The good, the bad and the best: ‘Cats take their second conference series in a high-scoring weekend
Northwestern’s offense carried them to a successful weekend against Indiana to avoid the Big Ten’s basement.
After extending their conference losing streak to ten games on Friday, if you had told me Northwestern wouldn’t win another Big Ten series in 2026, I would’ve wholeheartedly believed you. College baseball, though, rarely makes much sense, so naturally the ‘Cats bounced back with two straight victories to take the series against Indiana and kickstarted just their second conference winning streak of the season. Northwestern earned some unconventional victories, but in the midst of such a disastrous skid, you’ll take them however you can.
The Good What felt great about earning the gutsy series win was how despite playing far from a perfect brand of baseball, the ‘Cats earned leads and, just as importantly, held them. These types of go-ahead, stay-ahead wins have eluded Northwestern all season long; their run differential in their five earlier conference wins was just six, a tally they matched in two wins over the weekend. Much of this credit goes to the bullpen, who surrendered just four runs across 9 ⅔ innings in the victories.
For an offense that needs to slug, the knowledge that the pitchers can protect leads is absolutely critical to ensure that hitters don’t press more than they already do. On that note, the offense played two quite polar, yet similarly effective, games on Saturday and Sunday. In the middle game of the series, it was great situational hitting, capitalizing on free passes and a Jack Lausch bomb that allowed the ‘Cats to score seven times despite recording just five hits.
On Sunday, the clutch gene evaded them, but they slugged and walked their way to nine runs. The Bad Northwestern’s starting pitching has been inconsistent all year. In its Big Ten opener against USC, they looked like a serious unit.