
Hall of Fame second baseman Ryne Sandberg dies after battling cancer
Sandberg was surrounded by his family when he died at his home on Monday, according to the team.
Sandberg announced in January 2024 that he had been diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer. He had chemotherapy and radiation treatments, and then said in August 2024 that he was cancer-free.
But he posted on Instagram on Dec. 10 that his cancer had returned and spread to other organs. He announced this month that he was still fighting, while 'looking forward to making the most of every day with my loving family and friends.'
Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts said Sandberg 'will be remembered as one of the all-time greats in nearly 150 years of this historic franchise.'
'His dedication to and respect for the game, along with his unrelenting integrity, grit, hustle, and competitive fire were hallmarks of his career,' Ricketts said in the team's statement.
Sandberg was born and raised in Spokane, Washington. He was selected out of high school by Philadelphia in the 20th round of the 1978 amateur draft.
He made his major league debut in 1981 and went 1 for 6 in 13 games with the Phillies. In January 1982, he was traded to Chicago along with Larry Bowa for veteran infielder Ivan De Jesus.
It turned into one of the most lopsided deals in baseball history.
Sandberg hit .285 with 282 homers, 1,061 RBIs and 344 steals in 15 years with Chicago. He made 10 All-Star teams — winning the Home Run Derby in 1990 — and took home nine Gold Gloves.
'Ryne Sandberg was a legend of the Chicago Cubs franchise and a beloved figure throughout Major League Baseball,' MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said. 'He was a five-tool player who excelled in every facet of the game thanks to his power, speed and work ethic.'
Even with Sandberg's stellar play, the Cubs made just two postseason appearances while he was in Chicago.
He was the NL MVP in 1984, batting .314 with 19 homers, 84 RBIs, 32 steals, 19 triples and 114 runs scored. Chicago won the NL East and Sandberg hit .368 (7 for 19) in the playoffs, but the Cubs were eliminated by San Diego after winning the first two games of the National League Championship Series at Wrigley Field.
The 1984 season featured what Cubs fans still call 'The Sandberg Game,' when he homered twice and drove in seven runs in a 12-11 victory over St. Louis in 11 innings on June 23.
Chicago paid tribute to Sandberg and that game when it unveiled a statue of the infielder outside Wrigley Field on that date in 2024.
'He was a superhero in this city,' Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said during a TV broadcast of the team's game on July 20. 'You think about (Michael) Jordan, Walter Payton and Ryne Sandberg all here at the same time, and I can't imagine a person handling their fame better, their responsibility for a city better than he did.'
Sandberg led Chicago back to the playoffs in 1989, hitting .290 with 30 homers as the Cubs won the NL East. He batted .400 (8 for 20) in the NLCS, but Chicago lost to San Francisco in five games.
Sandberg set a career high with an NL-best 40 homers in 1990 and drove in a career-best 100 runs in 1990 and 1991, but he never made it back to the postseason. He retired after the 1997 season.
He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2005, receiving 76.2% of the vote by the Baseball Writers' Association of America in his third try on the ballot. The Cubs retired his No. 23 that same year.
Sandberg also managed Philadelphia from August 2013 to June 2015, going 119-159. He got the interim job when Charlie Manuel was fired, and he resigned with the Phillies in the middle of a difficult 2015 season.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
22 minutes ago
- New York Times
For the WNBA, this is about more than just green sex toys
The first time a bright green sex toy was hurled onto a WNBA court last week in Atlanta, players mostly laughed it off and some posted social media jokes. When it happened a few days later and interrupted a game in Chicago, Sky center Elizabeth Williams called it 'super disrespectful.' After a third incident during a Sparks-Fever game on Tuesday, L.A. guard Kelsey Plum kicked the object off the court. Advertisement It's natural for players to wonder how they should react to these bizarre, brazen and potentially embarrassing and dangerous incidents. Whatever the purpose behind this trend — a coordinated effort or one-offs by attention-seekers — it's not incumbent on the players to laugh along with this supposed joke. Because these are not just silly pranks. MLB, MLS and preseason NFL games are ongoing. But this is only happening at WNBA games? … Interesting. The WNBA has grown exponentially in the last two seasons — record attendance, climbing television viewership and massive financial investments. The league and its star players are now regarded as mainstream, included in the national sports conversation like never before. But these women are still the subject of an occasional punchline. While players are negotiating for higher salaries, they're still fighting for their reputations to be respected as elite professional athletes. They have now had to be graceful and coolly navigate being unfairly thrust into an obscene moment. 