
Rookie Cade Horton matches Pittsburgh Pirates star Paul Skenes pitch for pitch in Chicago Cubs' 2-1 loss
Cade Horton knew the Chicago Cubs likely would struggle to score runs Friday at Wrigley Field.
The quick turnaround from a night game, the wet, misty conditions and, most notably, National League Cy Young Award contender Paul Skenes on the mound for the Pittsburgh Pirates. The matchup didn't faze Horton, who has pitched in big games before, whether in the College World Series with Oklahoma in 2022 or making his MLB debut in New York against a tough Mets lineup.
Horton matched Skenes pitch by pitch, inning by inning Friday, tossing 5 2/3 shutout innings while scattering three hits, walking one and striking out four Pirates. The Cubs couldn't get much going either against Skenes — who held them scoreless in five innings — and the Pirates bullpen in a 2-1 loss in 10 innings.
'I'm not scared of the moment, I love the moment,' Horton said. 'Going out there and competing, it's all about one pitch.'
'Iron sharpens iron. Being able to compete against him was really fun and hopefully we're doing it for a lot of years.'
Oneil Cruz's fielder's choice off reliever Brad Keller briefly gave the Pirates the lead in the eighth. The Cubs (42-28) responded in the bottom half to tie it on Dansby Swanson's fielder's choice. Isiah Kiner-Falefa's sacrifice fly against lefty Drew Pomeranz in the 10th was enough for the Pirates to hold off the Cubs.
Horton continues to impress as he seizes his opportunity. He has allowed three runs or fewer in six of his seven major-league appearances and lowered his ERA to 2.70 in three starts at Wrigley. Cubs fans gave Horton an ovation as he exited in the sixth inning.
'Cade's going to be Cade, it doesn't matter to Cade that Paul Skenes is pitching — and it shouldn't, Cade has got to go out and do his thing,' manager Craig Counsell said before the game. 'If anything, the pitcher feels, 'Hey, it's going to be tough to score for the Cubs today, and I'm going to try to do my best to keep us in it from that perspective, and I've got to be at my best.' Cade's going to be up to that challenge.'
Horton's efficiency played a key role in his success versus the Pirates. He didn't allow the leadoff hitter to reach until the sixth, showed a five-pitch mix, featuring a nasty sweeper that on 16 pitches produced five whiffs on nine swings and two called strikes, and stayed around the zone to yield three innings in which he threw 10 pitches or fewer.
'He's a really big time competitor so he's hard on himself, but that's almost like his strength is he expects himself to be great,' said catcher Reese McGuire, who also caught him in Triple A this year. 'And that's what we talk about, just, hey, let's be good over and over, each pitch, win the pitch, win the at-bat and those good things add up, and then you have a great day. He gave us a chance to win today.'
Skenes entered Friday with a 1.88 ERA through 14 starts while giving up more than two earned runs in an outing just twice. One of those times came against the Cubs, though, when they hit three home runs to score three runs off Skenes on May 1 in Pittsburgh. The Cubs didn't need a pregame meeting to prepare for Skenes. Friday marked the sixth time they faced the 23-year-old right-hander since he made his MLB debut May 11, 2024 — versus the Cubs, whom Skenes also squared off against in his second big-league start.
'It doesn't become a game planning meeting, it becomes execution for kind of both sides,' Counsell said. 'That's why I always say when you play somebody a lot, it's becomes execution, that's how this works.'
Skenes largely executed against the Cubs, though they made him work. A Kyle Tucker 10-pitch at-bat and Matt Shaw getting him to throw 17 pitches between his first two plate appearances helped Skenes climb to 95 pitches by the end of the fifth to end his day.
In the last two weeks, the Cubs offense has been tested by some of the best starting pitchers in the majors. The schedule has aligned for the Nationals' MacKenzie Gore, Tigers' Tarik Skubal, Phillies' Zack Wheeler and Jesús Luzardo and Skenes over the previous 10 games, with that group owning a collective 2.69 ERA, which is skewed by Luzardo surrendering 20 total runs in his two starts before facing the Cubs on Wednesday.
As much as the Cubs battled in those games, they lost all five, including four by two runs or fewer.
