LIVE: Cubs-Brewers NLDS Game 1 (TBS)

October 4th, 2025

MILWAUKEE -- If you thought Cubs-Brewers games were supercharged affairs during the regular season, you haven’t seen anything yet.

The NL Central rivals are set to meet in the postseason for the first time after Chicago dispatched San Diego in the NL Wild Card Series to earn a trip up Interstate 94 for an NLDS date with best-in-baseball Milwaukee, beginning with Game 1 on Saturday at American Family Field.

“It feels fitting, right?” Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner said. “They’ve had an incredible season. Every regular-season [game] we play with them is seemingly higher stakes and intense and close. We’ll see when we get there, but it’s kind of fun not to get on any planes yet in the playoffs. That’s a good thing. They’re a great baseball team. So are we. It’ll be a lot of close games. I’m excited for it.”

This one won’t require much scouting, because the teams know each other inside and out starting with the managers. Brewers skipper Pat Murphy and Cubs manager Craig Counsell go all the way back to 1989 at Notre Dame, Murphy as a hard-driving coach and Counsell as a spindly shortstop. Then they spent eight seasons side-by-side on the Brewers’ bench, Counsell as manager and Murphy as his bench coach before Counsell left for the Cubs last season.

But this series will be decided not by the managers, but by the players. The Cubs won the season series between the teams, 7-6, but the Brewers won the division for the third straight year, and the fourth time in five years, while amassing the best record in the Majors.

Now these familiar foes will meet again.

“There’s nobody on television saying, ‘Hey, the Brewers are the odds-on favorites,’” Murphy said. “As a matter of fact, I saw that we’re not even in the top five, you know what I mean? That’s perfect.”

When is the game and how can I watch it?

Game 1 is live now on TBS and HBO Max, with Alex Faust and Ron Darling on the call.

All series are available in the US on MLB.TV with authentication to a participating Pay TV provider. Games also are available live internationally, although not in Canada. Sportsnet is MLB's exclusive English language broadcaster in Canada for every Postseason game, while TVA Sports will be covering the entire AL Postseason and the World Series in French and Broadcaster RDS will cover the entire NL Postseason in French.

Who are the starting pitchers?

Cubs: The North Siders made a surprising pick for Game 1, announcing after Friday’s workout that veteran lefty (14-8, 3.21 ERA) would take the ball in the opener against the Brewers. Boyd started Game 1 of the Wild Card Series against the Padres and gave Chicago 4 1/3 solid innings, allowing only one run. He also threw just 58 pitches, offering the opportunity to return on short rest. Boyd also warmed up during the ninth inning of Game 3 against San Diego and was willing to enter the game, if needed. By not being called upon, that mound workout essentially served as a bullpen session for the NLDS assignment. This could also put Boyd on a path for possibly being lined up for Game 4, if necessary.

Brewers: Right-hander (17-6, 2.70 ERA) led the National League in wins, but it was his team-leading 33 starts and 176 2/3 innings which made the biggest difference for the Brewers, who had seven starting pitchers on the injured list at one point in early April. Peralta helped hold things together by taking the ball every five days, including going 3-1 with a 3.43 ERA in four starts against the Cubs. If there’s a knock on him, it’s his efficiency; he completed six innings 13 times and completed seven innings only once, an eight-inning gem against the Royals in his second start of the season.

What are the starting lineups?

Cubs: Counsell rolled out the same lineup for all three of the Wild Card Series games against the Padres, but he tweaked it a bit for Game 1 of the NLDS: Ian Happ moved down a couple spots, while Kyle Tucker and Seiya Suzuki slid up.

Brewers: The Cubs’ decision to start the lefty Boyd on short rest throws a wrench into something new the Brewers tried in the final week of the regular season: bumping Christian Yelich to the leadoff spot. Besides getting their most consistent hitter additional at-bats, the thinking was to also provide some protection for nine-hole hitter Joey Ortiz, who plays stellar defense but has really slumped offensively. Yelich moved down to the cleanup spot, while Jackson Chourio will get things started. Chourio is in left field with Blake Perkins in center; Isaac Collins is available off the bench.

How will the bullpens line up after the starter?

