logo
Alan Ritchson Films ‘Reacher' Spin-off in Stands During Chicago Cubs Game

Alan Ritchson Films ‘Reacher' Spin-off in Stands During Chicago Cubs Game

Yahoo21-05-2025

Imagine sitting in the stands at Wrigley Field for a Chicago Cubs baseball game, and in front of you are two stars of your favorite television show doing recon on something that sounds terrifyingly important.
That was the case over the weekend, as Reacher star Alan Ritchson and his former co-star Maria Sten, who played Neagly, were filming in the stands of a Cubs game, as Marquee Sports Network showed. However, while Sten has appeared in 20 episodes, second only to Ritchson himself, they were reportedly filming a different show.
Upcoming Reacher spin-off, Neagly, was apparently the focus here, but it appears that Ritchson will make at least one crossover appearance in the future show.
Some of the film crew can be seen in this photo of the duo at the game:
Not surprisingly, the reactions poured in from fans of the Cubs and the popular television show. Even before it was pointed out that they were filming, fans stated how apparent it seemed that the two weren't just in attendance to check out the game, and that it looked as though they were doing a scene.
"Are they filming cause he's straight in character as Reacher. I think they're filming," said one fan.
"They look like they are in character," said another with a crying laughing emoji.
"they were definitely filming a scene + used all of the fans for free extras," joked another fan.
"That's not the cast; that's Reacher and Neagley on a surveillance job," read a comment.
Other fans chimed in while joking about how huge Ritchson is in real life, along with how terrified they'd be sitting there if they didn't know filming was happening.
"That guy is huge, lol," said another comment.
"I don't know but if I was sitting next to them I'd be terrified that shit was about to go down! (Love the show!)," replied a fan with a laughing emoji.
It was a cool moment to see, and it had to be quite an experience for the fans attending the game. However, those fans around Ritchson and Sten were almost certainly informed of what was going on before filming.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Happ homers, has 4 RBIs on 3 hits as Cubs down Nats
Happ homers, has 4 RBIs on 3 hits as Cubs down Nats

CBS News

time10 hours ago

  • CBS News

Happ homers, has 4 RBIs on 3 hits as Cubs down Nats

Ian Happ homered and drove in four runs on three hits, Pete Crow-Armstrong added his team-leading 16th home run and Chicago Cubs beat the Washington Nationals 7-1 on Thursday night to earn their seventh consecutive series victory. Colin Rea (4-2) allowed five hits over 5 1/3 scoreless innings after opener Drew Pomeranz completed a clean first as the Cubs won the rubber game and their 16th of their last 21 games overall. Washington's Jake Irvin (5-2) allowed three runs over five innings, including Crow-Armstrong's two-run shot in the first and Happ's run-scoring double — good for his 500th career RBI — in the second. Luis García Jr. singled in the Nats' run in the ninth. Happ connected for his two-run, 405-foot drive off the facade of the third deck in right field against Jackson Rutledge in the sixth. In the ninth, he followed Reese McGuire's run-scoring infield single with his own RBI single to center off Eduardo Salazar. Key moment Caleb Thielbar entered for Rea with two aboard and a 5-0 lead in the seventh. García fouled out, then after Robert Hassell III's single loaded the bases. Thielbar froze CJ Abrams with a 2-2 curveball over the zone to escape the jam. Key stat Including Rea, the Cubs bullpen allowed no earned runs in 12 1/3 innings in the series. Chicago's bullpen ERA is 0.74 over its last 19 games. Up next Cubs: Haven't named their Friday starter yet, but will open their series in Detroit against reigning AL Cy Young winner Tarik Skubel, who has pitched 16 consecutive scoreless innings in his last two starts. Nationals: Continue their homestand against Texas, opening the series against former teammate Patrick Corbin (3-4). The left-hander spent the previous six seasons with Washington and was its last remaining player from the 2019 World Series-winning team. Righty Michael Soroka (2-3) goes for the Nats.

