Welcome back to the Cubs Beat newsletter. Jordan Bastian has covered baseball for MLB.com since 2005, including the Cubs since the 2019 season. |
CHICAGO -- Anthony Rizzo has returned to Wrigley Field as a visiting player and had the chance to raise his cap to the crowd while receiving well-earned standing ovations. The situation will be a little different on Saturday, when fans will really have the opportunity to celebrate his part in one of the great eras in Cubs history. That is when Rizzo will officially retire as a member of the Cubs, tying a bow on a legendary decade with the organization that included ending the team’s 108-year World Series drought with the triumph in 2016 over Cleveland. Rizzo’s time with the North Siders will be celebrated before and during the team’s game against the Rays at the Friendly Confines. "The fact that he’s going to get his day,” Cubs outfielder Ian Happ said, “that it’s going to be during the season with a packed house at Wrigley, it’s going to be really special.” The news of Rizzo’s retirement after 14 seasons in MLB arrived on Wednesday morning, as the Cubs were in Atlanta to finish up their series against the Braves. Happ and second baseman Nico Hoerner broke into the big leagues when Rizzo and the bulk of the core group from the '16 team was still in the fold to set the expectations for their own careers. Hoerner has pointed to the fact that Rizzo -- who was acquired by the Cubs prior to the ‘12 season -- was the rare player who debuts amid a rebuild, blossoms into a star and realizes the dream of World Series glory. The current Cubs second baseman has always admired that aspect of Rizzo’s career, while hoping to enjoy a similar experience. "He was there for every bit of it,” Hoerner said. “It’s just part of why I think fans really gravitated toward him and why it was so meaningful for him, too. … His ability to be significant in one place and kind of a steady force throughout different parts of a team’s arc is incredibly cool. And the relationships that he built in the clubhouse, along with friendships he had on the team and things like that, it’s just so hard to get that in sports, where there’s so much turnover every year.” |
Happ reached the Majors in ‘17 and has pointed to Rizzo and Jason Heyward, in particular, among those who helped teach him the ins and outs of being a Major Leaguer and what it meant to play for the Cubs. The now-veteran outfielder -- playing in his ninth season for Chicago has tried to impart those lessons to younger players now. “I looked up to those guys quite a bit, so if anybody in this locker room feels that way about me it’d be pretty special,” Happ said. “I learned from that group. I grew up with that group and learned from watching them play every day. Learned from the way they went about their work. I learned how to play as many day games as we play from those guys, learning about routine and what it takes to do that here. I think Nico and I take a lot of pride in passing that down.” As part of Rizzo’s retirement, the Cubs also plan on making him an ambassador for the organization. In that role, the former Cubs great will have opportunities to be around the ballclub more in the future. That is something that Happ and Hoerner agreed could only be beneficial for current players. “No matter where he went or what he did after leaving Chicago, he had always earned and would have a home here,” Hoerner said. “It’s so cool to have people around … to just remind you of the impact that can be had on the organization and just the joy that can be created for fans, and the relationships. Having Rizz around in any capacity like that would be really fun.” “Hopefully he’s there next spring,” Happ said. “Hopefully he’s around a lot more during the season next year. When you get guys in the locker room like [Ryan Dempster] or a guy like Rizz with his personality and his experience, just for guys to be able to pick his brain and ask him questions, it’s going to be so valuable and impactful.” |
MLB MORNING LINEUP PODCAST |
|
|
FALL LEAGUE ROSTER ANNOUNCED
|
Once the Minor League season wraps, baseball fans can still track some of the game’s prospects in the Arizona Fall League. On Wednesday, the six rosters were announced for the AFL, which begins play on Oct. 6 and runs through the championship on Nov. 15 at Salt River Fields. A group of Cubs prospects will be featured with the Mesa Solar Sox, which will also have farmhands from the A’s, Marlins, Rays and Yankees systems. Highlighting Chicago’s AFL class is corner infielder Cole Mathis (MLB Pipeline’s No. 17 Cubs prospect), who was a second-round pick in the 2024 Draft. The Cubs will also be sending catcher Owen Ayers and shortstop Ed Howard, along with right-handers Thomas Mangus, Luis Martinez-Gomez, Koen Moreno, Mathew Peters and J.P. Wheat. |
|
|
Rizzo boasts the Cubs’ career record and ranks eighth all-time in Major League history in which statistical category? A. Doubles B. Walks C. Hit-by-pitch D. Sacrifice flies |
|
|
• Cade Horton bolsters NL ROY case with latest gem Read more >> • Sammy Sosa, Derrek Lee enter Cubs’ Hall of Fame Read more >> • Kyle Tucker lands on 10-day IL after calf issue persists Read more >> • Closer Daniel Palencia to 15-day IL with shoulder injury Read more >> |
“For that team, and this is just my perspective, there were so many stars on that team, but it always felt like Rizz was kind of in the middle of everything. That’s just how it felt to me -- maybe that was how he played against teams I was a part of. But it felt like he was in the middle of it. I also just enjoyed watching him play, because he was just a really good baseball player. He seemed to do everything well.” -- Cubs manager Craig Counsell, on Rizzo |
|
|
C. Hit-by-pitch With a stance that positioned him close to the plate, Rizzo was hit by a Cubs-record 165 pitches, surpassing the mark previously held by Frank Chance (137). Overall, Rizzo was hit-by-pitch 222 times in his 14-year career, which ranks eighth on MLB’s all-time leaderboard and is the most in history for a left-handed batter. |
|
|
FORWARDED FROM A FRIEND? SUBSCRIBE NOW |
To subscribe to Cubs Beat, visit this page and mark "Cubs Beat" from our newsletter list. Make sure you're following the Cubs or that they're checked as your favorite team. |
|
|
|