Padres Fall Victim to Bellinger Blast, Busch Walk-Off Shot in Loss to Cubs

Padres Fall Victim to Bellinger Blast, Busch Walk-Off Shot in Loss to Cubs
Michael Busch is doused by a Chicago Cubs teammate after hitting a walk-off home run against the San Diego Padres in Chicago on May 7, 2024. (Erin Hooley/AP Photo)
The Associated Press
5/8/2024
Updated:
5/8/2024
0:00

CHICAGO—Michael Busch led off the ninth inning with a game-ending home run, Cody Bellinger went deep in his return from broken ribs, and the Chicago Cubs beat the San Diego Padres 3–2 on Tuesday night.

Bellinger had three hits after missing two weeks. He gave the Cubs a 1–0 lead when he connected leading off the fourth against Randy Vásquez.

“I just wanted to make sure my swing was in a good spot,” Bellinger said. “It’s nice to see some results.”

Cubs starter Shota Imanaga was in line to win his fifth straight start before the Padres broke through in the eighth.

He gave up a leadoff single to pinch hitter Luis Arraez before Jurickson Profar chased him with a two-run drive that just cleared the left-field wall. Cubs starters had gone four straight games without allowing a run—the first time in franchise history that happened in the same season, according to team historian Ed Hartig.

The Padres had a man on third with two out in the inning when second baseman Nico Hoerner raced back to make a lunging grab on Xander Bogaerts’ bloop, saving another run.

The Cubs tied it in the bottom half when Mike Tauchman drew a leadoff walk from Yuki Matsui, took third on Bellinger’s single, and scored on Christopher Morel’s sacrifice fly.

Chicago’s Héctor Neris (2–0) pitched out of a jam in the ninth, when he retired Jackson Merrill on a pop fly with runners on first and second.

Busch won it in the bottom half when, in a driving rain, he knocked the first pitch he saw from Enyel De Los Santos (1–2) out to right for his first career game-ending homer. He got mobbed by his teammates as he crossed the plate.

“It was pretty special,” Busch said. “It all happened so fast. I was just thinking about that 10, 15 minutes ago—I don’t think I'd ever had a walk-off home run in my life. It was pretty cool.”

Imanaga came through with another solid outing, allowing two runs and seven hits. He struck out eight and walked one. The Japanese left-hander’s earned-run average rose from 0.78 to 1.08 in his seventh major-league start, thanks to that home run. Profar pulled a splitter about knee-high toward the outside half of the plate just beyond the wall.

Imanaga pitched out of a first-and-second jam in the sixth. He struck out Manny Machado and Bogaerts, then smacked his glove and pumped his fist as he walked off the field while the crowd roared.

“Recently, it’s been hard for me to get up in the morning, so I think if I switch the fans cheering to my alarm, I think I'll get up fast,” he said through an interpreter.

Bellinger had the crowd cheering when he connected against Vásquez. He drove a 3–2 pitch to the right-field bleachers for his sixth home run of the season.

Cody Bellinger (L) celebrates his home run against the Padres with Cubs teammate Christopher Morel in Chicago on May 7, 2024 (Erin Hooley/AP Photo)
Cody Bellinger (L) celebrates his home run against the Padres with Cubs teammate Christopher Morel in Chicago on May 7, 2024 (Erin Hooley/AP Photo)

It was a sweet return for Bellinger, who fractured two ribs on his right side when he ran into the center-field wall at Wrigley Field trying to make a play against the Houston Astros on April 23. The 2019 National League most valuable player had been heating up prior to the injury, going 10 for 30 with three homers and seven RBIs during an eight-game hitting streak.

Vásquez went 4 1/3 innings, allowing one run and five hits in his third start this season. The right-hander struck out six and walked none, after being recalled Sunday from Triple-A El Paso, Texas, with Joe Musgrove going on the injured list because of right-elbow inflammation.

Trainer’s Room

Cubs: Manager Craig Counsell said the club planned to have Bellinger serve as the designated hitter on Tuesday and probably Wednesday before deciding whether to play him in the field. ... The Cubs placed right-hander Daniel Palencia (strained right shoulder) on the 15-day injured list. ... Outfielder Seiya Suzuki (strained right oblique) was headed to Triple-A Iowa to play Wednesday and Thursday, and could return this weekend at Pittsburgh, Mr. Counsell said.

Up Next

Padres right-hander Dylan Cease (4–2, 2.55) makes his first start in Chicago since the White Sox traded him to San Diego, while right-hander Hayden Wesneski (2–0, 0.54) gets the ball for the Cubs on Wednesday. The 28-year-old Cease was one of baseball’s best pitchers in 2022. He struggled last season, and the White Sox dealt him to the Padres in March.
By Andrew Seligman