



It wasn’t as if Kyle Hendricks was giving up rockets in the first couple innings. But he wasn’t satisfied with just well executed pitches. He wanted to refine his plan against the White Sox.
“I was just getting to be a little predictable,” he said.
He adjusted and held the White Sox scoreless for the rest of his outing. But the Cubs still fell just short in a 5-3 loss on Tuesday.
The margin for error keeps getting slimmer as the season winds down. Offense will come and go, but during the stretch run, the Cubs are going to need to rely on their starting pitching. Hendricks put together another quality start on Tuesday, settling in to hold the White Sox to three runs in six innings. But the Cubs offense couldn’t take advantage of a South Side pitching staff that was decimated at the trade deadline.
The Cubs rotation has been a strength for most of the season despite individual pitchers’ ups and downs. The Cubs have been able to weather several of its starting pitchers’ rough patches because others have carried the rotation as they worked out of their slumps.
When Jameson Taillon had a rocky start to his Cubs tenure, Justin Steele and Marcus Stroman were pitching at an All-Star level. Hayden Wesneski had his ups and downs early on, but Drew Smyly was as consistent as anyone for the first two months.
As Smyly’s results started to waiver, Kyle Hendricks returned from the injured list, transitioning in smoothly after being sidelined for 11 months.
Just as Stroman’s mechanics fell out of sync, an issue likely impacted by nagging injury, Taillon’s behind-the-scenes work translated into a string of strong starts last month.
The challenges for the rotation are mounting. Stroman landed on the 15-day IL with a hip injury a couple weeks ago, but he felt discomfort around his right ribs on Sunday, delaying his return. Smyly temporarily moved to the bullpen while he continued to try to recapture his early success.
Those concerns would have been more glaring if it weren’t for the offense’s recent hot streak and Javier Assad’s emergence in Stroman’s absence. But a game like the Cubs’ 11-4 loss to the Blue Jays Sunday was eye-opening.
“We have a chance to make some noise, and it kind of starts and ends with the starting pitching,” Taillon said Sunday after allowing eight runs in three innings. “You see a game like today where the starting pitching is not very good, it’s hard to come back and claw back from. And then you see when we can just keep our team in games what our offense is capable of. So, I feel like our starting pitching is going to set the tone.”
The most obvious way for them to do so is to get Stroman back healthy and have Smyly or Assad claim the fifth rotation spot with authority.
The good news for the Cubs is that their rotation still has untapped potential. They’ve come this far lifting each other up, but imagine if all their starters were in rhythm all at once. It would be the team equivalent of a mid-game adjustment that turns a solid approach into a dominant one.
On Tuesday, Hendricks didn’t want to take back many pitches in the first two innings. Other than Elvis Andrus’ two-run double, most of what he gave up was soft contact – a fielder’s choice here, a bunt there.
“I’m executing a lot of pitches,” he said. “Just got to trust my eyes a little bit better with what I’m seeing and make those adjustments maybe a little quicker.”
Throw a few more inside strikes. Mix in the curveball a little more.
Once he adjusted, he shut down the White Sox scoreless for the next four innings.