How Hayden Wesneski is syncing up his delivery, providing silver lining for shorthanded Cubs

Chicago Cubs starting pitcher Hayden Wesneski throws during the first inning of a baseball game against the Boston Red Sox, Sunday, April 28, 2024, in Boston.

Michael Dwyer/AP Photos

BOSTON — When Cubs manager Craig Counsell told right-hander Hayden Wesneski on Saturday that he was going to start the next day in place of injured Jordan Wicks, Wesneski said:

“My job is to get the first guy out.”

Counsell thought that was a good way to approach the task.

“It’s not to think about, ‘I’ve got to get five innings or six innings,’ ’’ Counsell said. “It’s just, get the first guy out, then move on to the next thing.”

In the Cubs’ 5-4 loss to the Red Sox on Sunday, Wesneski got the first guy out, fielding Jarren Duran’s soft ground ball and running it to first base. He went on to hold Boston to one earned run through four innings — only three days removed from throwing 2⅓ scoreless innings of relief against the Astros.

“We got exactly what we needed from Hayden,” Counsell said. “And that was four strong innings. Put us in a position to make the game work.”

Wesneski’s consistency this season — stemming from confidence and tweaks to his delivery — is a promising sign for a team that will have to lean on him even more while the rotation is short-handed.

He hit a bit of a sophomore slump last season. This month, Wesneski has focused on streamlining his delivery.

“The delivery had gotten really big and really [was] starting to get tough to sync up,” assistant pitching coach Daniel Moskos recently told the Sun-Times. “He was starting to pull off the ball a lot, which was messing with pitch shapes and execution.”

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Wesneski can trace the issues back to an effort to get into his legs more. The goal made sense. Pitchers generate power from their lower half. But Wesneski was sinking into his back leg and lengthening his arm path to account for a slower lower half. And when his lower half wasn’t consistent, it threw off the timing even more.

Moskos, who had coached Wesneski in the Yankees farm system before he was traded to the Cubs, had several phone calls with him and Triple-A pitching coach Tony Cougoule to collaborate on adjustments.

“What we tried to do is just simplify,” Wesneski told the Sun-Times last week. “Where it’s like, stand tall, lean . . . use the slope and the momentum of you going down the mound better.”

When the Cubs recalled Wesneski for his season debut a week and a half ago, the difference was clear.

“I thought that was probably the best his delivery has been in a while,” Moskos said. “Most consistent, and his stuff was the most consistent. It’s a really simple approach, simple plan of attack, and he just went out and executed. And I think it just freed him up to be happy and go compete.

“I think his delivery had been wearing on him; the lack of execution had been wearing on him. All things trending in the right direction, but most important, simple, positive thoughts and just go execute a plan.”

Wesneski, a perfectionist, wasn’t quite as bullish.

“It does help with the confidence, like, ‘OK, this is the right path,’ ’’ he said. “I also feel like I should be at the ‘great’ stage, not the ‘good’ stage.”

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With his standards high, he continued to stack one strong outing on top of another.

“I always say, relieving, we pick the hitters you face,” Counsell said before the game, “and starting, they pick the hitters you face.”

If Wesneski had a little better luck, he would’ve had another zero in the runs column. The first run he allowed was unearned. And the second scored on a grounder that hit third base and shot straight up.

As it was, he kept the game close enough while the Cubs’ offense was dormant, giving them a chance at a comeback. In the eighth inning, Mike Tauchman’s three-run home run tied the game at 4. But the Red Sox won it on a walk-off single by Tyler O’Neill.

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