Paul Sullivan: Anthony Rizzo -- 'everybody's go-to guy' -- returns to the Cubs family
Published in Baseball
CHICAGO — Anthony Rizzo will retire as a Chicago Cub and join the organization as a team ambassador, the team announced Wednesday.
Rizzo, one of the stars of the 2016 championship team that ended the historic, 108-year drought, will be feted Saturday at Wrigley Field before the Cubs game against the Tampa Bay Rays.
After being acquired from San Diego to start the Theo Epstein-led rebuild in 2012, Rizzo enjoyed a long and successful career on the North Side, earning three All-Star nods, four Gold Gloves, a Platinum Glove and a Silver Slugger award. A cancer survivor who beat Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, he devoted much of his off-the-field time in Chicago visiting children with cancer in hospitals, including Lurie Children’s Hospital, and was named the Roberto Clemente Award winner in 2017 for his charitable work and foundation.
Epstein said that was just the “Rizz” everyone gravitated toward.
“Rizz was everybody’s go-to guy — on the field, in the clubhouse and in the community — and he never let us down,” Epstein told the Tribune on Wednesday. “The magical ride we were all so lucky to be a part of simply doesn’t happen without Anthony Rizzo. What a career and a legacy.”
Rizzo was the building block of the Cubs rebuild and quickly established himself as one of the city’s most beloved athletes. Even his dog, Kevin, was well known. His return to Wrigley Field last September earned him the biggest reception of any of the former members of the 2016 team on their homecomings.
“Anthony Rizzo was the face of one of the most successful eras in Chicago Cubs history and we are so excited he will be a part of our organization for many years to come,” said Cubs Executive Chairman Tom Ricketts in a statement. “His play on the field spoke for itself. Who could forget Anthony catching Kris Bryant’s throw from third base for the final out that clinched the series?
“In addition, he was an inspiration to so many off the field through his foundation and his work with cancer research. Anthony’s professional career on the field might be complete, but it will be great to share this next chapter with him here with the Cubs.”
Rizzo was dealt to the New York Yankees at the trade deadline in 2021 in a clearance sale that would mark the end of an era and the beginning of Jed Hoyer’s rebuild that’s on target for the first postseason appearance under his leadership. Rizzo spent 3 1/2 seasons in New York and played on their World Series team last year before his $17 million option was declined, leaving him as a free agent.
Rizzo, now 36, went unsigned in the offseason, but had not given any indication publicly that he was done playing. Friends like ex-Blackhawks star Chris Chelios urged him to return to the Cubs, but that scenario was never going to happen with left-handed hitting Michael Busch at first base, veteran Justin Turner as the backup and Seiya Suzuki as the primary designated hitter.
Rizzo sat out instead of signing a low-salaried, one-year deal with a team, as many veterans are forced to do at the end of their careers. His wife, Emily, gave birth to their first child, Anthony, and Rizzo has spent most of his time at home in Florida dabbling as a guest analyst with MLB Network.
He was seen with his wife and infant son at Wednesday’s Yankees-Detroit Tigers game at Yankee Stadium and chugged a beer after being put on the video board. Rizzo was the ringleader of the Cubs clubhouse and was instrumental in bringing a nightclub-style party to home wins, a DJ for postseason wins, and introducing hip-hop and dance music to the Wrigley P.A. system during batting practice.
In “The Cubs Way,” a book on the 2016 season written by Tom Verducci, catcher David Ross, who would later become the manager, said Rizzo “wants everybody to have a good time. He’s more worried about everybody else having a good time and puts himself second.”
Rizzo backed that up before Game 5 of the 2016 World Series with the Cubs trailing Cleveland three games to one. He stripped naked, jumped on a couch in the clubhouse and began quoting lines from movies like “Rocky,” as the theme song from “Rocky” blared. The Cubs won Game 5 and came back to win the World Series in seven games.
The Cubs will celebrate the 10th anniversary of that championship in 2026, and getting Rizzo as an ambassador was an important part of the reunion, which is already being planned and will be celebrated next summer. He was peeved upon his departure in 2021, especially after Hoyer noted the team “made offers to everyone that I believe will hold up exceptionally well and we weren’t able to reach deals.”
Rizzo told David Kaplan of WMVP-AM 1000: “I’m kind of confused on why. Why say that? Sounds like a bad breakup and the person saying they’re fine when they’re not fine.”
The parade of Cubs first basemen after Rizzo has included Frank Schwindel, Alfonso Rivas, Eric Hosmer, Trey Mancini, Cody Bellinger, Busch and Turner. Bellinger was dealt to the Yankees last winter in a salary dump.
But the trade to New York ultimately benefited Rizzo, who admitted as much last September when I asked him if he was better off being a Yankee than a Cub.
“Yeah, in hindsight,” he replied. “Obviously if you had asked me before I got traded, there is no way I would’ve ever wanted to go anywhere else but Chicago. But getting traded has taught me so much about life in general, and has helped me grow as an individual.”
Cubs ambassadors aren’t required to be at the ballpark all the time, but look for Rizzo to become a frequent presence at Wrigley, likely in some sort of part-time analyst position with the team-owned Marquee Sports Network.
Of the other seven current Cubs ambassadors, only Ben Zobrist played on the 2016 team. But Dexter Fowler, Jon Lester and others have been welcomed back in retirement. The Cubs still need to mend fences with Ross, who was blindsided by his firing as manager after the 2023 season, shortly after Ricketts spoke of the great job he’d done.
Ross has not returned to Wrigley since other than attending a concert or two. Having his old buddy, Rizzo, as a bodyguard could help bring Ross back into the Cubs family that he was a central part of before the dismissal.
Either way, Rizzo is now back, and he told WSCR-AM 670 he planned to spend his Saturday afternoon in the bleachers, where chugging beer is permitted and often encouraged.
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