CHICAGO — The Cubs and Padres meet again in a series shaped by last October, when Chicago knocked San Diego out in three games in the NL Wild Card Series. This time, both clubs arrive with strong records and enough early-season form to make the matchup feel like more than a rematch.
The Cubs had won 10 in a row before dropping their last two games at Dodger Stadium, yet they still sit a game behind the Reds in the NL Central with a plus-31 run differential, fourth best in the majors. The Padres, meanwhile, went 5-3 on a road trip through Anaheim, Colorado and Mexico City, carry the third-best record in the majors behind the Braves and the Dodgers, and own a plus-12 run differential that ranks seventh.
Chicago’s offense has been fueled by Seiya Suzuki, who has four of the team’s 13 home runs over the last week, and Moises Ballesteros, who hit.438/.526/.875 over that same stretch. The bullpen has also been busy, with Hoby Milner leading the Cubs with 13 appearances on the season. On the other side, Mason Miller is in the middle of a run that has lasted 34⅔ straight scoreless innings, a franchise record.
The series also puts a handful of pitching lines under the microscope. Matthew Boyd is 1-1 with a 5.79 ERA, but he has struck out 22 and walked three over three starts and 14 innings after missing three weeks with a biceps strain. Boyd faced the Padres twice in the regular season last year and once in the playoff series at Wrigley Field, so the matchup is not new to him. Randy Vásquez is 2-0 with a 1.88 ERA, and San Diego has won all five of his starts, while he has posted a 2.57 ERA in three career starts against the Cubs.
Chicago’s biggest move of the offseason also comes into view here. The Cubs acquired Edward Cabrera from the Marlins for Owen Caissie and two minor leaguers, and Cabrera arrives 2-0 with a 2.73 ERA. He has been especially effective against San Diego, owning a 0.54 ERA in three career starts against the Padres, even after allowing five runs, three earned, in seven innings against the Phillies last week. Walker Buehler is 1-2 with a 5.75 ERA and has a 4.54 ERA in 37⅔ innings against the Cubs in his career, while Jameson Taillon is 1-1 with a 4.55 ERA and a 5.73 ERA in two road starts this season.
What makes this series matter now is that neither team is arriving as a surprise. Chicago split six games against San Diego last year before beating the Padres in the playoffs, and the standings say both clubs remain among the National League’s better early-season teams. The gap is small, the familiarity is real, and the next swing or missed pitch could decide whether this looks like a sequel or a reset.