The Major Leagues are full of young studs having terrific debut seasons, and the Chicago Cubs have some young studs of their own matching them all. The newest Cubs rookie is catcher Kyle Schwarber, and he has made his second call-up to the Majors just as spectacular as his first.

On Tuesday night, Schwarber belted two late home runs -- one to tie the game and one to win it -- as the Cubs (50-42) came from behind to defeat the Cincinnati Reds (41-50) 5-4 in 13 innings. 

With his team trailing 4-2 in the top of the ninth and Dexter Fowler on first, Schwarber launched a 3-2 pitch from Cincinnati's J.J. Hoover into the Bowtie Bar down the right-field line for the game-tying home run (2).

Fowler led off the ninth with a single off Hoover, who got the closing assignment. Reds manager Bryan Price gave closer Aroldis Chapman the night off after the flame thrower pitched in two straight games, including a two-inning, 44-pitch performance on Sunday. 

The score remained tied at 4-4 until Schwarber came up again in the 13th. This time, he took Nate Adcock over the right-field wall for the game-winning home run (3). 

Schwarber also drove in the Cubs' first run with a ground-rule double to score Addison Russell and cut the deficit to 2-1. With his 4-for-7 night, Schwarber is now hitting .410 in 11 games (39 at bats) with 3 HR and 10 RBI. He has had at least three hits in three of those 11 games and four hits twice. 

Lost in the Schwarber celebrations was a 3-RBI performance from Reds third baseman Todd Frazier, who gave the Reds that 4-2 lead with a two-run single in the bottom of the seventh. Frazier golfed a Pedro Strop slider off the ground to drive in Brandon Phillips and Joey Votto. It was the sixth slider Frazier saw in the at bat, and the veteran reached down and got it. 

Frazier also drove in the game's first run with a sacrifice fly in the first. The Reds then scored again in the second on Skip Schumaker's RBI ground out that plated Marlon Byrd.

The Cubs tied the game at 2-2 in the sixth on a controversial home run. Chris Coghlan lined the ball to left, and it appeared to hit the top of the wall. Coghlan slid into third for an apparent triple. 

Umpires reviewed the play and determined that the ball hit a fan's arm behind the wall; they ruled the hit a home run for Coghlan (9). 

Jason Motte (W: 7-1, 2.70 ERA) benefited from Schwarber's 13th-inning home run to earn the win. He pitched two innings, allowing three hits and no runs. Justin Grimm (S: 2) rebounded from Monday's loss with a perfect 13th. The Reds hit the ball hard of Grimm but could not find a hole. Cubs starter Jason Hammel worked five innings, allowing two runs (one earned) on five hits while walking three and striking out four.

Adcock (1-2, 6.19) served up the long ball as the only hit he allowed in two innings. He walked no one and struck out three. Reds starter Raisel Iglesias pitched well in his 5 2/3 innings: 2 ER, 6 H, 1 HR, 4 BB, 8K. 

In Ernie Banks fashion, the teams play two on Wednesday. Game 1 pits the Cubs' Kyle Hendricks (4-4, 3.44) against the Reds' Mike Leake (7-5, 3.95) and starts at 12:35 p.m. EDT. Game 2 starts at 6:10 with Chicago's Dallas Beeler (0-0, 3.60) taking on Cincinnati's Tony Cingrani (0-3, 3.47).