Cubs: Counsell loves to refer to his pitchers as “out-getters” to avoid applying any kind of labels associated with a bullpen. That frees him up to be creative with how he deploys a group that does not have a set closer at the moment. While hard-throwing righty worked his way to a closer’s role this year, he was utilized for high-leverage, mid-game moments in the Wild Card Series. , , and all fit into the late-inning category, too. Kittredge pitched in all three games against San Diego, working as an opener in Game 2 before picking up the series-clinching save in Game 3. The Cubs also have righty and lefty in the mix. Bulk options behind Boyd would include , and , depending on who makes the roster.

Brewers: The bye created some challenges for Brewers hitters, but was welcomed for Brewers relievers -- and that’s putting it mildly. It provided extra time for All-Star closer , who was able to return from a flexor strain to pitch in the Brewers’ regular-season finale against the Reds and declare himself ready for the playoffs. It also meant a break for hard-worked right-hander , who filled in ably as closer while Megill was down for a month, and left-hander . They ranked 1-2 in appearances for the Brewers, Uribe with 75 games and Koenig 72. The big question is how the roles will shake out. Would the Brewers thrust Megill right back into ninth-inning duties, or will there be some mix and match with Uribe? And what to make of rookie Jacob Misiorowski? He had a 6.23 ERA in his final seven starts before one shaky bullpen appearance during the final series of the regular season. Nevertheless, it looks like he’s a go for the NLDS.

Any injuries of note?

Cubs: Tucker missed three-plus weeks in September due to a left calf injury, but returned at the end of the regular season as a DH. He remained in that role for the entire Wild Card Series due to his running ability not being all the way at 100% yet. While it’s possible that Tucker is cleared to return to right field, he may just stay put as a DH for at least Game 1, especially as Suzuki has looked solid in right. … Righty (15-day injured list, right rib fracture) was out for the Wild Card Series, removing one of baseball’s best second-half arms (1.03 ERA) from the equation. While Horton is technically eligible to return for a potential Game 5, Counsell announced during Friday’s workout that the righty will not be activated for the NLDS. His status for the rest of October remains unclear at the moment.

Brewers: Megill’s status is worth monitoring, including how he bounces back. … Left-hander also made it back for the regular-season finale after missing about six weeks with a right oblique injury, and is a question mark going into the NLDS. … The Brewers confirmed that , who went down with a right lat injury, will not pitch in the NLDS but could return later if the club advances in the postseason. … Contreras sat out the final two games of the regular season with a bruised left hand, the result of being hit by Iván Herrera’s swing on Sept. 20 in St. Louis. He’ll play in the NLDS, Murphy said. … One pitcher to watch is rookie right-hander , who had a 1.78 ERA in five starts before being sidelined by an elbow injury. He has been throwing bullpens and was expected to be ready by early October if needed.

Who is hot and who is not?

Cubs: Suzuki finished the regular season on a four-game homer streak (five home runs in all) and then launched one as part of back-to-back blasts with Kelly in Game 1 of the Wild Card Series. Suzuki also had two doubles in the series. … Crow-Armstrong had three hits in the Game 3 clincher after going 0-for-6 with five strikeouts in the first two games. … Happ (1-for-11) and Shaw (0-for-7) are off to slow starts this postseason. … Lefty allowed a homer in his Game 2 outing, continuing a trend from the regular season. Imanaga allowed 12 homers in his last six games and 31 overall on the ‘25 campaign going into October.

Brewers: Turang was the Brewers’ best hitter down the stretch, hitting .321/.399/.580 over his final 52 games. He was 16-for-46 (.348) against the Cubs in 2025. ... Uribe had a 0.62 ERA (two earned runs in 29 innings) over his final 29 outings of the regular season. … Ortiz had a .478 OPS over the final six weeks of the regular season but continued to play every day because he plays highlight-reel defense at the most premium position. The problem, however, was how often he batted in big spots. He tied the Braves’ Michael Harris II for the Major League lead with 31 plate appearances with the bases loaded this season, a Brewers record. Ortiz went 5-for-30 (.167) in those spots.

Anything else fans might want to know?

The last time the Brewers and Cubs played a game with anything resembling these stakes was Game 163 in 2018, when the NL Central came down to a one-game playoff. The Cubs had longtime Brewer-killer on the mound but Milwaukee, which had sat five games behind division-leading Chicago at the start of September, emerged with a victory and the division crown. Seven years later, Quintana pitches for the Brewers with a chance to start Game 3. And the Cubs will have a chance to avenge that defeat.