baseball

The good, the bad and what’s next for a struggling Northwestern squad

Yahoo Sports

Unpacking this rough stretch for the ‘Cats.

Sweeps are never easy to stomach. Sweeps that extend a losing streak and slide your team to the bottom of the conference standings are even more unpleasant. With three losses in Ann Arbor over the weekend, Northwestern baseball sits at the basement of the Big Ten and the benchmarks for success in 2026 have officially shifted.

The Wolverines didn’t necessarily dominate the Wildcats. Rather, Northwestern failed to play a single sound, complete game over the weekend, as it’s often failed to do all year. In my first column of the season, I articulated just how vital 2026 could be for Northwestern baseball and it’s disappointing, to say the least, that 2026 will likely be a step backwards for Ben Greenspan and the Wildcats after showing so much promise the year prior.

The markers of improvement Wildcats fans were anticipating: stronger starting pitching, better plate discipline, minimal whiff, simply have not been there. Instead of highlighting the “best” from such a lackluster performance against Michigan, let’s instead look forward to the final few Big Ten series and set some realistic expectations. The Good One fairly easy way to sum up Northwestern’s pitching struggles this year is through a new stat I’ve created, K/HR rate, in other words, how many strikeouts does a pitching staff get for every home run they allow?

The Wildcats have allowed the most home runs and struck out the fewest batters in the Big Ten, and their K/HR rate is an appallingly low 3. 83, near half that of the second-worst Big Ten school. Against Michigan, however, Wildcats pitchers struck out 16 and surrendered just a single long ball.