After selling beloved core pieces Javier Baez, Anthony Rizzo and Kris Bryant at the 2021 trade deadline, the Chicago Cubs sold closer David Robertson en route to a 74-88 2022, then made minor upgrades at the 2023 and 2024 trade deadlines, acquiring Jeimer Candelario in 2023 and Isaac Paredes in 2024. In both seasons, the Cubs finished 83-79, missing the playoffs.
In 2025, make no mistake, the Chicago Cubs will be definite buyers. In fact, Jed Hoyer’s front office is preparing for its most aggressive trade deadline since the 2015-2020 window.
With a 60-41 record entering a weekend series against the White Sox, the Cubs are tied with the Brewers atop the NL Central and share the best record in baseball. Their +121 run differential is tops in MLB. They rank top five in nearly every major offensive category, feature an above-average pitching staff, and play elite defense.
The foundation is solid. But to transform themselves from contender to favorite, the Cubs are looking to bolster their pitching depth and add an impact bat at third base.
Few teams in baseball are as complete as Chicago right now:
The offense has been driven by MVP candidate Pete Crow-Armstrong, pacing for a 40/40 season and trailing only Aaron Judge in bWAR (5.8). Kyle Tucker (4.2 bWAR), Nico Hoerner (3.9), Michael Busch (3.5), and Carson Kelly (3.0) also find themselves among the most valuable all-around position players to this point in the 2025 season.
Seiya Suzuki is tied for 6th in MLB in home runs and ranks 4th in RBI. Dansby Swanson has been a steady presence on both sides, commanding the middle infield with elite defense, while providing timely hitting with pop.
On the mound, All-Star lefty Matthew Boyd (2.2 ERA) has anchored a rotation that lost ace Justin Steele for the season. Shota Imanaga has returned from an injury that sidelined him in early May until late June, compiling a 2.4 ERA and 0.92 WHIP in 13 starts.
Colin Rea (3.8 ERA) and rookie Cade Horton (4.04 ERA) have been solid. Jameson Taillon has also been a fine backend rotation (4.44 ERA, 1.11 WHIP in 17 starts), but has been hurt since late June. He is expected back in August.
The bullpen has quietly silenced the doubters:
Eugenio Suárez (3B, Diamondbacks)
Mitch Keller (SP, Pirates)
Merrill Kelly (SP, Diamondbacks)
Seth Lugo (SP, Royals)
Jhoan Duran (RP, Twins)
Kyle Finnegan (RP, Nationals)
Zac Gallen (SP, Diamondbacks)
Sandy Alcantara (SP, Marlins)
Ryan McMahon (3B, Rockies)
Jonathan India (INF, Royals)
Charlie Morton (SP, Orioles)
Jacob deGrom (SP, Rangers)
The Cubs have waited years for this moment. With the division up for grabs, a loaded offense, elite defense and a surprisingly effective bullpen, they are built to win now. And with one of the deepest and strongest farm systems in the game, the Cubs have plenty of trade capital, making most names on the list provided above quite possible. By adding a top-tier starter and an impact third baseman, Chicago can cement itself as a true World Series threat.
This deadline is about pushing chips in and trusting the player development that’s carried them this far. The question is no longer whether the Cubs will buy, but how bold they’re willing to be.
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