Episodes

  • PITCHERS AND CATCHERS REPORT: Flexibility, Health, And Deep October Baseball
    Feb 9 2026

    Spring hits different when your pitching plan actually matches your October goals. We kick off a loaded Monday Morning Cubs Show by setting a clear blueprint: use the catcher tandem smartly, spread early innings across a deep rotation, and lean on a bullpen with defined tiers while keeping the door open for a midseason upgrade. We walk through why Miguel Amaya and Carson Kelly make a high-floor backstop duo and how Moises Ballesteros adds rare DH insurance. Then we map the rotation with intent: Cade Horton is electric but protected, Justin Steele remains the staff’s soul, and Eddie Cabrera—now Eddie in Chicago—gets room to acclimate before the weather and rhythm turn in his favor.

    From there, we highlight the ballast that wins long seasons: Matthew Boyd in a contract push, Shota Imanaga with a chip on his shoulder, and Jameson Taillon as the day-game stabilizer who enables a six-man look in April. We explain why Colin Rea and Javier Assad are elite insurance and flag Jackson Wiggins’ triple-digit upside and Jordan Wicks’ must-click changeup as pivotal spring storylines. In the pen, Daniel Palencia holds the ninth for now, while Caleb Thielbar and Phil Maton bring late-inning courage and command. Hunter Harvey is the value swing who could break the season wide open, with Jacob Webb and Hobie Milner poised to thrive in better-shaped roles—and big-velo lottery tickets Porter Hodge and Luke Little waiting to pop.

    We keep it honest, too: a raw moment on gambling’s costs and why integrity matters, plus measured WBC excitement with a watchful eye on health. The big takeaway? Don’t panic when April pitch counts feel conservative. This roster is built to peak when it counts, and the path to a top-five MLB staff is right in front of us.

    If you’re riding with us into 90-plus wins, hit follow, drop a five-star review on Apple or Spotify, and share this with a Cubs friend who’s counting down to Opening Day. Who’s your Game 1 starter? We want to hear it.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Groundhog Day Debates, Pitchers Reporting, And Cubs Roster Questions
    Feb 2 2026

    A groundhog rivalry, a cough, and a countdown to what actually matters. We open with Woodstock pride and Groundhog Day lore, then cut through the annual noise around “pitchers and catchers report” to ask a tougher question: how do the Cubs set themselves up for a season that feels built for right now? We get honest about Nico Horner’s value, why trading him would be a mistake, and how an extension only makes sense at the right number. We also make the case that Michael Busch isn’t a sleeper waiting for a leap—he’s already one of the most productive first basemen in baseball, with room to sharpen the glove and manage lefty exposure.

    From there, we look at the prospect pipeline with a clear lens. Losing a blue-chipper hurts, but Moises Ballesteros and Jackson Wiggins headline a next wave that keeps the system useful without stealing focus from a win-now window. We talk timing, roles, and why a couple of rookies filling everyday jobs can work for a big-market club when the veterans carry the peak months. Then comes the World Baseball Classic: a blast to watch, a knot in the stomach for coaches. PCA’s energy could benefit from high-leverage reps, but the risk is real in early March intensity; we draw the line between fun and what the regular season demands.

    Finally, we map the rotation market with patience. Big names remain, but a late spring signing only makes sense after a real look at in-house arms. If health or performance dips, a short-term stabilizer becomes logical; if not, save the ammo. Through it all, we keep our eyes on the only countdown that counts: the home opener at Clark and Addison. Cold April air, short lines, loud innings—those days set the tone. If you’re ready for a season built on clarity, smart risk, and a little Midwest superstition, you’re in the right place.

    If you enjoyed this, follow the show, leave a five-star review, and share it with a Cubs fan who needs something real to hold onto before first pitch.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • Why The 2026 Cubs Are Built To Win 95 Games + SPECIAL GUEST JAKE
    Jan 26 2026

    The North Side turns 150 with a roster built for a modern pennant race, and we’re fired up to explain why. So much that we're joined by our close friend and very special guest JAKE.

    We dig into the national buzz that slots the Dodgers first, then make the case for Chicago at No. 2 because of something flashier teams can’t fake: true depth. From an elite infield to a rotation that changes shapes night to night, this group stacks series wins, handles cold starts, and shortens losing streaks before they begin.

    We spotlight the pitching identity that travels. Edward Cabrera’s bowling-ball sinker, Cade Horton’s dog-in-the-arena tempo, and the anchor presence of Justin Steele create a mix that’s tough to game-plan for over a weekend—let alone a playoff series. Steele’s return isn’t just about health; it’s about headspace. The family reset, the fierce want for wins, and the Lester-like expectation to dominate the sixth and beyond give this staff its soul. We also talk lineup resilience and why Seiya Suzuki’s right-handed thunder makes him the toughest loss to absorb.

