For the second time in the month, a Chicago baseball legend has lost his life prematurely due to cancer. Former Cubs second baseman Ryne Sandberg, who had been suffering from metastatic prostate cancer for over a year, died Monday at 65.
Ryne Sandberg was acquired by the Cubs, along with Larry Bowa, from the Phillies for Ivan DeJesus in January of 1982. He was the primary third baseman for the Cubs during the 1982 season, hitting .271 with 7 home runs and 54 RBIs, good enough to place sixth in Rookie of the Year voting. After the Cubs acquired Ron Cey following the season, they moved Sandberg to second base, where he would become a mainstay for the next decade plus.
1983 saw Sandberg garner his first Gold Glove while hitting .261 with 8 home runs and 48 RBIs. He blossomed in 1984, as the Cubs made a surprising run at the NL East title. Sandberg won the MVP, Silver Slugger, and Gold Glove awards while leading the league with 114 runs and 19 triples. He hit .368 during the NLCS against the Padres, which the Cubs dropped in 5 games. 1985 saw him win another Silver Slugger and Gold Glove, while still earning MVP support despite the Cubs falling to the bottom of the division. He earned another Gold Glove in 1986, hitting .284 with 14 home runs. Injuries limited him to 132 games in 1987. but he still took home his fifth consecutive Gold Glove.
Sandberg posted a .741 OPS in 1988, good enough for his third Silver Slugger award and his sixth straight Gold Glove. The Cubs returned to the post-season in 1989, as Sandberg hit .290 with 30 home runs, which garnered him yet another Silver Slugger and Gold Glove while coming in fourth for MVP voting. He hit .400 and drove in four in the Cubs’ NLCS loss to the Giants in five games. In 1990, Sandberg set a career high with 40 home runs, which led the National League, and duplicated his Silver Slugger, Gold Glove, and fourth place for MVP voting results from the previous year. 1991 saw Sandberg win his ninth consecutive, and final, Gold Glove award, breaking a tie with Bill Mazeroski. In 1992, he won his fifth straight, and seventh overall, Silver Slugger award. 1993 saw Sandberg make his tenth consecutive, and final, All-Star team.
Sandberg struggled out of the gate in 1994, and with rumored marital issues at home, he abruptly retired on June 13th, saying “I lost the desire that got me ready to play on an everyday basis for so many years. Without it, I didn’t think I could perform at the same level I had in the past, and I didn’t want to play at a level less than what was expected of me by my teammates, coaches, ownership, and most of all, myself.” Following a divorce and a new marriage, Sandberg returned to the Cubs in 1996, hitting .244 with 25 home runs and 92 RBIs. With his OPS dropping to .711 in 1997, his lowest total since 1983, Sandberg retired for good following the 1997 season. He was inducted to the Hall of Fame in 2005 and, that August, the Cubs retired his #23. Last June, a statue of Sandberg was unveiled on Gallagher Way outside Wrigley Field
Former Cubs manager Lee Elia, who became an infamous part of baseball history following an epic rant in 1983, passed away Tuesday just shy of his 88th birthday. Born in Philadelphia, Elia spent all of his short major league career in Chicago, in 1966 with the White Sox and in 1968 with the Cubs. Following the end of his playing career, Elia was a coach for the Phillies in 1980 and 1981 under manager Dallas Green. When Green was hired by the Tribune Company to be their new executive vice president and general manager for the recently acquired Cubs, he hired Elia to be the team’s new manager.
