No lengthy introductions. No LED screens showing clips. The Cubs want silence to speak for itself — because sometimes, the most profound tribute is irreplaceable.
Ryne Sandberg never sought attention. Throughout his Hall of Fame career, he represented the Cubs’ core values: hard work, loyalty, discipline, and humility. He didn’t need a stage. He needed Wrigley.
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The Cubs’ leadership believed that an empty chair—where no one was allowed to sit—said it all:
No one could replace Sandberg.
No one could fill that legacy.
And no season would begin without him.
“We don’t want to build anything else,” an insider shared. “We just want to keep his place.”
Before kick-off, the entire Cubs team would turn to face the stands where the chair was placed. 23 seconds of silence—a number synonymous with Sandberg—would be observed. No background music. No introductions. Just the sound of the wind, the slow breathing of the spectators, and a Wrigley Field remembering him.
It wasn’t a moment of silence. It was a farewell.
For Cubs fans, Ryne Sandberg is more than just a legend. He is a living memory: summer afternoons, game-winning shots, the years the Cubs spent searching for faith amidst hardship.
An empty seat—the most ordinary thing in the stands—suddenly becomes the center of emotion. Fans will see Sandberg there, even though he’s no longer present. They’ll know that seat isn’t for anyone else.
And in the moment the Cubs score their first game of the 2026 season, no one will be surprised if the entire stadium chants the name etched into Wrigley Field history.

In the modern age of baseball—where everything can be replaced by new contracts, new numbers, new stars—the Cubs choose not to replace. They choose to keep a void.
That chair is a reminder:
There are people who transcend the roster.
There are legacies that don’t lie on the statistics.
And there are legends who don’t need to be present to be felt.
The Cubs confirmed the tribute chair will appear on special occasions, starting with Opening Day 2026 — as a season-opening ritual, a promise that the past and present will always go hand in hand.
Ryne Sandberg once said baseball is something to be preserved and passed on. In the first game of the 2026 season, the Cubs will give that back to their fans with a small act, but one that carries more weight than any monument.
A chair. An empty space. And a history that sits with the Cubs, once again.