Cubs can thank their lucky stars they never traded for Eugenio Suarez

Eugenio Suarez’s struggles prove Cubs were smart to avoid trading for him
Chicago White Sox v Seattle Mariners
Chicago White Sox v Seattle Mariners | Alika Jenner/GettyImages

The MLB trade deadline has become an important moment for the Chicago Cubs' 2025. The moves made by Jed Hoyer suggested that the team's focus wasn't solely on the 2025 season, and confirmation of that was provided by general manager Carter Hawkins over the weekend, who confirmed the Cubs' thought process included making sure things were in order for the 2032 Cubs.

Conventional wisdom would suggest that Hawkins was just trying to make a point about the Cubs not being eager to move their top prospects in any deal that comes across their table, but the Cubs' front office doesn't deserve the benefit of conventional wisdom.

That said, there is one deadline move that the Cubs didn't make that is looking like the right decision. Matt Shaw homered again for the Cubs during their 3-2 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday, and he now has 7 home runs and 208 wRC+ since the All-Star break.

We're also moving beyond the idea that this is a small sample size from Shaw. The adjustments he has made seem to have unlocked his offensive potential at the Major League level. The Cubs may not admit it publicly, but Shaw's turnaround could be why they backed off from their pursuit of Eugenio Suarez at the MLB trade deadline.

Cubs’ decision to avoid Eugenio Suarez deal looks brilliant now

Whatever their reason, it looks like the Cubs made the right choice--in terms of trading for Suarez or gambling on Shaw's turnaround. Through his first 41 plate appearances with the Mariners, Suarez has only 4 hits with 1 home run. Suarez is carrying a wRC+ of -1 since being traded to the Mariners, and the Jed Hoyer takes that would have been had if he were a part of the Cubs' deadline approach.

Of course, that doesn't shield Hoyer from the other, more egregious mistakes he made at the deadline. Mistakes that defined the reason why the Cubs are quickly becoming an afterthought in the National League Central, while the Milwaukee Brewers hide with the division lead.

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