Post-Tribune

By the time he got to Phoenix ...

Despite the trek that day from Iowa to Chicago to Arizona, Wesneski put in the best pitching performanc­e of the season, according to Counsell

- By Meghan Montemurro

PHOENIX — Hayden Wesneski’s phone kept buzzing with so many missed calls and text messages in the wee hours Wednesday that he eventually awoke to find it on the floor.

Thankfully, Wesneski got an assist from his Triple-A Iowa roommate Matt Mervis, who woke him up at 1 a.m. with a knock on the door to let him know their manager, Marty Pevey, was trying to get hold of him. Wesneski immediatel­y knew that meant a majorleagu­e call-up.

A long day that required a 4 a.m. trip to the ballpark to pick up his gear en route to the airport to fly to Chicago and then halfway across the country to Phoenix culminated in what manager Craig Counsell called the Cubs’ best pitching performanc­e of the season. Running on little sleep and adrenaline, Wesneski tossed four shutout innings of one-hit ball without walking a batter in the Cubs’ 5-3 victory Wednesday against the Diamondbac­ks to secure the series win.

“It’s just one of the things where you just have to focus on the job,” Wesneski said. “It’s trying to make it as simple as that right? Like, I’ve gotta do this today. OK, let’s do it really good and figure it out and it worked out.”

A depleted Cubs bullpen was bolstered by muchneeded reinforcem­ents Wednesday. Following back-to-back extra-inning games, the Cubs called up Wesneski and Colten Brewer from Triple A. Left-hander Luke Little and right-hander Daniel Palencia were optioned to Iowa. Right-hander Julian Merryweath­er (rib stress fracture) was transferre­d to the 60-day injured list to open a 40-man roster spot for Brewer. Merryweath­er won’t be eligible to return until June 5.

The Cubs used all but two relievers in Tuesday’s 11-10 loss in 10 innings, only staying away from Héctor Neris, following three straight appearance­s, and Keegan Thompson, who threw two innings the night before. Over the last three games entering Wednesday’s series finale in Arizona, Cubs relievers combined to throw 267 pitches in 11 ⅓ innings.

“We have to have able pitchers today and really just kind of through the weekend,” Counsell said.

Brewer, 31, made a good impression during spring training and brings big-league experience to the bullpen with 84 career appearance­s for three organizati­ons. Among the nonroster invitees in camp, Brewer “definitely was somebody that we knew at some point would get here,” Counsell said.

Wesneski was in the mix to make the roster out of spring training, but the Cubs opted to have him go to Iowa and stretch out in case they needed a pitcher who could provide length. Wesneski has found success when used out of the bullpen, posting a 3.49 ERA in 25 appearance­s (49 innings) the previous two years.

“For these guys in Triple A, I mean, when you come up you’ve got to be ready to do whatever,” Counsell said. “We’ve asked Ben Brown to do that, it’s the same thing we’re going to ask Hayden to do. It’s really get outs, it’s not label myself as a starter

or reliever. Let’s get people out.”

The three-city trip took its toll on the pitching staff, though the Cubs came out of the always challengin­g visit out West with a 5-4 record as they head home for a seven-game homestand.

A look at three takeaways from the Cubs’ West Coast trip:

Cubs need more from Hendricks

Right-hander Kyle Hendricks’ first four starts have been ugly, to put it mildly.

Hendricks hasn’t been giving the Cubs a chance when he’s on the mound and in the process has put up arguably the worst numbers in the league. Hendricks’ 12.71 ERA and minus-0.5 fWAR rank second-to-last and last, respective­ly, in MLB among the 175 pitchers who have thrown at least 10 innings this season.

Hitters have feasted on Hendricks’ mistakes, slugging seven home runs off the veteran in 17 innings. He allowed 13 home runs in 137 innings last season.

“I just make a couple bad pitches and give up big slug,” Hendricks said. “I don’t know where that’s coming from, to be honest. Guys are just on it right now.”

Hendricks is scheduled to make his next start Sunday against the Miami Marlins at Wrigley Field. With an off day Monday, multiple pitchers stretched

out and Jameson Taillon coming off the injured list to start Thursday, Counsell was asked whether it was a possibilit­y they’d skip Hendricks’ turn.

“I think frankly, all of our pitching stuff is we’ve got to get through every day,” Counsell said. “And then we’re in a tough enough spot, right? We’ve just got to get through the day and then reevaluate it and make an

assessment going forward. We’re going to need Kyle’s innings in his next start.”

Hendricks is known for his slow starts to the season, as evident by a career 5.58 ERA in 37 career starts in March/April, which is more than a run-and-a-half higher than his next-worst month. His struggles can’t continue to compromise the bullpen, though. The Cubs can show some patience while Justin

Steele remains sidelined, but if Hendricks can’t turn things around sooner than later, tough conversati­ons await.

Morel shows why he could be great at third base

The full-time transition to third base has had its rocky moments for Christophe­r Morel.

It was clear in spring training that Morel would have highlights and lowlights playing regularly at third.

The Cubs, however, are committed to giving Morel a real chance to stick at the position while keeping the designated hitter spot open to rotate players in the lineup.

Morel delivered his best stretch of defense on this road trip, making strong, accurate throws and, just as importantl­y, knowing when not to try to force a throw.

His defensive performanc­e certainly didn’t go unnoticed by the Cubs, especially the pitchers he played behind.

Shifted toward shortstop with Diamondbac­ks lefty Jace Peterson at the plate, Morel went to his right and backhanded a soft bouncer down the line, and in one motion fielded the ball and threw a dart to first base as his momentum took him toward the foul line. He looked smooth making the difficult play, one of multiple standout defensive sequences during the ninegame trip.

Morel will need to continue to make more positive than negative plays at third base as the season progresses, but his performanc­e was an important developmen­t.

“He had a heck of a road trip defensivel­y for sure,” Counsell said. “Played it really flawlessly, thought he made some real heady plays too. I think his pace is improving, obviously made some spectacula­r plays.”

 ?? DARRYL WEBB/AP ?? Hayden Wesneski throws against the Diamondbac­ks during the ninth inning on Wednesday.
DARRYL WEBB/AP Hayden Wesneski throws against the Diamondbac­ks during the ninth inning on Wednesday.
 ?? DARRYL WEBB/AP ?? Christophe­r Morel fields a grounder against the Diamondbac­ks on Wednesday.
DARRYL WEBB/AP Christophe­r Morel fields a grounder against the Diamondbac­ks on Wednesday.

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