Chicago – After years away, one of the most beloved icons in Chicago Cubs history has finally returned home.
Mark Grace officially rejoined the Cubs as a senior advisor in a $10 million deal, a move that sent Wrigley Field into a frenzy and immediately generated excitement throughout the Chicago baseball community.
For many older Cubs fans, this is more than just a personnel change.
It’s like a part of the franchise’s old soul is returning.
In the long history of the Chicago Cubs, not many players have been loved the way Mark Grace was.
He wasn’t a slugger who scored 60 home runs a season.
He wasn’t a superstar who loved the Hollywood spotlight.
But Grace perfectly represents the Chicago baseball style:
tough
persistent
emotional
and always fighting for the team.

For over a decade with the Cubs, Grace became an iconic figure at Wrigley Field with his fiery playing style and close relationship with the fans.
And now, after many years, he’s finally returning to the place where he made his name.
According to several internal sources, the Cubs see Grace’s return as a strategic move to reconnect traditional identity with the current younger generation.
In his new role, Grace will participate in:
hitting advisor
supporting youth player development
working with baseball operations management
and especially mentoring the Cubs’ youth clubhouse.
This is extremely important for Chicago right now.
Because although the Cubs possess many promising young talents, the team has been criticized for lacking the “Cubs DNA” and the spirit of previous generations.
Mark Grace is expected to bring that spirit back.
Immediately after the official announcement, Cubs social media almost exploded.
Fans continuously posted:
old highlights of Grace
legendary swings
images of him at Wrigley Field in the 1990s
and clips of fans standing up and applauding when his name appeared on the scoreboard.
Many called this:
“one of the most emotional days for the Cubs in years.”
Because for Chicago, Mark Grace was never just a former player.
He was a childhood memory.
Those who didn’t live through the Cubs’ 1990s era might find it hard to understand why Chicago fans were so deeply moved.
But for a franchise that has endured decades of pain and disappointment, Mark Grace is one of the few consistently bright spots.
He led MLB in hits in the 1990s.
He played baseball with incredible intelligence and consistency.
Most importantly:
He never abandoned the Cubs during their toughest years.
That created an incredibly deep connection with Chicago fans.

According to many sources around the team, the Cubs’ leadership believes that the current young players need more than just talent.
They need:
a competitive mindset,
toughness,
the ability to handle pressure in Chicago,
and an understanding of what makes the Cubs what they are.
Mark Grace is seen as the perfect person to pass that on.
Because no one understands the weight of Wrigley Field better than those who have lived with it for many years.
The Cubs giving Grace a $10 million contract shows that this is not a symbolic role.
Chicago truly wants him to be a vital part of the franchise’s future structure.
The team is entering an extremely exciting phase with:
Nico Hoerner
Pete Crow-Armstrong
Cade Horton
Matt Shaw
and many other promising young players.
But to become a true contender, the Cubs need more than just skill.
They need identity.
And Grace is the embodiment of that.
After winning the 2016 World Series, the Cubs went through years of inconsistency and gradually lost the special feeling that once made Wrigley Field a fearsome place for any opponent.
The management understood that:
to return to the top, the Cubs had to rediscover their winning culture from within.
Mark Grace’s return sends a very clear message:
Chicago doesn’t want to just build a good team.
They want to build a true Cubs.
According to many sources, Mark Grace was extremely emotional upon his return to Wrigley during recent internal meetings.
The familiar corridors.
The old stands.
The distinctive sounds of Chicago baseball.
All of it made him feel like he’d never left.
For Grace, the Cubs wasn’t just a place where he used to play baseball.
It was where his whole life was shaped.
In modern baseball, full of analytics and cold-blooded deals, sometimes what fans need most is emotion.
And the Cubs have just brought that emotion back to Wrigley Field.
Mark Grace may no longer step into the batter’s box.
But his presence alone is enough to make all of Chicago believe that something special is being built.
Not just a better team.
But a Cubs that truly embodies the soul of Chicago once again.