Ferris Bueller's iconic vest goes up for auction 40 years after famously skipping school
Ferris Bueller's iconic vest goes up for auction 40 years after famously skipping school

Chicago Tribune

time18 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Ferris Bueller's iconic vest goes up for auction 40 years after famously skipping school

Few films have done more to cement the city of Chicago's reputation in American culture than 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off,' the 1986 teen comedy classic that follows Ferris and his two friends as they skip school in the suburbs to explore everything the Windy City has to offer. Now, 40 years after cameras first rolled, an iconic piece of the film's wardrobe is jumping off the screen and into one lucky fan's closet. Starting today, Sotheby's will be auctioning off the signature sweater vest worn in the film by Matthew Broderick, who starred as the teenage slacker Ferris. The vest is featured in some of the movie's most memorable scenes: Ferris electrifying the Von Steuben Day Parade audience with his performance of 'Twist and Shout,' the gang taking in a Cubs game at Wrigley Field and the trio making a trip through the Art Institute of Chicago. ''There are few costumes in Hollywood history that are instantly recognizable and this is undeniably one of them,' Darren Rovell, Emmy Award winner and the vest's owner, said in a statement. Rovell said that the piece has been not only photo matched to the vest seen on screen, but also has been inspected by costume designer Marilyn Vance before being made available to the public. The film was Vance's fourth collaboration with John Hughes, the man behind the Chicagoland-set classics, 'The Breakfast Club' and 'Pretty in Pink.' As the entire film takes place over the course of one day, Vance wanted to ensure each lead had a costume that told viewers everything they needed to know about the characters in just one look. Early on, she decided Ferris should wear a sweater vest, as Vance felt it would quickly demonstrate his disregard for the conformist style rules of the adult world of the decade. Her search for the perfect vest eventually led her to a Chicago institution: Marshall Field's. There, she picked up an off-the-rack cardigan, trimmed its sleeves and created one of cinema's most iconic looks. The vest manages to be retro, weird and cool all at once — perfect for the vision both Vance and Hughes had of the character. 'Bueller's vest is emblematic of the character's most exciting quality,' Sotheby's said in the statement, 'the ability to blend in anywhere, while standing out just enough to get exactly what you want from the world around you.' As Ferris Bueller turns 30, Northbrook invites the world to sit and look at his favorite water towerThe winner of the auction will go home with more than just the costume. Three pieces of baseball memorabilia are included: the baseball Ferris catches at Wrigley Field and tickets from both baseball games featured onscreen (though the scene takes place over a single game, footage from two games was used in the final film). A pair of movie tickets from the film's original run are also included: one from a Showplace Cinema and one from a theater in Japan. The bidding for the vest opens today, June 5 — the day Ferris himself left the suburbs and headed downtown, celebrated across the country as Ferris Bueller Day — and doesn't close until June 24. For more information about this and other auctions, check out .

Could Ceddanne Rafaela be the next Pete Crow-Armstrong? The Red Sox hope so
Could Ceddanne Rafaela be the next Pete Crow-Armstrong? The Red Sox hope so

