Sunday, December 7, 2025

Shocker, Cubs Screwed the Pooch Again

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Kyle Tucker last played against the Atlanta Braves on Sept. 2, and in the least shocking development coming from the Chicago Cubs the team appears to have screwed the pooch again. Mismanaging an injured player? Yup, we’re talking about the Cubs.

Tucker exited last Tuesday’s game prior to the seventh inning because of calf tightness. After that game Craig Counsell said Tucker wouldn’t play the next game, hoping that two days of rest (Thursday was an off day) would give the right fielder enough time to recover. Tucker was absent from the starting lineup on Friday. Then, he wasn’t in there again on Saturday, but surely he’d be playing Sunday? Nope.

During that entire time it made sense to put Tucker on the injured list, call up a player from Triple-A and move on. But no, it can’t ever be that easy. The Cubs are now set to begin a three-game series against the Braves in Atlanta on Monday and Tucker still isn’t ready to play.

Apparently Moises Ballesteros was in Atlanta on Sunday night, so maybe now the Cubs will place Tucker on the injured list?

Monday night’s game is only a few hours away and the team still hasn’t made an announcement on it, so it looks like they’re delaying that decision even more. Good job, Cubs.

(Previous Update)

Before the Chicago Cubs decide how serious they want to be about re-signing Kyle Tucker in free agency they’ll have to decide how much longer they want to keep the right fielder on the active roster. It’s been a turbulent second-half for the All-Star, but in recent weeks Tucker was finally looking like himself again at the plate, following his mental reset. Now, there’s a different problem the Cubs are facing with Tucker.

Earlier this week Tucker was removed from a game against the Atlanta Braves at Wrigley Field and it turned out to be a calf issue. The team initially categorized the cause of Tucker’s early exit during Tuesday night’s game as calf tightness that also sidelined Tucker on Wednesday. The Cubs were hoping that Thursday’s off day would give Tucker enough time to recover, but the left-handed hitter was once again absent from Friday’s starting lineup.

You always hate to see this kind of manager speak on a player who is dealing with something physical.

Via Marquee Sports Network.

“He’s improved, for sure, and I think we’d like to give him the day to just move around,” Counsell said on Friday morning before the Cubs’ series opener against the Washington Nationals. “Really, we want to get him symptom-free.”

“Wednesday was a good day in terms of how he came into the park and felt on Wednesday,” Counsell said. “I think he was very encouraged, and we were encouraged that he felt if he had to absolutely play on Wednesday, he probably could have.

“But we’re going to give him a day to do a little more running around today, and then just see where we’re at. But I’m pretty optimistic that we should get him in the lineup by the weekend.”

I mean, all right. Tucker could reasonably return to the lineup this weekend, but it sounds like that would only be as the designated hitter, which again is perfectly fine. Yet, it kinda makes you think back to all the times the Cubs haven’t placed a player on the injured list when said player then proceeds to miss a bunch of games anyway.

Tucker himself probably would have benefited from a stint on the injured list back in July or early August, when he was struggling mightily after he was playing through a broken finger.

This calf issue comes at both a bad and good time. Obviously any injury late in September, leading up to the playoffs or during the postseason would be less ideal, but it’s also a shame that Tucker is being forced to miss games right when he was crushing the ball again. He was given a couple days to reset back in August and after his first game back Tucker has been a beast at the plate. In Tucker’s last 11 games he’s gone 16-for-40, with four home runs and four doubles, slashing .400/.489/.800, in 47 plate appearances.

Fingers crossed that this calf issue goes away quickly or that the Cubs actually give Tucker time to completely get over the injury.

Aldo Soto
Aldo Soto
With a journalism degree from Eastern Illinois University and a decade of Cubs reporting, my work has appeared on 670 The Score, ESPN 1000, and the Pinwheels and Ivy Podcast. I cover Cubs news and analysis for Sports Mockery, including roster moves, game breakdowns, and prospect development.

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