The rivalry wasn’t supposed to be personal. Not between the Chicago Cubs and the Los Angeles Dodgers. Not like Yankees–Red Sox. Not like Cubs–Cardinals. Just two National League heavyweights coexisting in October conversations.
Apparently, nobody told Pete Crow-Armstrong.
In a front-cover interview with Chicago Magazine that was meant to center on his disappointing second half of 2025 and his public desire for a long-term extension, the Cubs’ electrifying center fielder detonated a quote that instantly ricocheted across baseball. What began as a heartfelt tribute to Chicago spiraled into an unexpected jab at Dodgers fans — and perhaps the most awkward timing imaginable as he campaigns to spend his entire career at Wrigley Field.

“It’s just an incredible city. The people are great. They give a s—,” Crow-Armstrong said while praising Chicago. “They aren’t just baseball fans who go to the game like Dodgers fans to take pictures or whatever. They are paying attention. They care.”
And just like that, a simmering offseason turned combustible.
Cue the social media explosion. Cue the side-by-side attendance graphics. Cue Dodgers fans reminding everyone exactly who fills ballparks at historic levels year after year.
Because if Crow-Armstrong was aiming for the so-called “Evil Empire” aura that has followed Los Angeles since its spending spree, the numbers don’t quite cooperate with his narrative. The Dodgers have been Major League Baseball’s attendance juggernaut for years, and 2025 was no exception. They shattered their own franchise record with more than 4 million fans through the gates — nearly 600,000 more than the second-place Padres — and averaged 49,357 per game. By comparison, the Cubs averaged 37,259. Even accounting for stadium capacity and the charm — and limitations — of Wrigley Field, the gap is glaring.
Los Angeles sold out its home ballpark roughly 30 times last season. “Casual” is a curious label for a fanbase that routinely packs the house, rain or shine, contender or rebuilder.
Which raises the obvious question: Why go there?
Crow-Armstrong’s original message was straightforward, even admirable. He wants to stay in Chicago. He wants an extension. He wants to build something lasting in one city — a rarity in modern baseball economics. His second half slump in 2025 clearly stung, and he framed his comments around accountability and hunger.
“The f— are you playing for if you’re not trying to play in the playoffs and win the World Series?” he added in the same interview.
That’s the quote Cubs executives likely preferred. Competitive fire. Championship ambition. A franchise cornerstone demanding October relevance.
But the Dodgers line is the one that caught fire.
It’s not as though the Cubs–Dodgers relationship has been particularly venomous. There’s postseason history, yes. There’s the unavoidable tension that exists between a historic brand and a modern powerhouse. Yet this has never been a blood-feud rivalry. It has never required bulletin-board material.
Until now.
Around the league, reactions ranged from eye-rolls to raised eyebrows. Players understand passion. They understand loyalty to a city. But openly dismissing another fanbase — especially one attached to the sport’s reigning powerhouse — is a gamble. And it’s a gamble Crow-Armstrong made while simultaneously asking his own front office for long-term security.

Because here’s the cold reality: if the Cubs want to fulfill PCA’s playoff prophecy, they must eventually go through Los Angeles. The Dodgers are not just another contender; they are the runaway train of the National League, armed with MVPs, All-Stars, and a payroll structure that allows them to reload without blinking.
Taking a swipe at their fanbase won’t make that road any easier.
Perhaps this was calculated. Perhaps it was an unfiltered moment. Crow-Armstrong has built his brand on energy, swagger, and edge. Cubs fans adore that about him. Wrigley embraces players who wear emotion on their sleeve.
But baseball has a long memory. And the Dodgers have a scoreboard.
If the Cubs’ young star truly wants to plant his flag in Chicago for a decade or more, he will need to do more than win press conferences. He will need to produce in October. He will need to lead a roster capable of dethroning the team he just casually dismissed.
Otherwise, this quote risks living on as internet fodder — a meme, a screenshot, a reminder that sometimes the loudest swings come off the field.
For now, the Cubs say nothing publicly. Dodgers fans, meanwhile, have receipts. And the next time Crow-Armstrong steps into Dodger Stadium, you can bet nobody will be there “just to take pictures.”