The Chicago Cubs did not play on Monday, but that didn't stop them from losing even more ground to the Milwaukee Brewers in the National League Central race. The race is all but over as the Brewers now have a 6.5-game lead over the Cubs, and for the North Siders, the focus is quickly turning toward being the top Wild-Card team in the National League.
With a 7-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday night, the Brewers have once again gone on a winning streak of at least 10 games. The Brewers had an 11-game winning streak that started their surge ahead of the Cubs, and now, their current 10-game winning streak is allowing them to run away and hide with the division lead. It's not just voodoo magic working in the Brewers' favor this season; it's history.
The @Brewers are the 10th team in the Divisional Era (since 1969) to have two winning streaks of at least 10 games in one season.
— MLB Stats (@MLBStats) August 12, 2025
2019 Astros
2017 Dodgers
2015 Blue Jays
2013 Braves
2001 Cardinals
1978 Pirates
1977 Royals
1969 Mets
1969 Astros https://t.co/WRf71mlTi9
The Brewers are everything that the Cubs claim to be. The Cubs want to be the team that is never great but is consistently good each season. Despite that being a flawed process, and one the Cubs haven't mastered since winning the World Series in 2016, it's the philosophy that has defined Jed Hoyer's tenure as the team's President of Baseball Operations.
Brewers’ historic surge turns Cubs into complete afterthought
The goal of being good enough each season simply isn't one that is going to be successful for a Cubs team that doesn't want to use their financial advantage over the Brewers. While the Cubs are fascinated with the approach that the Cleveland Guardians and Tampa Bay Rays, the Brewers have become the class of the National League. In baseball's smallest market, the Brewers are running circles around the Cubs when it comes to baseball operations.
It's an embarrassing look for the Cubs, considering they thought poaching Craig Counsell away from Milwaukee would turn the tide in their favor. If anything, that has just proved that Hoyer's approach is never going to make the Cubs the team to beat in the National League Central. Despite that reality, Hoyer isn't going anywhere after his multi-year extension was announced last month.