    Then it’s anticipation season. We size up a brutal, cold-heavy April that could forge an early edge, call for more national broadcasts against strong AL opponents, and explore the league’s marquee contrast: star-chasing Mets vs cohesion-first Cubs. Along the way, we celebrate the 150th anniversary with a push for tasteful on-field nods, revisit Jake Arrieta’s all-time Wild Card masterpiece, and debate which 2015 Cub would best lift this roster right now—Dexter Fowler’s top-of-order presence makes a compelling case.

    If you’re ready for a season built on layered pitching, smart depth, and a city-wide buzz that feels earned, hit play. Subscribe, drop a quick 5-star review on Apple and Spotify, and share this episode with the Cubs fan who’s already counting down to Steele’s first start back.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • Forgetting Kyle Tucker + Bears Playoff Heartbreak + Inside the 2016 Cubs (Exclusive Stories)
    Jan 19 2026

    The city woke up with that hollow feeling you only get after an overtime gut punch, but the story doesn’t end at the interception. We unpack the Bears loss with honesty and poise: where aggression helped, where early points were there for the taking, and why Caleb’s late-game aura can coexist with teachable mistakes. The defense forced a potent offense into 17 in a one-possession overtime. That’s a standard worth carrying forward, even in a league where momentum resets every week.

    Then we flip the switch to Wrigley. CubsCon brought the 150th anniversary, the 2016 reunion, and the kind of nostalgia that doesn’t gather dust. It motivates. We talk about why seeing Happ, Hoerner, and Taillon freezing together at Soldier Field matters for culture, and how the Bregman signing adds exactly the steady heartbeat this lineup needed. The contract structure—deferred money done right—signals a front office willing to use every tool, not just chase names. Put Bregman next to Dansby and you’ve got two pros who set standards, simplify at-bats, and elevate the room.

    We also zoom out. The Dodgers just turned a $60 million AAV into roughly $126 million in cash outlay after tax penalties. That’s not a rumor; that’s a business model powered by monster media rights. What it means for Chicago: you don’t have to mirror their budget to compete, but you do need to nail structure, timing, and fit. We lay out why the Cubs’ approach can win now—on the field and on the balance sheet—while embracing the city’s hunger for another run.

    If you’re ready for smart Chicago sports talk that moves from the pain to the plan, hit play and ride with us. And if you’re feeling the energy, subscribe, drop a review, and tell a friend which moment hit you hardest.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 9 mins
  • Bears Stun Packers, Cubs Land Alex Bregman
    Jan 12 2026

    A Chicago sports fever dream turned real: the Bears roared back from a 21–3 hole, and the Cubs landed Alex Bregman on a five-year deal that signals a new era at Clark and Addison. We ride the adrenaline rush, then get surgical about what Bregman’s arrival means for the roster, the budget, and the path to October.

    We break down why this contract matters beyond the headline number: no-trade clause, no opt-outs, and—finally—deferrals that modernize how the Cubs manage payroll across a multi-year window. Then we get into baseball guts. Bregman’s selective aggression, elevated walk rate, and low strikeout profile give the lineup a steadier heartbeat. His line-drive backspin fits Wrigley’s mood swings, turning windy days into doubles instead of weak flyouts. Add a championship mindset and meticulous prep, and you’ve got a clubhouse accelerator next to Dansby Swanson on the left side.

    There’s real roster calculus here. With third base locked and shortstop elite, we weigh two paths: keep Nico Horner for a complete defensive spine while Matt Shaw becomes a Swiss Army knife across infield and corner outfield, or explore value on Nico in his final control year. We also map lineup options against righties and lefties, the Counsell factor in weather-based game plans, and where the true power should sit in the order. And yes, we address the risks: last year’s quad, and the reality that the MVP peak is in the rearview. The bet isn’t on 2019 fireworks—it’s on everyday excellence that stacks wins.

    By the end, the picture is clear: the Cubs didn’t just add a name, they declared a window, with budget flexibility, veteran leadership, and a deep supporting cast ready to surge. If you felt that two-hour swing in your chest, you’re not alone. Hit play, join the maniacs, and tell us where you slot Bregman in the order. If you’re new here, follow, share with a Cubs fan, and drop a five-star review to keep this rolling.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    54 mins
  • EMERGENCY SHOW: CUBS LAND EDWARD CABRERA
    Jan 8 2026

    A true shake-up for the North Side: we dig into why Edward Cabrera’s elite stuff at a bargain price could tilt the Cubs’ rotation from steady to scary. With four years of control and a $3.75M tag this season, Cabrera offers rare surplus value in a market where similar swing-and-miss profiles cost $20–30M per year. We break down how his 97 mph fastball and wicked, arm-side-running changeup add desperately needed velocity to a staff built on command, deception, and spin—plus how that contrast plays in October when strikeouts rule.