New York Times

timea day ago

  • New York Times

Could Ceddanne Rafaela be the next Pete Crow-Armstrong? The Red Sox hope so

BOSTON — The easiest path for the Boston Red Sox to promote top prospect Roman Anthony, give him regular playing time, and perhaps jolt their lagging offense would be to move versatile center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela to the infield and use Anthony in center. It hasn't happened, in part, because the Red Sox see Rafaela as one of the truly elite defenders in baseball and believe he may be on the verge of a breakout akin to what the Chicago Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong has delivered this season. Advertisement There is merit, some in the organization acknowledge, to the concept of Rafaela as a super utility man, especially if it opens outfield playing time for Anthony, but such a move would eliminate Rafaela's greatest strength — his center field defense — and could disrupt his encouraging signs of progress at the plate. Rafaela's hit the ball better than his statistics suggest, and even if he were to remain a slightly below-average hitter, his defense and base running have him on track to be a 4 WAR player according to FanGraphs. Only 12 outfielders (and only three center fielders) reached 4 WAR last season. Rafaela currently has the third-best fWAR among American League center fielders, his base running metrics are among the best in all of baseball, and only Crow-Armstrong has slightly better defensive numbers in center. Crow-Armstrong is a worthwhile comparison and perhaps a useful model. A year younger than Rafaela but with similar major-league experience, Crow-Armstrong has a profile remarkably similar to Rafaela's. Both are elite defenders and great base runners who swing and miss a lot but also have a knack for barreling the ball often. Their batted ball data on Baseball Savant — Crow-Armstrong on the left, Rafaela on the right — is not identical, but the contours are similar. Based on plate discipline and batted ball data, The Athletic's Eno Sarris found that Crow-Armstrong is indeed one of Rafaela's strongest comps of the past five years. Astros catcher Yainier Diaz is another, but so are less productive hitters Alex Kiriloff and Jordan Diaz. 'High-chase guys don't age well,' Sarris said, citing Josh Hamilton, Pablo Sandoval, Javier Báez and Tim Anderson, ' but they can be super exciting in their primes. I think I'd be excited about Ceddanne as an overall player, and maybe less so just as a bat.' Advertisement One clear difference between the two, however, is that Crow-Armstrong, a left-handed hitter, has pulled the ball with authority, something the Red Sox would like right-handed Rafaela do more often. Manager Alex Cora on Wednesday compared Rafaela's offensive development to that of Mookie Betts, who won an MVP award in 2018 when his pull percentage soared. 'And I think Ceddanne is learning how to do that,' Cora said. 'We're going to keep the conversations. I think he can take his shots to right field, especially later on when it becomes hot and the ball is going to carry that way, but most of the time here (at Fenway Park), it's a hard place to live in right-center.' As it is, Crow-Armstrong is an early MVP candidate while Rafaela is a potential Gold Glove winner with a 91 wRC+. That's a below-average offensive figure, but underlying metrics show Rafaela trending heavily in the right direction at the plate. Since his MLB debut in 2023, Rafaela has steadily cut down on his strikeouts while improving his hard-hit rate. He's slugging just .401, but Baseball Savant gives him an expected slugging percentage of .491, one of the 30 largest negative disparities between expected and actual slugging in the majors. Despite mediocre surface-level statistics, the Red Sox are encouraged by Rafaela's development at the plate. In the field, they see few better. Rafaela first gained prospect attention as a lower-level player with energy and a good glove at shortstop, but he really blossomed when he started playing center field in High A in 2021. His offense improved at the same time, and what had been a good defender in the infield became almost immediately an elite defender in the outfield. When Rafaela became a consensus top 100 prospect in 2023, The Athletic's Keith Law wrote that he had a chance to become a 70- to 80-grade defender in center field — the highest end of the scouting scale — while Baseball America noted that 'Rafaela's excellent first step in center field, plus speed, fearlessness and creativity offer elite defensive potential, and he can also play a solid shortstop.' The infield ability had become an afterthought. Advertisement Rafaela has lived up to his defensive billing. By almost every Statcast measurement, Rafaela has been the best defensive center fielder in the American League this season, but it's unlikely he would maintain that value as an infielder. Trevor Story's injury led the Red Sox to play Rafaela semi-regularly at shortstop last year, but he produced minus-7 outs above average at the position. The Red Sox believe Rafaela would improve with reps and fresh familiarity, but a move to the infield would almost certainly downgrade Rafaela's defensive impact and potentially wipe out much of his immediate value. It also would potentially throw a wrench in his steady progress in other aspects of the game. 'I'm the type of guy that, I'm not really worried about where I play,' Rafaela said. 'But it's helpful, of course, to just focus on that position and be me. I'm happy that I'm playing everyday center field. It's helping my body, too.' Anthony, the top prospect in baseball, has dominated Triple A as a 21-year-old, but he has yet to make it to the major leagues. The Red Sox have promoted their top infield prospects — Kristian Campbell and Marcelo Mayer — but finding at-bats for Anthony has proven more difficult. The Red Sox have one of the best outfields in baseball with Rafaela in center, Jarren Duran in left, Wilyer Abreu in right and Rob Refsnyder crushing lefties off the bench. Nearly all DH at-bats have gone to Rafael Devers, who's having the best offensive season of his career. That alignment — with Rafaela remaining in center — leaves little room for another outfielder, a crunch that chief baseball officer Craig Breslow seemed to acknowledge in a recent radio interview. 'Roman's time is coming,' Breslow said. '… We want to make sure when he comes up, not only is he ready, but there's runway for him to play.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store