The Houston Astros send Spencer Arrighetti to the mound this afternoon, May 22, at 2:21 p.m. EDT at Wrigley Field with top run-prevention numbers that clash against a Chicago Cubs offense in a pronounced slump. Arrighetti carries a 5-1 record and 1.50 ERA through six starts, while the Cubs have been shut out in three of their last four games and have lost eight of ten . Chicago’s Jameson Taillon owns a 4.97 ERA and has shown vulnerability to hard contact, creating a starter gap that the market’s -141 Cubs moneyline does not fully reflect.
| Metric | Houston Astros | Chicago Cubs |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Away/Home) | 20-31 (8-17) | 29-21 (18-8) |
| Runs Per Game | 4.3 | 5.0 |
| Runs Allowed | 5.4 | 4.3 |
| Team OPS | .733 (6th in MLB) | .743 (4th in MLB) |
| Team ERA | 5.36 (30th in MLB) | 4.11 (16th in MLB) |
| Team WHIP | 1.53 (30th in MLB) | 1.22 (9th in MLB) |
| Home Runs | 60 | 58 |
| Stolen Bases | 17 | 33 |
| Batting Average | .248 | .245 |
| On-Base Percentage | .324 | .341 |
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Key Advantage
Starting Pitching: Arrighetti’s 1.50 ERA and 1.19 WHIP across 36 innings represent a stark run-prevention edge over Taillon’s 4.97 ERA and corresponding contact issues. If Arrighetti extends his early-season form through six innings, the Astros neutralize Chicago’s home-field advantage and force the game into a bullpen phase where Houston’s late-inning variance becomes the decisive factor.
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Market Analysis
The market prices the Cubs at roughly 59% implied win probability on a -141 moneyline, with the Astros at +120 and a total of 7 runs. The -1.5 run line at +159 on Chicago signals that books see a narrow victory as more probable than a comfortable margin reflect the starter matchup tension rather than a clean structural edge for the home team. Houston’s season-long 5.36 team ERA and 1.53 WHIP explain why the market anchors to the Cubs despite recent form, though Arrighetti’s individual excellence is a clear outlier from that team profile. The 7-run total sits below both teams’ combined scoring averages, pricing Arrighetti’s presence and the Cubs’ offensive collapse as the governing variables.
Arrighetti’s Contact Suppression vs. Taillon’s Hard-Hit Vulnerability
Arrighetti has allowed just 22 hits across 36 innings this season, a contact-suppression rate that ranks among the best in the American League. His 35 strikeouts against 21 walks show command that is not top but is sufficient given how rarely batters square him up, with only one home run allowed all season. The Cubs’ lineup has produced a .246 average and .341 on-base percentage, but those numbers are driven by a hot early season; over the last ten games Chicago has scored 3.1 runs per game and has been held to two runs or fewer in six of those contests.
Taillon’s 4.97 ERA comes with a 1.20 WHIP that is respectable on the surface, yet his underlying contact profile is concerning. He has surrendered 50 hits in 50 innings and has shown a tendency to allow hard contact in the middle innings, a pattern that Arrighetti’s low-hit approach directly contrasts. The Astros’ lineup, led by Yordan Alvarez and his .303/.412/.605 slash line, has the power to exploit Taillon’s mistakes, particularly if the Cubs starter leaves pitches over the heart of the plate in his third time through the order.
Cubs Bullpen Fatigue and Houston’s Injury-Depleted Lineup
Chicago’s bullpen has been heavily worked during a stretch in which the team has lost eight of ten games, including a four-game sweep by Milwaukee that required extended relief appearances. The Cubs’ 4.11 team ERA is carried by rotation stability that Taillon does not currently provide, and the bridge to closer Adbert Alzolay has shown cracks in high-leverage spots. If Arrighetti delivers a quality start, Houston’s path to a late lead or tie becomes viable against a taxed Chicago relief corps.
The Astros are not without their own structural issues. Houston has placed five players on the injured list, including shortstop Jeremy Pena, catcher Yainer Diaz, and outfielders Taylor Trammell and Joey Loperfido, stripping the lineup of speed and defensive range. The remaining core of Alvarez, Jose Altuve, and Christian Walker must carry the offensive load, a concentration that Chicago’s pitching staff can target but has not successfully neutralized in recent games. The Astros’ 17 stolen bases, removing a pressure element that could have tested the Cubs’ control of the running game.
