MLB Notes: Cubs Acquire Jose Quintana in Blockbuster Trade With White Sox

CHICAGO -- The Chicago Cubs found the pitching help they were looking for just a few miles from Wrigley Field. They hope it will give the scuffling team the kick it needs.

The defending World Series champions acquired left-handed ace Jose Quintana from the White Sox on Thursday in a major trade between crosstown rivals that could shake up the NL Central race.

By landing the 2016 All-Star, the Cubs made it clear they're not giving up on a difficult season after arriving at the break two games under .500. They also added a pitcher who figures to be a key piece in the rotation for at least the next few years.

"We had a bad first half," Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein said. "We did. We own that. We know we can do better."

The Cubs trail Milwaukee by 5 1/2 games in the division at 43-45 after ending a 108-year championship drought last fall. They believe they are set up to contend for years to come with stars such as Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo.

By trading for Quintana, they brought in an elite starter who is under club control through 2020. They had to give up two top prospects in outfielder Eloy Jimenez and right-handed pitcher Dylan Cease along with minor league infielders Matt Rose and Bryant Flete.

Philadelphia Phillies

Complete coverage of the Fightin' Phils and their MLB rivals from NBC Sports Philadelphia.

Phillies notes as Taijuan Walker nears season debut, Trea Turner wins NL Player of the Week

Phillies place Bryce Harper on paternity list ahead of Reds series

Quintana has pitched better lately after a slow start and is 4-8 with a 4.49 ERA in 18 starts this season. He won a career-high 13 games last season with a personal-best 3.20 ERA while making his first All-Star team and is 50-54 with a 3.51 ERA since debuting with the White Sox in 2012. White Sox general manager Rick Hahn said letting him go was a difficult choice for the rebuilding team.

"He's a true professional who had to deal with everything from poor run support to the bullpen occasionally letting him down, the defense letting him down," Hahn said. "He certainly never complained, never threw his arms up in the air, never rolled his eyes, never expressed any displeasure with his teammates. Instead, he was always supportive and continued to go about his business and set a wonderful example for the other young players in our clubhouse" (see full story).

Dodgers: Streaking team enters 2nd half on pace for 100 wins
LOS ANGELES -- The century mark is in sight for the Los Angeles Dodgers heading into the second half of the season.

Their 61-29 record leads the majors for the first time since 2009. Their plus-163 run differential is the best in National League history at the break, according to STATS LLC. They own a 7 -game lead over second-place Arizona in the NL West.

The last time the Dodgers reached 100 wins was in 1974 when they were 102-60 under manager Walter Alston. They lost the World Series to Oakland.

Riding a six-game winning streak, the Dodgers open the second half Friday with three games at Miami, followed by an interleague series in Chicago against the White Sox. Brandon McCarthy (6-3) takes the mound in the opener against the Marlins in his second start since coming off the disabled list.

Los Angeles is a major league-best 26-4 since June 7.

"How long is it a hot streak or this is just us?" ace Clayton Kershaw said. "I guess we'll find out."

After going a major league-best 39-11 at home -- winning 18 of their last 19 -- in the first half, the Dodgers play 40 of their remaining 71 games on the road. They'll face the next-to-last Padres and last-place Giants a combined 18 times.

"We are just really good at being in the moment right now. We're not worrying about what happened yesterday or worrying about what's in front of us," said third baseman Justin Turner, one of the team's six All-Stars (see full story).

Copyright CSNPhily
Contact Us