'Everyone's trying to make sure the W is not a joke and it's taken seriously, and then that happens,' Sophie Cunningham said on Tuesday's episode of her 'Show Me Something' podcast. 'I'm like, how are we ever going to get taken seriously?' ARENA SECURITY?! Hello??! Please do better. It's not funny. never was funny. Throwing ANYTHING on the court is so dangerous. — Isabelle Harrison (@OMG_itsizzyb) August 2, 2025 What compels someone to sneak a sex toy into a basketball game and throw it on the court at athletes is beyond my comprehension, but it's telling that this is only happening right now at WNBA games. Humiliation, often lewd or sexual, has long been used as an attempt to make women feel uncomfortable in sports or diminish their place in this space. For centuries, athletics was a world for men only — a sanctum to prove their masculinity. Into the 20th century, women were widely discouraged from encroaching on this space as medical 'experts' decried exercise as detrimental to childbearing and their fragile emotional state. Women, of course, increasingly proved those theories as nonsense, but as they displayed athletic prowess, their femininity and even their sex was questioned, most notably in Olympic and international competitions. Advertisement By the mid-1940s, international sports committee leaders required female athletes to have 'femininity certificates.' Some were subjected to a 'nude parade' in front of a panel of doctors (or asked on their backs to hold their knees to their chests for the doctors to take closer inspection) to prove they were female. More messages — often overt — were sent to women through the years. Katherine Switzer was grabbed in an attempt to stop her from running the 1967 Boston Marathon. In the lead-up to losing to Billie Jean King in their 1973 tennis match, Bobby Riggs said, 'Women belong in the bedroom and kitchen, in that order.' Women in sports journalism have also been subjected to lewd gestures, unwanted advances and vulgar comments by male athletes. Lisa Olson said she was sexually harassed in the 1990 Patriots locker room while working for the Boston Herald, and Sacramento Bee reporter Susan Fornoff wrote about the intimidation she faced covering the Oakland A's. They're only the most prominent of cases among the many women who've experienced demeaning treatment in an effort to scare them off from covering men's sports. Most women who have played or been involved in sports have a story about being doubted or denigrated. In these recent incidents, it's a stretch to argue targeting the WNBA wasn't strategic and intentional. Making a sex toy the focal point of games in a league that has perhaps the most openly gay and queer players doesn't seem like an accident either. The W has been lauded for its world-renowned athletes, but there's no denying it's also frequently used for bad-faith arguments about gender, race and sexuality. Misogyny in women's sports — like in society – is often subtle. However, in this instance, the message being sent by the people throwing these sex toys on the courts is loud and clear. This is not just a prank or an opportunistic viral moment, but another attempt to demean women in sports. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle


San Francisco Chronicle
39 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
A year after fame found him in Paris, Stephen Nedoroscik, aka 'Pommel Horse Guy,' is back for more
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The glasses haven't gone anywhere. And they aren't going anywhere. The same goes for Stephen Nedoroscik's hair, which remains a bit of a floppy, curly brown mess. Nor, insists the gymnast who became forever known as 'Pommel Horse Guy' after winning a pair of bronze medals in Paris, has his devotion to the discipline that made him one of the breakout stars of the 2024 Olympics faded in the least. While Nedoroscik leaned into the fame, most notably a long run on 'Dancing With the Stars' last fall, followed immediately by a stint co-hosting the show's national tour, he never once considered putting away his grips for good and trying to go Hollywood full-time. Sorry, that was never the point of all this. Three months ago, Nedoroscik walked back through the doors of EVO Gymnastics in Florida and quietly went back to work. And when the U.S. Championships begin on Thursday night, he'll hop onto the event that, at 26, he remains in some ways obsessed with after all these years and begin again. 'At the end of the day, I am a gymnast and I blew up for being a gymnast,' Nedoroscik said. 