ATSWINS

Column: As summer heats up, Chicago’s sports teams buckle down — and the NASCAR course just buckles

Updated June 29, 2025, 11 a.m. by Paul Sullivan 1 min read
NHL News

It was a hot start to summer in Chicago for our legacy sports teams.

Up was down, down was up and our downtown streets buckled just in time for the Chicago Street Race.

The first half of the Chicago Cubs season was like a good book you couldnt put down.

Amazing comebacks, plenty of runs and the daily Pete Crow-Armstrong Show .

Wrigley Field was packed, and for the first time since the Theo Epstein rebuild, there was reason to believe in the teams future.

Whether the second half can match the start depends largely on whether Epsteins replacement as president of baseball operations, Jed Hoyer, can fill some rotation holes and shore up the bench.

Hoyer fixed a shaky bullpen early in the season with low-key, underrated moves and now faces another obstacle.

When Marquee Sports Network analyst Cliff Floyd pulled out a tiny red flag recently to signal the Cubs had starting pitching concerns, it signaled two things: The Cubs do have starting pitching concerns, and Floyd has a guaranteed contract.

Through the fog of a team-owned network that often serves as a marketing tool for all things Cubs, Floyds flag stood out.

Its obvious to everyone that Hoyer needs to do something.

But when Marquee joins in, you know its serious.

The return of Shota Imanaga on Thursday in St.

Louis after seven weeks rehabbing a hamstring injury was a shot in the arm for the Cubs, who were 12-12 in June entering Saturdays game against the Houston Astros, slowing to a light jog after sprinting for the first two months.

But it doesnt bail out the rest of the rotation, which is in a state of flux with Ben Brown back at Triple-A Iowa.

Only Matthew Boyd and Jameson Taillon are assured of keeping their spots behind Imanaga, and Taillon has allowed an MLB-worst 2.08 home runs per nine innings.

Rookie Cade Horton was roughed up Friday night in Houston, bluntly saying, I got my ass kicked.

Saturday nights starter, Colin Rea, allowed seven runs on 11 hits against the Seattle Mariners last week, serving up four home runs.

True, the wind was blowing out at Wrigley, but it has blown in plenty of times for Rea, whom left-handed hitters are salivating over with a .952 OPS against the right-hander.

If someone told you in March the White Sox would have a better rotation than the Cubs at the midway point, you wouldve laughed or cried, depending on your anxiety level.

Justin Steeles season-ending elbow surgery and Imanagas hamstring injury obviously have factored into the Cubs rotation problems, but they were supposed to have starting depth.

Instead, their starters ranked 23rd entering Saturday with a 4.31 ERA.

Sox starters, meanwhile, were 18th at 4.20.

Thanks in no small part to the offense, Cubs starters were a combined 30-21, while Sox starters, with no run support to speak of, were a combined 13-30.

Would you swap rotations if you were a Cubs fan? White Sox starting pitcher Adrian Houser gestures a greeting to the plate umpire at the start of a game against the Giants on Saturday, June 28, 2025, at Rate Field.

(John J.

Kim/Chicago Tribune) The Sox likely will deal starter Adrian Houser before the trade deadline, in case Hoyer hasnt heard lately from his Winnetka Starbucks buddy, Sox general manager Chris Getz.

Houser has a 1.90 ERA in seven starts for the Sox after throwing seven shutout innings in Saturdays 1-0 victory over the San Francisco Giants.

Hes affordable and shouldnt cost the Cubs more than a prospect.

Lonzo Ball is out, and this time its for good.

The Cleveland Cavaliers accepted the challenge of trying to get Ball healthy enough to play in the NBA, acquiring him from the Chicago Bulls for Isaac Okoro, a disappointing top-five pick in the 2020 draft.

When healthy, Ball can be a premier player.

He was that player for only 35 games in the 2021-22 season before the knee injury that would sideline him for 212 seasons.

He came back with a new knee in 2024-25, only to be limited to 35 games by a wrist injury and other ailments.

What if Ball had remained healthy? Would the Bulls have been competitive enough to be an annual playoff team the last four years? Probably not, but it doesnt matter anyway.

Executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas, who reportedly is getting a contract extension for reasons that never will be publicly explained, wouldnt have made the necessary trade-deadline decisions even if Ball had been healthy on a winning team.

Hopefully Ball can overcome his injuries and become the player many thought hed be and not the Bulls version of former Cubs pitcher Mark Prior.

Luis Robert Jr.

has a 0.0 WAR, which seems almost impossible for a player with his talent.

Getz said Monday its still possible Robert could remain with the Sox after the trade deadline, which would be a shocking twist for a player who has been on trade-rumor watch for more than a year.

White Sox center fielder Luis Robert Jr.

rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run against the Diamondbacks on Tuesday, June 24, 2025, at Rate Field.

(Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune) Weve never been out there making phone calls about Luis Robert, Getz said.

Its teams calling us and we have conversations.

And (weve stuck) to the plan that weve been working (on) so far in which, if we feel like we can help the long-term health of the organization, so be it.

We like having Luis Robert and I enjoy having him in the lineup on a nightly basis.

Three days later, Robert was out with hamstring tightness.

The wait goes on ...

and on.

Anton Frondell, the No.

3 pick in the NHL draft by the Chicago Blackhawks, could provide the organization with a much-needed personality boost, along with what he can do on the ice.

His draft-day story of starting out as a 5-year-old wearing pink figure skates showed his sense of humor.

Frondell compared himself to Florida Panthers star Aleksander Barkov, another 6-foot-3, 215-pound forward who can score goals and doesnt get pushed around.

When the Hawks asked him whether hed prefer to be a center or winger, Frondell replied, Whatever Connor (Bedard) doesnt play, Ill play.

Look for the Hawks marketing machine to put these two on billboards soon.

Its what they do best.

Our pick to click in next weeks Chicago Street Race is Katherine Legge, the eighth woman in modern history to compete in NASCAR and the first since Danica Patrick in 2018 to race in the Cup Series.

In its third year, Chicagos NASCAR race could use a nice storyline like a woman outdueling a field of men and less rain.

Buckling pavement on the pop-up course from the recent heat wave provided a realistic, Chicago-style driving obstacle.

But crews quickly repaired the pavement, which of course never would happen to a normal Chicago street..

This article has been shared from the original article on chicagotribune, here is the link to the original article.