CHICAGO — On a quiet winter afternoon outside Wrigley Field, the Cubs Nation fell silent as Randy Hundley’s family unveiled the extraordinary will of the greatest baseball player in the team’s history. Not money, not trophies, not the statistics that made his name — Hundley left all his personal belongings to underprivileged Chicago children, with a final wish that was simple yet profoundly moving.
According to his family, in his will, completed at age 83, Randy Hundley requested that all his gloves, jerseys, signed photos, medals, and career memorabilia be donated to a small museum area at Wrigley Field, designed specifically for children from disadvantaged families.
No tall glass display cases. No expensive tickets. No distance.
Hundley wrote clearly: children should be able to see up close, to touch, to feel that the baseball dream is real.

What brought Chicago fans to tears was the final part of his will—his last wish:
Every year, 100 underprivileged children would be invited to Wrigley Field completely free of charge to visit the small museum named after him, touch his memorabilia, and hear the story of “the day the catcher caught the ball with one hand”—a legend that became synonymous with Randy Hundley.
It wasn’t a story about money or power.
It was a story about faith.
For the Cubs, Randy Hundley was more than just a catcher. He was a symbol of perseverance and sacrifice. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Hundley was famous for his ability to catch the ball with one bare hand, enduring pain to protect every pitch, every game.
He played in an era when the Cubs didn’t even know the World Series, in years when fans’ faith was more fragile than leather gloves. But Hundley never gave up — and he never forgot where he came from.
Born into a working-class family, Hundley once shared with relatives, “Without the Cubs, I would just be a poor kid who didn’t know what I could do.”
The Hundley family revealed that the idea for the children’s museum had been brewing in his mind for years. He didn’t want his memorabilia locked away in storage or sitting idle at auctions.
He wanted poor children to touch their dreams — literally.
A torn glove. A worn-out shirt. A black-and-white photograph with a shaky signature.
These are the things Hundley believed could change a child — just as baseball had changed him.
According to the original plan, the small museum area would be located near the stands behind the home plate, where children could look out onto the field, hear the Chicago wind, and understand that those who stood there were once children just like them.
The Cubs Organization reportedly fully supported this desire, viewing it as part of the team’s spiritual heritage, no less important than the flags or monuments.
When the news broke, Chicago social media was flooded with quiet messages. No noise. No arguments. Just gratitude.
One fan wrote: “Randy Hundley didn’t give us more wins. He gave us hope.”
Another said: “He understood the Cubs better than anyone — the Cubs are for those who never give up on their dreams.”

Randy Hundley may not be the name that appears most often on the MLB statistics board. But with this testament, he did what no title could: he transformed his baseball legacy into a bridge for children who had nothing but dreams.
At 83, he didn’t ask how he would be remembered.
He only asked: “Will any children be inspired?”
And for Chicago, the answer is clear.
Today, the Cubs remember not just a legendary catcher. They remember a man who left his heart to children who never had the chance to step onto Wrigley Field.