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Jamison Taillon’s meltdown puts more pressure on the Cubs
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Jamison Taillon’s 2026 season began with a warning sign during spring training. Before leaving to pitch for Team Canada during the World Baseball Classic, Taillon had made four starts and gone 0-3 with a 22.18 ERA. In his first start after returning, he was rocked for ten runs on eight hits and four walks over just 3.1 innings. Many felt it was still in March and hoped it was just a veteran easing into the season. Unfortunately, it wasn’t.

In Game 2 of the 2026 Crosstown Classic, Cubs starter Jamison Taillon was hit hard early and often as they lost 8-3. The White Sox jumped him early — loud contact, missed spots, and a fastball that lived in the middle of the plate. By the time Craig Counsell walked out to get him, the damage was done and the Cubs were chasing a game they never caught. Taillon allowed a career-high five home runs, two to Japanese sensation Munetaka Murakami, and eight earned runs.

Everything that went wrong in March showed up again on Saturday night.

Taillon did not just lose a game. They lost a little more faith in a pitcher they were counting on to stabilize a rotation already stretched thin. His disastrous outing against the White Sox was messy, and never competitive. After Saturday, Taillon has now given up 16 homeruns, which is leads all Major League pitchers.

Taillon’s postgame quotes told the story

To his credit, Taillon didn’t hide from it afterward. His postgame comments were blunt, frustrated, and honest — the kind of quotes that tell you a pitcher knows he’s running out of rope.

There was no sugarcoating. Just a veteran acknowledging that he’s not performing at a major‑league level.

Now the pressure shifts to Jed Hoyer


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The Cubs entered the season believing they had enough pitching depth to survive bumps. But with Taillon struggling, Matthew Boyd on IL twice already this season, and Cade Horton out for the foreseeable future with season-ending right elbow injury, the rotation suddenly looks even more fragile.

And that puts the spotlight squarely on Jed Hoyer.

This isn’t a front office that can afford to wait until July. Not with Shota Imanaga carrying the staff. Not with the bullpen already overworked and also injury-riddled. Hoyer is now forced to find a reinforcement — maybe even a significant one — far earlier than planned.

The only thing keeping Taillon in the rotation is injuries to other starters. The Cubs do not need Taillon to pitch like an ace. They just need him to be competent. But after last Saturday’s debacle, whatever they can get from him moving forward, win or lose, should be considered a bonus because it cannot get any worse.

Even Taillon acknowledged that this game is unforgiving and is running out of time.

No matter what happens with Taillon, Hoyer and the Cubs must start planning now and act quickly.

This article first appeared on ChiCitySports and was syndicated with permission.

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