Despite the rest of the division jockeying for pole position in the NL Central, the Chicago Cubs have one of the most lethal offenses in professional baseball, capable of setting the tone in the Senior Circuit. Michael Busch, the North Side’s powerful yet underrated first baseman, impressed insiders with a scorching star turn in the late goings of his club’s 2025 regular season and playoff run. 

We’re about to get our first look at a Cubs lineup that, if it stays healthy, could be excessively difficult to get through, like the extended version of a Peter Jackson film. With the likes of Alex Bregman and Pete Crow-Armstrong holding down the middle of the lineup, Busch’s early placement in Craig Counsell‘s lineup aligns the club for early offensive outbursts against opponents that would find themselves playing catch-up, looking on as the North Siders exchange high fives in the middle of the diamond. 

Teams in the majors average a barrel rate of 8.6%; factoring in Bregman and Moises Ballesteros, your Chicago Cubs sport a barrel rate of 10.9%. Though he rarely gets credit for it, Ian Happ is one of the more proficient leadoff men in the game, with a career OBP of .343. Putting that kind of proficiency in front of a slugging Busch in the two-hole opens up a window for early offensive production likely to produce a rally and create situations for the opposition where they’d have little choice but to pitch to other power hitters like Bregman and Crow-Armstrong. There are no easy outs in this lineup. 

It’s easy and quite a lot of fun to witness Busch step into the batter’s box. A lot like the “C” in his club’s primary logo, his Baseball Savant page is bright red. His 76% hard-hit rate backs up his slug and his overall power numbers from 2025. Though his All-Star teammate in centerfield overshadowed his output, Busch smacked 34 home runs, 25 doubles, and five triples in 2025. His vision, timing, and swing decisions are elite. By extension of that, his whole club figures to be elite in 2026. 

Good teams don’t just have big names — they have balance. The 2026 version of this Cubs lineup is one of the most balanced in years. Last year, Busch was kept from a resoundingly splendid season due to his performance against left-handed pitching. But, not only did he trounce all pitching hands in his dominant postseason run, thanks to Jed Hoyer, he’s got all kinds of insurance surrounding him to make sure he gets some good stuff to offer on. 

For the 150th time in baseball history, Chicago’s North Side team is about to embark on a new season. Myriad pieces are in place to assure that version of this club is a memorable one for all the right reasons. Chief among those reasons will be whatever Michael Busch can accomplish atop the lineup.