Chicago Cubs, Jed Hoyer and Kyle Tucker
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Chicago Cubs president Jed Hoyer provides an interesting perspective on the recent success of the Milwaukee Brewers.
Since his strong play in June, Tucker has struggled in recent months, recording a .189 batting average with just four extra-base hits in July and a high ground-ball rate of 54 per
Chicago Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer's response to a question about the team's lineup will likely frustrate fans.
After a quiet trade deadline, the Chicago Cubs are losing ground in the NL Central. Here are a few potential waiver wire additions to help Jed Hoyer save face.
With the Cubs holding one of the best records in baseball and Thursday’s 5 p.m. CT Trade Deadline looming – offering an opportunity to further bolster the roster – the team has invested to continue its longtime partnership with president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer.
The Cubs definitely earned their booing after a virtual rerun of a game fans have seen too many times over the past several weeks. They finished with six hits, and Jack Suwinski's ninth-inning, home run off closer Daniel Palencia turned out to be the difference.
Hoyer left a lot to be desired at the deadline, which especially stings in what could be Tucker's only season in Chicago, but he wasn't the only executive to fall short.
On Monday, Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer tried to defend the semi-infamous “2032” comment. That was a line uttered by general manager Carter Hawkins, claiming “We have a
Chicago Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer glanced from the dugout to the visitors’ side Monday morning, where the Milwaukee Brewers were doing light pregame work.
Jed Hoyer and Cubs have friction in the front office The Cubs gave Craig Counsell record money to recruit him from the rival Brewers. They signed Shota Imanaga, brought back Cody Bellinger and more.