'And I have sort of a mindset where I don't really want to be famous. I get, like, anxiety. So it's like I kind of accept the fact that having this moment was amazing, but eventually that wave will end.' In a way, Nedoroscik hopped off before he had a chance to be pushed. He's well aware of the tropes of all the teen movies where the main character starts off as an outcast of sorts, then one flash of talent, one splash of popularity, and one makeover montage later, they emerge as a different person. He had no interest in sticking to that script, though the lure is certainly intoxicating. When he drilled his dismount at Bercy Arena during the men's team final last July to clinch the biggest international medal by the U.S. men's gymnastics program since the 2008 Olympics, he didn't think it would lead to a spot on 'The Tonight Show,' with host Jimmy Fallon rapping a song on how to spell his name. The only contestant in 'Dancing With the Stars' two-decade run to incorporate a pommel horse into a dance routine didn't imagine being a fixture on national television for two months either. Yet that happened too. Quickly followed by weeks crisscrossing the country as one of the faces of the show's annual tour. While he appreciated the support, the messages to his Instagram account that cut through the noise the most weren't the ones talking about the way he navigated a ballroom floor, but from mothers who saw Nedoroscik and his American teammates triumph in Paris and decided it was time to sign their sons up for a sport that always seems to be fighting for its survival. 'Like that's what it's all about, honestly, because this is a great sport,' he said. 'And I think it's the best sport, especially for hyper kids like I was.' That almost relentless energy hasn't gone anywhere. Sharing a stage with Olympic teammates on Wednesday afternoon, Nedoroscik leaned over to Brody Malone and asked how his hair looked. When Malone responded 'disgusting" in the kind of good-naturedly sarcastic tone that has been the love language of guys everywhere for eons, Nedoroscik's laugh echoed throughout the room. It's one of the many reasons Nedoroscik is happy to be back to what passes for his normal. He understands competing just three months after returning to training might be asking a bit much of his body. The early weeks in the gym were humbling and eye-opening. Yet interspersed with the aches and pains were the occasional reminders that yeah, he's still pretty good at this. How good? Well, that's one of the reasons the Worcester, Massachusetts, native is already pointing toward the 2028 Games in Los Angeles. There's a chance his best gymnastics might still be ahead of him. 'I love to just push myself as far as I can go and I love to ride this wave, like right on the edge of possibility and like, 'Am I gonna just die out there?'" he said. 'But I do it for the thrill and I do it for the love of the sport, so I want to keep going.' While keeping it real at the same time. Asked how he stayed grounded as his profile soared, he shrugged. While his number of followers on social media 'I do think it is sort of my inherent nature to just stick true to myself,' he said. 'I don't really try to put up a fake face in any situation that I'm in and I think so long as I do that, I am not going to change.' ___
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Bulls leaning into Michael Jordan nostalgia for 2025-26
Bulls leaning into Michael Jordan nostalgia for 2025-26 originally appeared on The Sporting News The Chicago Bulls are going all-in on their Michael Jordan glory days ahead of yet another doomed season. The Bulls haven't been even in sniffing distance of legitimate championship contention in a decade. They responded to a 50-win 2014-15 season and a hard-fought second-round playoff exit by firing head coach Tom Thibodeau. It was the first in a series of boneheaded decisions that ultimately cost Chicago everything. Now, Chicago is a perpetual play-in tournament team, too semi-competent to totally tank and thus get the best odds for an elite lottery pick, but too bad to actually make the playoffs. The Bulls have made three such futile postseason runs, and have missed the playoffs in seven of the last eight seasons. The only moves of note that Chicago made this offseason were flipping oft-hurt reserve point guard Lonzo Ball for former Cleveland Cavaliers 10th man wing Isaac Okoro, re-signing free agent guard Tre Jones, selecting raw forward Noah Essengue with the No. 12 pick in this year's draft, and trading down for the draft rights to big man Lachlan Olbrich, the No. 55 pick. So ahead of what's likely to be another uninspiring season in 2025-26, Chicago is doing its darnedest to remind fans of what it once was. MORE NEWS:Dwyane Wade blames LeBron James for ruining planned Bulls superteam Per Anthony Gharib of ESPN, the Bulls are bringing back the black-and-red pinstripe jerseys they first donned during their 72-10 championship season in 1995-96. They're now dubbed Chicago's "Statement Jerseys" for this season. Per Gharib, the Bulls have also worn the threads in 1996-97 (when they won another title), 2008-08 and 2012-13. Chicago itself showed off the return to the red pinstripes on its X account, bringing in Hall of Fame former Bulls power forward Dennis Rodman, who won three consecutive titles alongside Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen from the 1995-96 season through 1997-89, to model the duds. Although the 2025-26 Bulls roster likely doesn't sport any future Hall of Famers, it is talented enough to not be, say, the 2024-25 Washington Wizards. Still, it makes sense for a team that effectively doesn't have a traditional power forward on its roster and is overloaded with guards to lean into a starry past — and to look beyond a sad present. MORE NEWS:Stunning amount of Bulls fans 'satisfied' with team's terrible recent play