    We get practical about fit. The Cubs’ pitch lab has a track record of elevating arms through pitch design, sequencing, and role clarity. Cabrera already trended in the right direction by cutting walks and reshaping his mix, a sign he’s coachable. We map the plan: manage early workloads, consider a six-man rotation, and refine the changeup to protect the shoulder without dulling his edge. The goal isn’t 200 innings; it’s 130–150 high-impact frames that raise the ceiling next to Justin Steele, Cade Horton, Shota Imanaga, Jamison Taillon, and a deep bullpen.

    Yes, there’s risk. Cabrera’s IL history is real—shoulder, elbow, blisters—and that’s baked into the price. We talk through why the roster math made Owen Caissie movable for 2026, where RF/DH plate appearances funnel toward Seiya Suzuki and Moises Ballesteros. We also spotlight Christian Hernandez’s on-base traits and Edgardo De Leon’s intriguing upside, then weigh all of it against the value of adding playoff-caliber stuff without paying free-agent premiums. The throughline is run prevention: elite defense, defined roles, and now a power righty who can miss bats in the zone.

    If you care about how the Cubs win the NL Central and build a rotation that plays in October, this breakdown lays out the strategy, the risk, and the upside. Hit play, then tell us your grade for the trade and your prediction for Cabrera’s 2026 line. If you’re new here, follow, share with a Cubs friend, and drop a quick five-star review to help more fans find the show.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    40 mins
  • Inside Jed’s Quiet Plan For A Run-Prevention Cubs
    Jan 5 2026

    Boring offseasons reveal what a team really stands for—and ours is spelling out a clear identity. We lay out why the Cubs are doubling down on run prevention, stacking veteran relievers with complementary shapes, and trusting elite defense to turn tight innings into quiet scoreboards. Instead of chasing a headline, we’re building a bullpen that can segment games, shield young starters from third-time-through exposure, and thrive under pressure because the group culture is strong enough to bounce back after rough nights.

    We dig into Dansby Swanson’s value beyond the box score: pre-pitch positioning, first-step reads, and real-time communication that shifts entire innings. Then we pivot to the bats. This lineup won’t bully you with tape-measure shots; it will bleed you with disciplined at-bats, zone control, and situational hitting. If Michael Busch, Seiya Suzuki, Ian Happ, Matt Shaw, and PCA keep strikeouts down and stack quality plate appearances, manufacturing offense becomes the sustainable path in a league obsessed with velocity and spin.

    There’s risk, and we own it. The plan assumes veterans don’t backslide while the kids level up. That means protecting Cade Horton’s workload now so he’s nasty in October, and giving PCA and Shaw defined reps to grow without asking them to carry the room. Layer in ownership constraints and a cloudy 2027 CBA horizon, and the strategy makes more sense: flexible spending, targeted arms, and a style of play that travels in September.

    If you want a blueprint instead of a splash, this conversation is for you. Tap play, ride along with our resolutions for beating Milwaukee, keeping the rotation healthy, and sharpening offensive identity, then tell us where you stand. Subscribe, share with a fellow Cubs fan, and drop a quick five-star review so more fans can find the show.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 15 mins
  • Inside Jed’s Bullpen Bet And The Bregman What-If
    Dec 29 2025

    A big-name signing sounds great until you run the numbers. We put the Bregman scenario on the table and stress test every downstream effect: moving Nico Horner, re-routing Matt Shaw’s development, and accepting a contract full of player-side leverage. The talent isn’t in doubt; the fit is. What looks like an October upgrade can become a regular-season tax, especially if you value defense, continuity, and runway for emerging bats.

    From there we shift to the quiet plan that might matter more: Jed’s bullpen build. Veteran journeymen with distinct shapes—Hobie Milner, Phil Maton, Jacob Webb, Hunter Harvey—aren’t headline candy, but they’re chess pieces if you deploy them with intent. Webb’s fly-ball profile is a liability in most parks; at Wrigley with the wind howling in, it’s a feature. Pair that with the pitch lab’s track record and you start to see a path to winning close games without breaking the bank.

    We also map the plate-appearance puzzle in right field and DH. Seiya Suzuki needs volume without wear. Owen Caissie needs targeted exposure, not a hard platoon label. Moisés Ballesteros needs a bat-first lane that protects the glove while maximizing contact damage. Treat the roles as fluid and the math works. Add a conversation about a six-man rotation to protect arms and keep stuff crisp into September, and a theme emerges: coherence over splash, leverage over noise, context over clout.

    Stick around to hear where the show is heading next and how you can help shape it. If you enjoyed this one, tap follow, drop a quick 5-star rating on Spotify or Apple, and share it with the Cubs fan in your group chat. Your support helps us keep building this community—and might just sway the bullpen gods our way.

    Thanks for tuning in!

    - Carl & Mahoney

    Show More Show Less
    51 mins