Cubs Just Got Their Best Offseason News Yet

A few weeks ago I wrote about the status of three young pitchers and whether the updates on their respective injuries would impact how aggressive the Cubs would be in their pursuit of more pitching talent this offseason. While it appears the Cubs will target at least one upgrade for the starting rotation regardless, the team also got their best offseason news yet this week.

According to Sahadev Sharma of The Athletic, Cubs pitcher Ben Brown has been medically cleared to proceed with a normal offseason program after missing the majority of the 2024 season with an unprecedented neck injury.

Via The Athletic.

Ben Brown has been cleared for a normal offseason throwing program, according to a team source. An unusual neck injury sidelined Brown, 25, for more than half of his rookie year — he did not pitch in a game after June 8 — denying the Cubs the chance to see one of their most promising pitchers develop.

The young righty was used both in the bullpen and in the rotation during the first half of the 2024 season and you could tell Brown was on the verge of taking the next step before the neck injury stopped his progress. Brown posted a 3.58 ERA in 55.1 innings, including a 3.23 ERA in eight starts.

Fingers crossed that there are no more setbacks for Brown and he can enter 2025 as a legit candidate to win a starting rotation spot. The one hurdle for Brown and him putting together a full season is that the 25-year-old has not thrown more than 104 innings in any year since becoming a pro in 2017. It seems unlikely that the Cubs are penciling him in for 130+ innings in 2025, but as we saw during his first stint in the majors Brown was equally impressive coming out of the bullpen, showing closer potential.

We’ll see how the Cubs plan to spread out Brown’s innings in 2025, but for now it’s a great sign that he’ll have a normal offseason after that bizarre neck issue.

(Injury Questions)

Pitching will be the number one priority for the Chicago Cubs this offseason, but injury updates could make their pursuit for arms much more aggressive.

The 2024 season was supposed to be set up for a trio of Cubs prospects to make their mark in the majors and while we saw a few glimpses of what could have been the year was overshadowed by injuries for those three pitchers. Ben Brown and Jordan Wicks combined to throw 101.1 innings in 26 total appearances, while the organization’s top pitching prospect entering the year, Cade Horton, missed most of the year because of a shoulder injury.

Cubs president Jed Hoyer gave updates on all three pitchers last week at the GM Meetings and while it might be silly to speculate on their health during November, I can’t help but feel a tiny bit uneasy about a couple of these guys. Let’s start with the best(?) update.

The lefty made 10 starts and one relief appearance in 2024, missing big chunks of the season with a strained forearm and then an oblique issue that at first was thought to be a repeat injury in September. It turns out that when Wicks was sidelined for the final couple weeks of the regular season he didn’t have the same oblique strain from the summer and instead it was a rib injury.

And well, the Cubs and Wicks are viewing that revelation as a positive.

Via the Chicago Sun-Times.

Left-hander Jordan Wicks’ season ended a couple weeks early, when he began feeling discomfort near his oblique. He’d already spent two and a half months on the IL for a strained right oblique. But he and the Cubs were encouraged when imaging showed that his late-season injury was actually a rib issue, which was causing tightness in the area.

The Cubs expect Wicks to have a normal offseason, so that’s an encouraging sign for the lefty. The 2021 first round pick will once again be in the starting rotation mix in spring training. If healthy, of course.

Right-hander Ben Brown showed the most promise from the Cubs minor league system in the first half of the 2024 season, but then he was abruptly shut down in June. The team initially diagnosed him with a stress reaction in his neck. After a few setbacks during the summer, Brown was officially ruled out for the year and the team updated the issue as a “benign area of concern” in August.

So yeah, no idea what that means and the Cubs still have to wait for further tests to reveal how Brown’s offseason will proceed.

 Rookie right-hander Ben Brown is scheduled to have another scan in mid-November to make sure a benign area of concern in his neck has fully dissipated.

“Our hope is that he has a no-restrictions offseason,” Hoyer said Monday. “But I don’t think we’ll know that for a couple weeks.”

Fingers crossed I guess?

Cade Horton looked phenomenal during his pro debut in 2023, ending the season at Double-A and primed to make his big-league debut with the Cubs in 2024. The righty was promoted to Triple-A following four April starts at Double-A this past season, but Horton only tossed 18 more innings the rest of the year.

