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The Cubs' offense is struggling to break out early in the season, sitting at 6-8 after a recent loss to the Pirates. Manager Craig Counsell noted the issue stems from too many 'empty at-bats' in the lineup.
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Itâs not unusual for Cubs bats to take some time to warm up. The early season cold and winds at Wrigley Field can be notoriously unfriendly to hitters. Headed into Saturdayâs game against the Pirates, the Cubsâ offense was just barely above the midline in overall production, and thatâs a big part of why they sit at 6-8 after the second game of this weekendâs series, a 4-3 extra-inning loss with several run-scoring opportunities that were squandered.
The offensive struggles are a product of having too many of what manager Craig Counsell called âempty at-batsâ in the lineup.
âOffense is sequential,â he said. âIt has to be a line of consistent at-bats.â
This is especially important at Wrigley in early April, when on a decent Saturday afternoon, the temperature at first pitch is still just 48 degrees.
âOn days where itâs difficult for the home run to be a part of your offense, itâs even more important that sequential offense happens. You have to have three [or] four straight good at-bats because youâre going to get some home runs knocked down,â Counsell said.
There have been a few games in this young season when the Cubs have done what Counsell is calling for. For a couple of nights in Tampa Bay during the week, it looked like a collective offensive breakout was coming. Instead, the Cubs returned home and got shut out by the Pirates on Friday and mustered just three runs while striking out 14 times on Saturday.
The most maddening aspect of the offensive woes has been the lack of timely hitting. The Cubs have one of the best walk rates and one of the highest hard-hit rates in baseball, but the hits arenât coming with runners in scoring position. Through these first 14 games of the season, theyâre batting just .219 when it matters most. In Saturdayâs loss to the Pirates, Alex Bregman came through with a ninth-inning RBI single that tied the game, but in the tenth and eleventh innings, the Cubs couldnât get the base hit when they needed it.
In the tenth, with Ian Happ on third base, Dansby Swanson grounded out to end the scoring threat, and then in the eleventh, the Cubs got runners to second and third with no outs, but pop outs from Bregman and Seiya Suzuki left the Cubs empty-handed and two games below .500.
All the same, the expectation is that these offensive struggles will not continue.
âWe just gotta execute better and play better, and we will,â Bregman said. âItâll turn [âŠ] Weâre all every single day getting after it, trying to turn it. And I feel like over the course of 162 the cream will rise to the top, and weâll play good baseball.â
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Odds are, Bregman is right. He came into Saturdayâs game batting just .192, and heâs not alone in sitting below the Mendoza Line. Michael Busch was batting .125 before striking out twice and then getting pinch-hit for in the seventh inning, and Swansonâs one base hit on Saturday brought his batting average up to .149.
Busch hasnât had a hit since April 1, so simple baseball odds would dictate that he is bound to turn things around sooner rather than later. The same is true for Bregman and Swanson. Solid pitching from the starting rotation and the bullpen has helped keep the Cubsâ record from being even worse, but at some point they will likely need a boost from the offense.
âLook, itâs gonna turn, itâs gonna happen,â Counsell said. âItâs no fun right now when it doesnât happen and when you feel like you have a ton of opportunities and canât get the run across.
âItâs going to turn, and thatâs the way you gotta look at it. You know, you miss opportunities as the hitter, and youâre mad at yourself, and you want the pitch back, but itâll turn.â
Armchair managers might be tempted at this point to start making some changes in an effort to spark that turn from the Cubs offense, such as giving Busch a day off in the midst of his struggles at the plate. That may happen, but sitting him is less simple this year because the Cubsâ options to back him up at first base arenât great.
On Saturday, Carson Kelly pinch-hit for Busch and then played two innings at first, a position he had not played professionally until this season. And when Kelly needed a pinch-runner in the ninth, that meant Matt Shaw had to play first for the final two innings of the game. He has even less experience there and only appeared at first base twice during spring training this year.
Things like this might mean Busch has to tough it out through his offensive slump because the team needs him defensively, but if thatâs going to be the case, the Cubs offense might not turn for the better as quickly as fans would like.
Again, there are signs that the Cubs are doing some things right at the plate, even if the results arenât there yet. Thereâs the aforementioned walk and hard-hit rates, both indicators that the Cubs are having quality at bats in some respects. They were eighth in baseball in walks before drawing five more in Saturdayâs game, but the Cubs still rank very close to the bottom of the league in hits, sitting just above the White Sox, Mariners, and Yankees.
Plain and simple, the Cubs need more hits, and they need more hits when there are guys on base. They stranded 15 runners on Saturday, a microcosm of why they have the second-worst clutch rating, according to Fangraphsâ metric. Walks and hard-hit balls are great; they are hopeful signs of better things to come for the Cubs offense, but eventually they just need base hits when there are guys in scoring position.
âSome of the underlying stuff is good, but some of it we need to correct and be better at,â Bregman said. âAnd I think everybody knows in here that we can play a lot better baseball, and we will.â
The Cubs' offense is struggling due to a high number of 'empty at-bats' and the challenging early season conditions at Wrigley Field.
The Cubs currently have a record of 6-8 after their recent game against the Pirates.
Manager Craig Counsell emphasized that offense is sequential and highlighted the need for consistent at-bats to improve performance.
The Cubs lost to the Pirates 4-3 in an extra-inning game, missing several run-scoring opportunities.

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