'Winning. What else is there?' Counsell said, when asked what he wants to see from the Cubs against those caliber of starters. 'We can make up a narrative, but if we don't win, it's not going to be a good narrative. I mean, that's what we're trying to do. I can say, let's see a lot of pitches, and then after the game I can say we saw a lot of pitches, but we didn't score.
'Look, we want to have a good process, that's what you can control. But that always involves swinging at balls — the right pitches — so that doesn't change no matter who's pitching, it's always the same.'
The challenging stretch has also yielded struggles with runners in scoring position, their .200 average in that span tied for third lowest in the majors. The Cubs stranded nine runners and went 0-for-10 with RISP on Friday.
'The offensive group has been so good all year, it wasn't going to be completely perfect, and you run into a stretch of some tough pitchers, some good staffs and bullpens that makes it difficult,' left fielder Ian Happ said. 'But that just means that we're due for a couple big numbers here, that's coming.'
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Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Chicago Cubs ride Matthew Boyd's strong start — and another pickoff — and Dansby Swanson's HR to a 2-1 win
Matthew Boyd gave up eight hits in six innings in his previous start and on Saturday, the Pittsburgh Pirates' Andrew McCutchen tagged him for a first-inning home run. Boyd had enough of that. The Chicago Cubs lefty retired the next 14 in a row. The 15th hitter, Tommy Pham, walked to lead off the sixth, and Boyd promptly picked him off first. The Cubs went on to a 2-1 win in front of a Wrigley Field crowd of 39,554. 'You just keep pitching,' Boyd said of his approach after the home run. 'Whether it's a home run or a walk or even a strikeout or something good. 'You just go out and keep doing what you expect of yourself when the ball is in your hand. McCutchen is a real good hitter. I made a mistake and he was ready for it.' Added Cubs manager Craig Counsell: 'The second guy in the game hits a home run and then he pitched really, really well. Matt continues to do an excellent job.' Dansby Swanson, who was hitting .193 against left-handed pitchers, hit a two-out solo home run against Pirates southpaw reliever Ryan Borucki to give the National League Central-leading Cubs (43-28) what turned out to be the winning run. Daniel Palencia notched his sixth save, and the bullpen lowered its ERA to 0.90 in the last 28 games. Boyd (6-3, 2.79 ERA) came up with his third pickoff in as many games and has six for the season. Rick Sutcliffe (1985) and Bill Hands (1970) are the only other pitchers in Cubs history to pick off runners in three straight games. Boyd, who faced just 19 batters in six innings, said he developed the move at age 9 when Bellevue College coach Mark Yoshino taught it to him at a camp, and he hasn't changed it much since. 'Mark joked that if you don't like someone, you hit him and then pick him off,' Boyd said. 'I'm not going to try that at the big-league level. 'But it (the pickoff) is something I've always had in my career ever since I was little.' Counsell appreciates the pickoffs as well as Boyd dominating after the McCutchen home run. 'His last outing was against a team that decided to be aggressive,' Counsell said of the Philadelphia Phillies. 'They made a decision on trying to be aggressive because in a previous start or two, he threw a lot of first-pitch strikes. 'That's just adjusting as a starter from game to game, not falling into a pattern. … We're always keeping an eye on it.' The Pirates (29-43) have played the Cubs tight in this four-game series as the Cubs won 3-2 Thursday and lost 2-1 Friday in 10 innings. Ian Happ's sacrifice fly in the third inning brought home Nico Hoerner to tie Saturday's tight game. Swanson was happy he could be a difference-maker in the game after belting his 13th home run of the season. 'My first couple of at-bats I was missing some good pitches, which can be frustrating in its own right,' Swanson said. 'It was a big swing in a big situation.' It was the second day in a row a young Pirates starter was able to confound the vaunted Cubs offense. Paul Skenes, 23, blanked the Cubs on four hits with five strikeouts in five innings Friday. On Saturday, Mike Burrows, 25, gave up one run on five hits with eight strikeouts in 5 1/3 innings in his first appearance against the Cubs. The Cubs have scored just eight runs in their last four games and hope to snap out of that Sunday when they face Mitch Keller, who comes in with a 1-9 record and a 4.15 ERA. But as long as they are playing close, low-scoring games, they want to come out on top. 