Happ breaks Musial's long-standing record

August 28th, 2023

This story was excerpted from Jordan Bastian’s Cubs Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

CHICAGO -- did not realize he was chasing down a record that had stood for seven decades. When the Cubs outfielder drew a bases-loaded walk in the third inning on Saturday, he surpassed Hall of Famer Stan Musial for the longest on-base streak in modern history against the Pirates.

“Stan Musial? Really?” said Happ, who then offered a wry grin. “Got him.”

Happ extended this very specific streak to 56 games with a walk and single in a 10-1 win on Sunday, moving further beyond Stan The Man’s 54-game run that concluded in 1953. It’s a record that is more fun fact than headline-grabbing feat -- Happ being a Pittsburgh native adds another entertaining layer -- but it does offer a glimpse into his value in the heart of the Cubs’ order.

Even as Happ’s season statistics have taken on a different shape than prior years, Cubs manager David Ross has stuck by the left fielder as Chicago’s No. 3 hitter. Ross loves having a switch-hitter in that slot and feels Happ’s tenure and standing with the Cubs warrants the steady trust. There is also the consistency and on-base ability.

“He's as consistent of an at-bat as I think we have on our team,” Ross said. “And I mean that in a fact of, like, when he's scuffling, when he's going well, when he's hitting for power, when he's getting on base, you don't see a change in the consistency in the at-bat.”

Ross also just does not want to mess with a good thing, and the Cubs’ offense overall has been on a strong run in the second half.

Chicago headed into Monday leading the Majors in runs scored (252) while posting a 27-14 record since the All-Star break, climbing back into the playoff picture in the process. The Cubs’ collective OPS of .808 in the second half ranked fifth in the Majors and the .270/.341/.467 team slash line was one of the best in baseball.

“Why would I mess with that?” Ross said.

While Happ has batted .229/.324/.458 through 40 games played in the second half, he has hit in front of red-hot cleanup hitter Cody Bellinger. Since the break, Bellinger had a .352/.385/.623 slash line to go along with a Major League-leading 46 RBIs. Ross likes their combination of skill-sets in the three and four slots.

Overall this season, Happ has produced a .241/.360/.410 line to go along with 15 homers, 25 doubles, 63 RBIs and a career-high (and counting) 83 walks. The outfielder went 5-for-16 in the recent four-game series in Pittsburgh, adding two walks, three extra-base hits and five RBIs to his season totals.

“The last couple days,” Happ said, “I'm just having better at-bats, seeing it better, controlling the strike zone a little bit. It's a good starting point.”