The Chicago Cubs hosted the Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday with Chicago carrying a five-game home winning streak and a 3-1 edge in the season series. It was the fifth meeting between the teams this year, and the matchup arrived with the Cubs at 13-9 overall and the Phillies trying to steady an 8-14 start.
Shota Imanaga was the Cubs' probable starter, and his numbers told the story of Chicago's edge on the mound: 1-1 with a 2.45 ERA, a 0.77 WHIP and 31 strikeouts. Jesus Luzardo was set to start for Philadelphia at 1-3 with a 7.94 ERA, a 1.46 WHIP and 30 strikeouts.
That pitching contrast matched the recent form of both clubs. The Cubs were 7-3 over their last 10 games and had outscored opponents by 22 runs in that stretch. The Phillies were 2-8 over their last 10 and had been outscored by 27 runs. Chicago also had been solid at home, going 8-5 in its own park, while Philadelphia was 3-4 on the road.
Ian Happ led the Cubs with six home runs and a.526 slugging percentage, while Nico Hoerner came in 14 for 45 over the last 10 games with a double, two home runs and 12 RBIs. For Philadelphia, Justin Crawford led the club with a.283 batting average, and Bryce Harper had been 12 for 35 over the past 10 games with two home runs and four RBIs.
The tension in this one was simple enough to see. The Cubs were favored at -120 with an over/under of 8 1/2 runs, but the Phillies arrived with a lineup that had not produced enough to match Chicago's pace. Philadelphia's trip into Tuesday's game was less about the standings than about whether Luzardo could slow a Cubs team that had already found a rhythm against them. For Chicago, the test was whether a home streak built on strong pitching and timely hitting could keep going against an opponent that badly needed a reset.
Backhus has seen enough baseball to know the shape of this one before the first pitch: a home team playing with confidence, a visitor searching for traction, and a series that keeps narrowing toward the side that has handled the moment better.