'That's part of the schedule,' Counsell said. 'You expect to play close games. You are not going to play 8-3 games every day. The bullpen, the defense, the baserunning, you count on those things. You have different clubs in your bag, so to speak.' Reliever Drew Pomeranz pitched a scoreless eight but felt back tightness, and the Cubs will monitor him. Left-hander Shota Imanaga threw four innings in an Arizona Complex League game and gave up three hits and struck out four in his second appearance since going on the injured list May 5 with a left hamstring strain. The Cubs will see how he responds to Saturday's outing before drawing up a game plan for his next rehab appearance. 'He has to get his arm in game shape,' Counsell said. 'He needs mound time. He needs conditions of the game. He needs to ramp up for now and health-wise for the future. 'The amount of down time and out-of-game competition — you have to follow certain steps because he missed too much time and game action.' Reliever Porter Hodge threw 14 pitches in a scoreless inning in a rehab assignment for Iowa on Friday, and Cubs officials said he felt good. Counsell said Hodge, on the injured list since May 18 with a left oblique strain, is in line for another appearance Tuesday.


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Matthew Boyd has been a key performer in his 1st season with the Chicago Cubs
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Hamilton Spectator
2 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Matthew Boyd has been a key performer in his 1st season with the Chicago Cubs
CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Cubs are on top of the NL Central with a depleted rotation. The quiet consistency of Matthew Boyd is a major reason for their success. Boyd has pitched at least six innings and allowed three earned runs or fewer in 10 of his 14 starts with his new team. The left-hander tossed six innings of one-hit ball in Saturday's 2-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. 'He continues to just do an excellent job and put us in position to win games,' manager Craig Counsell said. Chicago is missing three key starting pitchers because of injuries. Shota Imanaga could return by the end of June, but Justin Steele is out for the season after he had elbow surgery . Javier Assad is trying to come back from an oblique issue. Amid those issues with the rotation, Boyd just keeps sailing along for the Cubs — particularly at Wrigley Field. He is 6-0 with a 2.25 ERA in six home starts this year. 'Pitching at Wrigley is really special,' Boyd said. 'Getting to play in this environment, every outing, you know, you go out there, there's so much energy from the fans. It feels like a playoff-type outing. I'm really grateful to call it home right now.' The 34-year-old Boyd finalized a $29 million, two-year contract with Chicago in December. His late grandfather, John Boyd, grew up in Chicago and was a big Cubs fan. Matthew Boyd had Tommy John surgery in June 2023, but he returned last year with Cleveland and went 2-2 with a 2.72 ERA in eight starts with the Guardians. He also made three postseason starts for the AL Central champions, allowing one run while striking out 14 in 11 2/3 innings. 'He's got a lot of different ways to get guys out, whether it's the fastball, the changeup, slider, curveball,' Cubs shortstop Dansby Swanson said. 'It's kind of a little bit of a funky arm slot. He's a true pro in ways that he wants to get guys out. So you know when he's out there you know you got a chance to win the game. ... He's been awesome for us.' The only hit Boyd allowed on Saturday was Andrew McCutchen's one-out drive in the first inning for his seventh homer. He retired 14 in a row after McCutchen went deep. 'You just go keep pitching, right?' Boyd said. 'Whether it's a home run or a walk or even a strikeout, something good, you just continue to go out and keep doing what you expect of yourself when the ball's in your hand.' Tommy Pham broke up the string when he reached on a leadoff walk in the sixth, but Boyd promptly picked him off. Boyd has picked off a baserunner in a career-high three consecutive games, tying Rick Sutcliffe and Bill Hands for the franchise record. He has a major league-high six on the season, one more than Yankees left-hander Max Fried. Boyd said Bellevue College coach Mark Yoshino in Washington taught him his pick-off move when he was a kid. 'It's always been something I've put a focus on. ... It's something that you just want to stay sharp on,' Boyd said. 'You don't want to fall into weird patterns.' ___ AP MLB: