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The Chicago Cubs went into the 2026 season with high hopes and a deep rotation on paper but injuries have shredded those plans in a hurry. The Cubs have already lost Cade Horton for the year following Tommy John surgery, and both Matthew Boyd and Justin Steele have been sidelined with injuries of their own, as well as now Jameson Taillon, hitting the 15-day IL. That means Chicago has had eight different starting pitchers in just 21 games, exposing a gaping wound in the roster that general manager Jed Hoyer must address before the August 3 trade deadline.
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The Cubs’ health rotation of Edward Cabrera, Shota Imanaga and Colin Rea is a respectable group, but without a frontline arm to take them into October, the Cubs risk falling short in a tight NL Central. Hoyer is under pressure to be aggressive and one of the best fits in the market happens to be wearing a Royals uniform.
Why Michael Wacha Makes Sense for the Cubs
Mandatory Credit: Matt Blewett-Imagn Images
In 2026, Michael Wacha has been quietly terrific for Kansas City, throwing a 3.44 ERA in 13 starts with 67 strikeouts and a 1.14 WHIP in 81.0 innings. The 34-year-old righty has now produced four consecutive seasons with an ERA in the 3s, proving he is anything but a flash in the pan. His consistency, durability and playoff experience make him the exact type of proven veteran arm Craig Counsell’s pitching-starved rotation desperately needs.
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What makes Wacha such an appealing trade target is his contract situation. Wacha, signed to a three-year, $51 million deal through the 2027 season with a club option for 2028, offers an acquiring team not just a rental for the deadline, but multi-year cost certainty. As of early June, the Royals are 22-35 and well on their way to a seller’s market, and Wacha would bring the biggest return of any arm on their roster.
The Perfect Trade
The Cubs have a prospect pipeline that can satisfy the Royals’ ask without gutting the franchise. Here is the trade that makes the most sense for both sides:
Chicago Cubs receive:
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Kansas City Royals receive:
This package offers Kansas City a compelling two-piece return centered on upside and positional balance. Florentino, a 21-year-old Dominican right-hander, has been one of the most intriguing arms in the Cubs system. He recorded a sub-2.00 ERA in roughly 50 innings at Single-A Myrtle Beach with a 26.9% strikeout rate, and Baseball America praised his breaking ball as one of the best in the entire minor leagues. His 2.61 ERA and 10.4 K/9 across 151.7 career minor league innings underscore elite pitch-to-contact ability for his age. He is currently working his way through High-A South Bend, with Double-A squarely in his future.
Armas, meanwhile, is a defense-first catcher taken in the fifth round of the 2024 MLB Draft out of the University of San Diego, signed by Chicago for $375,000. MLB Pipeline had him ranked as the Cubs’ No. 19 prospect heading into 2026, and scouts rave about his athleticism and framing ability behind the plate. He threw out 15-of-32 (46.9%) base stealers in college, and he flashed some surprising pop in spring training, including a 397-foot home run at 101.3 mph exit velocity. Currently competing at Double-A Knoxville, Armas profiles as a future big league backstop with legitimate defensive value.
For the Cubs, trading Florentino and Armas is a calculated risk that keeps their true untouchables, like shortstop Jefferson Rojas off the table. Chicago surrenders a pair of promising but pre-MLB prospects to gain a proven, durable starter who can immediately slide into the top of their rotation and remain there through 2027. For Kansas City, the deal accelerates a rebuild with a pitching prospect showing ace-caliber indicators and a catcher who can grow into a long-term piece behind the plate. Wacha’s value is at its peak and will only decline with age, moving him now while he commands this return is the smart, calculated decision for a Royals front office already eyeing its next contention window.
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Related: Cubs rumors: Farm system collapse could lead to trade of once-promising young star
Related: Cubs add pitcher from Orioles after Jameson Taillon injury
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source sports.yahoo.com ’













