As long as he’s the Kimbrel who dominated the competition on the way to 333 career saves, with the second highest strikeout rate (min 400 IP) of all time, it means everything.
Whether it was Kimbrel, or another closer, the Cubs were in desperate need of late-inning relief help. In this case, it wasn’t just about the ninth inning — though their three losses when leading after eight is tied for the most in baseball. They were struggling just to get to the ninth with a lead. Their 52 percent save percentage, entering Wednesday, is second worst in baseball.
Many of those blown games came in innings 7-9, where they’ve already lost six games this season. So this move gives them the depth they desire and need. Now everyone in the pen can simply move down a notch on the depth chart.
Set-up man Pedro Strop can return to a more familiar eighth-inning role while righties Brandon Kintzler and Steve Cishek — both extremely valuable so far — can bridge the gap from the middle to late innings.