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Cubs ride 7-run inning to beat Reds for ninth straight win

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 4:49 PM

Shota Imanaga struck out 10 across six innings as the Chicago Cubs completed a four-game sweep of the Cincinnati Reds with an 8-3 victory on Thursday for their 15th straight home win.

Unlike the ​first three games of the series, the Cubs did not need ‌to walk it off. Instead, they used a seven-run fourth inning to turn it into a rout and hand the Reds their seventh straight loss. Chicago has won nine in a row.

Michael Conforto went 3-for-3 with two runs scored and two RBI. He hit a double, and ‌his ​second-inning solo home run off Reds starter Rhett ⁠Lowder (3-3) gave the Cubs the ⁠early lead. It was the veteran’s second homer of the series and season.

Lowder pitched into the fourth but was pulled after allowing back-to-back walks to Alex Bregman and Ian Happ to start the inning and throwing a ball ​in the dirt to Michael Busch. The right-hander went three-plus innings, allowing three runs on just one hit, but walked four.

The Reds announced Lowder left ⁠with right shoulder discomfort.

Reliever Connor Phillips walked Conforto ⁠with the bases loaded to double the Cubs’ advantage. He ​allowed an RBI single to Pete Crow-Armstrong, a two-run single to Miguel Amaya and ​a Nico Horner RBI double for 8-0.

Sal Stewart, who entered Thursday ‌with just two hits in his last 28 at-bats (.071), hit his 10th homer off Imanaga (4-2) to lead off the sixth, cutting the Cubs’ lead to seven runs. The Reds then loaded the bases with just one out, but the Chicago ⁠starter responded to strike out Ke’Bryan Hayes and Dane Myers swinging to end the threat.

Imanga allowed six hits and walked three.

Blake Dunn lasered his first homer of the ⁠season to left field ‌in the eighth off Gavin Hollowell. The right-hander also allowed ⁠JJ Bleday’s RBI double and loaded the bases in ​the ninth, ‌forcing Daniel Palencia to come in to get Nathaniel ​Lowe looking ⁠for his second save.

The Reds outhit their hosts 9-7, with Hayes and Dunn both going 2-for-4, but they left a season-high 15 runners stranded.

The loss capped a catastrophic seven-game road trip for Cincinnati, which started the trip in first place in the National League Central and will end it in no better than a tie ​for last.

–Field Level Media