Chicago vs. San Diego
This is the second postseason meeting between the Chicago Cubs and the San Diego Padres. Their only other postseason meeting occurred in the
1984 National League Championship Series, in which the Padres won in five games after being down 2–0.
Game 1 hit the second of back-to-back home runs in the fifth inning. In the top of the second inning,
Xander Bogaerts hit a RBI double to give the Padres a 1–0 lead. This snapped a 25-inning postseason scoreless streak for San Diego, dating back to the previous season's
Division Series against the Dodgers. Chicago's
Seiya Suzuki and
Carson Kelly hit back-to-back solo home runs in the bottom of the fifth inning off
Nick Pivetta to give the Cubs a 2–1 lead.
Nick Pivetta pitched five innings and struck out nine while
Matthew Boyd pitched innings and struck out two batters as the starting pitchers for both teams in Game 1. In the bottom of the eighth inning,
Dansby Swanson scored on a
Nico Hoerner sacrifice fly to give the Cubs a 3–1 lead.
Brad Keller earned the save after pitching a perfect ninth inning, giving the Cubs a 1–0 series lead. Four Cub relievers combined to retire the final 15 Padres to seal the win.
Game 2 hit a two-run home run in Game 2. In the top of the first inning,
Fernando Tatis Jr. scored on a sacrifice fly from
Jackson Merrill.
Andrew Kittredge only pitched one inning as he allowed two hits and one earned run while striking out one.
Shota Imanaga came in for relief of Kittredge in the second inning and pitched four innings, allowing three hits and two earned runs while striking out three.
Dylan Cease pitched innings as he allowed three hits and zero earned runs while striking out five.
Manny Machado hit a two-run home run in the top of the fifth inning to extend the Padres' lead to 3–0.
Mason Miller came in to pitch innings of relief; he gave up zero runs and zero hits while striking out five.
Robert Suárez pitched innings, only giving up one hit to earn the save, giving the Padres a 3–0 victory, and even the series 1–1 to force a winner-take-all Game 3. Miller had the fastest postseason strikeout pitch since 2008 when he struck out
Carson Kelly with a 104.5 mph four-steam fastball, and his eight straight strikeouts in the series tied
Josh Hader in 2022 for the most consecutive batters struck out in the postseason at any point. It's also the longest streak to start a postseason career by two, per
Sarah Langs.
Game 3 hit a solo home run in the seventh inning to help seal the Cubs series win over the Padres and send them to the NLDS. The Cubs scored first in the bottom of the second inning when
Kyle Tucker scored on an RBI single by
Pete Crow-Armstrong, giving the Cubs a 1−0 lead. Later in the inning,
Seiya Suzuki scored on an RBI walk by
Dansby Swanson, extending the Cubs' lead to 2−0.
Yu Darvish only pitched one inning, allowing four hits and two runs while striking out one batter; it was his second time lasting less than two innings in an elimination postseason start, following Game 7 of the
2017 World Series.
Jameson Taillon pitched four innings, only giving up two hits and zero runs while striking out four batters. In the bottom of the seventh inning,
Michael Busch hit a solo home run off
Robert Suarez to extend the Cubs' lead to 3−0.
Jackson Merrill hit a solo home run in the top of the ninth inning to give the Padres their first run and cut the Cubs' lead to 3−1.
Andrew Kittredge earned his first save of the series to secure the series win and send the Cubs to the
NLDS against their
NL Central division rival
Milwaukee Brewers. This was the Cubs' first postseason series victory since
2017, and the first for an NL Central team since
2019.
Composite line score 2025
NLWC (2–1):
Chicago Cubs beat
San Diego Padres ==See also==