
Pope Leo XIV brings hope to Chicago sports fans as Cubs, White Sox duel for his favour
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The sports loyalties of Pope Leo XIV became a topic of conversation almost as soon as the white smoke emerged from the Vatican's Sistine Chapel.
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Elected on Thursday, Robert Prevost is the first pope from the United States in the history of the Catholic Church. The Chicago-born missionary, who took the name Leo XIV, also attended Villanova University near Philadelphia, where he received a Bachelor of Science in 1977.
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Chicago's two baseball teams were front and center as sports fans reacted to the news.
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It was initially reported that the new pope was a Cubs fan. The team congratulated Pope Leo XIV in a post on X that had a picture of Wrigley Field's iconic marquee with the message: HEY, CHICAGO. HE'S A CUBS FAN!
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Congratulations to Pope Leo XIV! pic.twitter.com/s02yDDegQd
— Chicago Cubs (@Cubs) May 8, 2025
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But his brother, John Prevost, set the record straight in an interview with WGN-TV. The pope is a White Sox fan.
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'He was never ever a Cubs fan, so I don't know where that came from. He was always a Sox fan,' John said, adding that the confusion might stem from the fact their mother's side of the family were North Siders and Cubs fans.
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The White Sox posted a clip from the brother's WGN interview on X, along with a picture of the Rate Field videoboard with the message: HEY CHICAGO, HE'S A SOX FAN! The post read 'Well, would you look at that… Congratulations to Chicago's own Pope Leo XIV.'
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Well, would you look at that... Congratulations to Chicago's own Pope Leo XIV pic.twitter.com/U5DJ7TOyDr
— Chicago White Sox (@whitesox) May 8, 2025
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