Chicago Cubs 2026

#576      
Happy Kerry Wood day to all who celebrate.

I love the honest truth that this was a no-hitter against what turned out to be one of that year's best teams and probably the second-nastiest line-up. Unreal. Then a bunch of hulks and The Kid hit some homers.
 
#579      
I love the honest truth that this was a no-hitter against what turned out to be one of that year's best teams and probably the second-nastiest line-up. Unreal. Then a bunch of hulks and The Kid hit some homers.
Greatest 9 inning game ever pitched according to Bill James' Game Score Formula.

The pitching injuries are crazy... I'd swear we are snake bit, if it weren't for 3 walk-off wins in a row. Boyd didn't even get hurt playing baseball... he was playing with his kids.
Hoping Wiggins gets healthy soon and is also ready for the Show... (a lot to ask...) We can't afford to put Brown back in the rotation at this point. He is needed in his current role. Thielbar and Harvey should be back any day now...
 
#582      
Greatest 9 inning game ever pitched according to Bill James' Game Score Formula.

The pitching injuries are crazy... I'd swear we are snake bit, if it weren't for 3 walk-off wins in a row. Boyd didn't even get hurt playing baseball... he was playing with his kids.
Hoping Wiggins gets healthy soon and is also ready for the Show... (a lot to ask...) We can't afford to put Brown back in the rotation at this point. He is needed in his current role. Thielbar and Harvey should be back any day now...
Cubs have been hit hard, but all of the majors have been. There are approximately 175 pitchers on the IL and probably another 75 or so who are listed as day to day. I’m sure some of those in the latter group will end up on IL. If an organization can figure out how to keep their pitchers relatively healthy whether it be with conditioning, usage, how they throw, etc., it will have a huge advantage.
 
#584      
Cubs have been hit hard, but all of the majors have been. There are approximately 175 pitchers on the IL and probably another 75 or so who are listed as day to day. I’m sure some of those in the latter group will end up on IL. If an organization can figure out how to keep their pitchers relatively healthy whether it be with conditioning, usage, how they throw, etc., it will have a huge advantage.
I believe we are tied for most players on IL... even crazier, all but Tyler "Who is that guy?" Austin, are pitchers.
 
#585      
Chicago Cubs Baseball GIF by TheDreamTeam
 
#587      
If an organization can figure out how to keep their pitchers relatively healthy whether it be with conditioning, usage, how they throw, etc., it will have a huge advantage.
This is an interesting point. Back in the 70s and 80s, guys weren't on pitch counts and there were four man rotations and there weren't really closers, at least in the same way there are closers now. So it wasn't out of the question that a guy would pitch 130 pitches in a game then go out there in four days and do it again. I realize that there is more crazy movement and pitches these days. I also know that maximum velocity and maximum spin rate are king. I wonder if there is or has been a study comparing the velocity and spin rates of the 70s and 80s to today and then correlate that back to injuries.

Is pitching 180 innings with more torque on the elbow and shoulder worse than pitching 300 innings with less torque? In thinking about it, would seem like less innings and five man rotations would result in less injuries but the eye test suggests otherwise. Maybe this year is an outlier, not sure. But it's an interesting discussion for sure.
 
#589      
This is an interesting point. Back in the 70s and 80s, guys weren't on pitch counts and there were four man rotations and there weren't really closers, at least in the same way there are closers now. So it wasn't out of the question that a guy would pitch 130 pitches in a game then go out there in four days and do it again. I realize that there is more crazy movement and pitches these days. I also know that maximum velocity and maximum spin rate are king. I wonder if there is or has been a study comparing the velocity and spin rates of the 70s and 80s to today and then correlate that back to injuries.

Is pitching 180 innings with more torque on the elbow and shoulder worse than pitching 300 innings with less torque? In thinking about it, would seem like less innings and five man rotations would result in less injuries but the eye test suggests otherwise. Maybe this year is an outlier, not sure. But it's an interesting discussion for sure.

I also think we tend to romanticize the few who were able to pitch huge innings totals back in the 70s-80s while forgetting those whose arms fell off before they got to age 30.

Mark Fidrych threw 250 innings at age 21, winning rookie of the year, and his career was effectively over at age 25.

Fernando Valenzuela was a HoF level pitcher while pitching 230+ innings a year from age 20-26, and was then a barely replacement level pitcher who could!’t stay healthy for the rest of his career.

The things Sandy Koufax had to do to keep pitching were nightmarish and he retired at age 30.

Bruce Sutter threw almost 100 innings a year out of the pen from age 23 to 31 and then his career was effectively over.

And these are just some of the big names. There’s an enormous number of guys who had one great 100 inning season out of the pen and then immediately got hurt and was never heard from again.
 
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