I’m Expecting More This Year, Cubs — It’s Time to Start Winning

Cody Bellinger out with a rib fracture to the injured list.
Cody Bellinger out with a rib fracture to the injured list.

There’s no way around it: The Chicago Cubs did *not* have the offseason we hoped they might after making Craig Counsell the highest paid manager in MLB history.

Not that they did poorly, mind you.

Cody Bellinger, Shota Imanaga, and Hector Neris are legitimately solid pickups. And I like the addition of Michael Busch (and Yency Almonte), too. But signing just three big league free agents, one of whom was on the team last year and another who’s effectively replacing Marcus Stroman in a similar rotation, while trading for one admittedly exciting, but still unproven prospect and a dice-roll reliever comes up WELL short of what probably should have been.

And that’s especially true in an offseason with legitimate star power available — Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Juan Soto, Dylan Cease, Corbin Burnes, Josh Hader, Tyler Glasnow, Aaron Nola, Sonny Gray, Blake Snell (plus quality second-tier guys like Eduardo Rodriguez, Matt Chapman, Jordan Montgomery, Jung Hoo Lee, etc.). I’m not advocating for the Cubs to have gone over the top on any one specific signing or trade, but the broader point remains: the Cubs mostly hung back, making moves only on their terms with pretty obvious value from Day 1. That’s just how Jed Hoyer rolls.

And, listen, even if it’s not my preferred route, I do understand the approach. At the end of the day, there’s not a lot of risk in a three-year (opt-out heavy) deal for Bellinger, a one-year (plus club option) deal for Neris, or a creative contract for Imanaga (which wound up roughly half-as-pricey as projected). That leaves a lot of flexibility for the future, which is great….BUUUUUUUUUUT, it also screams “this is probably juuuuuuust good enough.”

And that’s kinda the point of this post.

Chicago Cubs manager Craig Counsell
Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-USA TODAY Sports

It feels to me like Jed Hoyer and the Cubs front office is playing to the (weak) NL Central. If 85-ish wins is enough to get you into the tournament, then why would you spend $100M more to win 95 games? That’s just excess!

Indeed, the projections and playoff odds are not favoring the Cubs this year, and Jed Hoyer kinda has to wear that.

  • FanGraphs: 82-80 (41.6% make playoffs)
  • PECOTA: 82-80 (39.5% make playoffs)
  • But this post was never meant to be negative. Because even though I think the Cubs should have done more, I do think the projections are a little light, based not only on the underlying performance last year that indicated 7-8 more wins than they actually acheived, but also the actual roster. In fact, I tend to think Hoyer’s bet is right, in that the Cubs probably have just enough to get the job done. Just go around the diamond, and it’s not hard to like what this team has to offer.

  • In left field you have a 29-year-old, two-time Gold Glove winner who gets on base, switch-hits, and is probably your everyday leadoff man (Ian Happ).
  • In center field you have a 28-year-old former MVP and the reigning Comeback Player of the Year playing on an incentive-based contract that could get him PAID next winter (Cody Bellinger). And behind him, waiting in Iowa, you have potentially the best defensive center fielder in baseball, who’s currently a consensus top-20 prospect in MLB (PCA).
  • In right field you have a 29-year-old slugger with a career 122 wRC+ in the big leagues, who finished the season as one of the hottest hitters in MLB (Seiya Suzuki).
  • At third base you have a 24-year-old with serious defensive concerns, but absolutely ENORMOUS offensive potential (Chris Morel).
  • At shortstop you have 30-year-old, two-time Gold Glover, who’s hit 74 homers over the past three seasons and is as steady as they come in the field (Dansby Swanson)
  • At second base you have a 26-year-old Gold Glover, who’s at least a league-average hitter who also stole 43 bases last year (Nico Hoerner).
  • At first base you have a 26-year-old lefty slugger who’s expected to hit by just about every possible analysis you’ll find out there – a guy that was only really available because he was blocked by Freddie Freeman and Shohei Ohtani, and who required legitimate prospect capital to acquire (Michael Busch).
  • At catcher the Cubs are pairing a high-quality veteran, Yan Gomes, who had a great 2023 season with a young, up-and-coming Miguel Amaya, who already handles the staff well and has offensive upside remaining.
  • At DH you have a bit of a vacancy that’ll be used for flexibility and rest. There was definitely room for an upgrade here, but it could also happen internally if PCA pushes Belli to first and Busch to DH (or if the Morel defensive experiment doesn’t work out).
  • The bench has a high quality, left-handed fourth outfielder that can play center field (Mike Tauchman), and then a bunch of guys with various, complimentary skills to offer (Miles Mastrobuoni, Nick Madrigal, Patrick Wisdom, Alexander Canario, Garrett Cooper, David Peralta, etc.). Experience, youth, versatility, speed, hit, power, lefties, righties, etc. They’re not stars, it’s a bench for a reason. But it’s a good mix.
  • Beyond that, the rotation is led by a 28-year-old All-Star, Justin Steele, who was a Cy Young front-runner for most of last season. And he’s followed by experience (Kyle Hendricks, who seemingly still has it), stability/depth (Jameson Taillon, Drew Smyly, Javier Assad), and plenty of immediate upside (Shota Imanaga, Jordan Wicks, Hayden Wesneski). Meanwhile, top prospects like Cade Horton and Ben Brown are expected to arrive this year.

    It’s not going to be the best rotation in baseball, but it certainly seems like it could be a step up from last year (even if I still think Jordan Montgomery would be nice).

    It’s always impossible to project a bullpen, but at a minimum, the Cubs young closer (Adbert Alzolay) now has some experience and a MUCH more dependable set-up man than he had last year (Hector Nerris). After him, there’s your usual combination of optionable, young guys or upside plays (Yency Almonte, Luke Little, Daniel Palencia), and can-you-do-it-again big leaguers (Julian Merryweather, Mark Leiter Jr., Jose Cuas).

    With one of the best perceived pitching staff managers at the helm, Craig Counsell, it’s not difficult to envision this playing out better than 2023.

    But let’s circle back again to my point: This all means there are expectations.

    Jed Hoyer should feel the pressure because he’s four years into a rebuild and decided to play it a little safer than expected this offseason. But the players and Craig Counsell should feel the pressure because, well, this is a pretty good, young team in a very winnable division with prospect reinforcements clearly on their way.

    In other words, this is not a development year. This is not a build up year. This is a go-win right now year. And while I will stop short of proclaiming “World-Series-or-bust!” this is absolutely, positively a playoffs-or-bust type of season. Anything short of that – arguably even if they snuck in as a Wild Card team – would be an enormous disappointment. I’m planting that flag now. From the front office to the dugout to the field, the expectations are on. It’s time to start winning.

    written by

    Michael Cerami began covering the Chicago Cubs for Bleacher Nation as a part-time contributor in 2015. One year later, he joined Bleacher Nation full-time, covering the Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball. Today, Michael runs Bleacher Nation, contributing as a writer (Cubs, MLB) and an editor for all sections of the site, including the Chicago Bears, Bulls, and Blackhawks, as well as MLB, NBA, NHL, and NFL. In 2019, Michael was the co-host of NBC Sports Chicago's Cubs Post-Game Show Outside the Ivy. You can find him on Twitter/X @Michael_Cerami

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