For as much as I really do appreciate Craig Counsell as manager of the Chicago Cubs, he has one quirk that always rubs me the wrong way. And that's when he refuses to identify the roles of any pitcher, particularly relievers, electing instead to label them all as "out-getters." It's like, yeah, I get what you mean (and you're not wrong to operate that way), but can you just answer the question?
For reasons discussed only a little bit ago, a guy like Aaron Civale became a relatively poor fit for the Chicago Cubs over the last couple months. The rotation really filled up, the bullpen really filled up, and the reclamation group of pitchers became so robust that the competition to win innings will be fierce. If you're the Cubs, bringing Aaron Civale back on a guaranteed deal might not make a lot of sense, because who is he bouncing?
Though I wouldn't go so far as to say it is the predominant "identity" of the Chicago Cubs of recent vintage, I do think it's important to note that the Cubs have typically sported one of the better defenses in baseball going back at least a decade. Defense was critical to the 2026 championship run, as a lot of the excellent pitching was really an excellent combination of pitching and defense.
Miller, 29, has spent some time in the big leagues in each of the last five seasons, after coming up as a notable Padres and then Guardians prospect ( you may remember his name from the big pandemic season trade that saw the Padres sending him, Austin Hedges, Cal Quantrill, Josh Naylor, Gabriel Arias, and Joey Cantillo to the Guardians (then Indians) for Mike Clevinger, Greg Allen, and Matt Waldron).
There's a lot of young talent on the big league roster, and the Cubs have used prospects well in trade, but the natural thinning that has accompanied the trades and promotions tended toward a reduction in overall talent down on the farm. Combine that with relatively poor outcomes in International Free Agency going back a decade, plus not a whole lot of surprise breakouts
The story is about a little boy (inspired by my son, Leo!) who gets surprised with a trip to his very first Cubs game. And it follows his journey from getting the tickets, to being stuck in traffic on the way downtown, to reaching his seats, experiencing "the troughs" for the first time, making friends in the bleachers, getting nervous about the game, eating snacks, throwing the other team's home run balls back on the field, singing Go, Cubs, Go! (spoiler alert), and so much more!
I know that the big league moves draw most of the attention - and, for good reason, since they are designed to generate most of the big league impact - but I have been very pleased by the Chicago Cubs' front office continuing to supplement deeper within the organization throughout December and January. Plenty of reclamation pitching signings, as always, and a number of more development-inclined pitcher signings, too.