Horton was placed on the injured list on May 31, and did not return to game action, but now he is on track to begin his offseason work.

Their top pitching prospect, right-hander Cade Horton, made just nine starts because of a strain of the subscapularis in his right shoulder that wiped out the rest of his season. Before the injury, he had seemed likely to debut this year. He’s now on track to start a throwing progression this offseason.

Horton was the seventh overall pick in the 2022 MLB Draft out of Oklahoma after only throwing 53.1 innings in college. The right-hander has already had Tommy John surgery and after seeing him miss most of 2024 with a shoulder injury I’m certainly not as optimistic about Horton as I was a year ago.

Again, fingers crossed that Horton’s arm issues are behind him, but even if all goes well from now until spring training, his 2025 season might still be delayed because we’ve already seen the Cubs take a cautious approach with Horton since drafting him.

In terms of being more aggressive, I don’t think these updates will influence the Cubs when it comes to big free agent commitments like a Max Fried, who seems like the big starter the team may be targeting this offseason.

However, if the organization eventually feels uncomfortable with what it sees from Brown’s further testing or Horton’s progress, could that influence the front office into a second significant addition to the rotation. That could be anything from one-year deals for Shane Bieber or Walker Buehler or a trade, maybe with the Mariners or White Sox for one of their pitching studs?

I feel confident that the Cubs will make one major pitching acquisition this offseason, but maybe the question marks surrounding a few of their younger pitchers pushes the front office into making multiple additions that move the needle.

Related Posts

🚨 MLB INSIDE RESET: The White Sox’s newly assembled coaching staff is raising quiet but serious questions across the league, as subtle hires, shifted responsibilities, and a clear change in philosophy hint at a deeper organizational reset. What looks like routine restructuring on the surface may actually signal a long term plan that hasn’t been fully explained yet — and insiders believe the real impact will only become clear once the season pressure hits.

The Chicago White Sox have finalized their coaching staff for the 2026 season following sweeping changes made at the end of September.

🚨 MLB INSIDE TRADE RUMBLINGS: The Braves are suddenly being linked to a bold trade for a $6 million NL rival left hander, a move insiders say could quietly solve multiple problems at once and even position him as a long term heir to Chris Sale. What looks like a low risk deal on paper may actually hide a far bigger plan, with Atlanta reportedly intrigued by a dynamic arsenal that hasn’t fully been unlocked yet — and the timing of this rumor is raising serious eyebrows across the league.

The Braves could go after a young star.

🚨 MLB INSIDE STORM BREWING: As hopes of an Alex Bregman return quietly fade, a new projection suggests the Red Sox may be preparing a jaw dropping $186 million swing for Bo Bichette, a move insiders believe could redefine Boston’s future in one bold stroke. What once seemed unrealistic is now gaining traction behind the scenes, and if this prediction turns real, the ripple effect could shock the AL East and completely change how this offseason is remembered.

A former MLB executive now believes that the Boston Red Sox will land coveted free agent infielder Bo Bichette from Toronto.

🚨 MLB INSIDE WHISPERS: Something big is quietly brewing behind closed doors in New York, as new projections hint the Yankees may be lining up an elite shortstop signing that goes far beyond a normal free-agency move. What started as a low-key prediction is now being viewed as a potential power shift, with insiders suggesting this decision could redefine the Yankees’ identity and force the entire American League to adjust sooner than expected.

The New York Yankees haven’t done much during the offseason, but MLB rumors continue to swirl. New York has been […]

Cubs Predicted To Land Marquee Free Agent Starting Pitcher On Six-Year Contract

The Cubs are in the market for a top-of-the-rotation starting pitcher, and David Schoenfield of ESPN predicted them to land Framber Valdez, previously of the Houston Astros.

🚨 INSIDE NFL REVELATION: The Packers reportedly had a stunning opportunity to sign an all time great for just $5 million, yet chose to walk away without even making a free agent offer — a quiet decision that is now raising serious questions inside the fanbase and league circles alike. What seemed insignificant at the time is suddenly being revisited as a potential turning point, with insiders suggesting this missed move could have changed far more than anyone realized.

Green Bay missed an opportunity.