4. Ron Santo

  1. General
  2. Awards
  3. Career Stats
  • Born: February 25, 1940 in Seattle, WA USA
  • Weight: 190 lbs.
  • Height: 6'0"
  • Bats: R
  • Throws: R
  • Debut: June 26, 1960
  • Final Game: September 29, 1974
 
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Ron Santo didn’t just play third base for the Chicago Cubs; he anchored it with a grit that defined an entire generation of North Side baseball. 

Arriving as a rookie in 1960, he quickly evolved into the gold standard for the "hot corner." For over a decade, Santo was the rare triple-threat: a defensive vacuum, a disciplined on-base machine, and a middle-of-the-order slugger. What the fans didn't know at the time was that Santo was achieving all of this while privately managing Type 1 diabetes, a battle that makes his durability and production seem less like sports and more like a miracle.

His peak was a masterclass in professional hitting. Santo wasn't just a "swing for the fences" type; he was a scientist at the plate, leading the National League in walks four times and twice topping the league in On-Base Percentage. But when the situation called for thunder, he delivered, launching 337 home runs in a Cubs uniform and driving in over 100 runs in four different seasons. Defensively, he was virtually untouchable, sweeping five consecutive Gold Gloves and leading the league in Total Zone Runs for four straight years. He was the complete package, the kind of player who could win a game with a diving stop in the ninth just as easily as a three-run blast in the first.

The final chapter of his playing days provided a legendary moment of franchise loyalty. In 1973, Santo became the first player to ever exercise his "10-and-5" rights, famously vetoing a trade to California because he simply couldn't imagine himself anywhere else. While he eventually accepted a move across town to the White Sox for a final season, his heart never left Wrigley. He spent the rest of his life as the team’s most boisterous ambassador and broadcaster, the self-proclaimed "biggest Cubs fan ever."

The ending of the Santo story is tinged with bittersweetness. While the Cubs rightfully retired his number 10 in 2003, the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown infamously waited until 2012, two years after his passing, to finally induct him. It remains a sore spot for the Chicago faithful, a "travesty" that took far too long to correct. But when the Cubs Hall of Fame opened its doors in 2021, Santo was an automatic first-ballot choice. He arrived as a young man with a secret struggle and left as a permanent monument to what it means to love a team with everything you've got.

The Bullet Points

  • Position: Third Base
  • Acquired: Signed as an Amateur Free Agent before the 1959 Season.
  • Departed: Traded to the Chicago White Sox for Ken Frailing, Steve Stone, Steve Swisher, and a Player to be Named Later (which would be Jim Kremmel 12/11/73.
  • Games Played: 2126
  • Notable Statistics: 1,199 Runs Scored
    2,171 Hits
    353 Doubles
    66 Triples
    337 Home Runs
    1,290 Runs Batted In
    35 Stolen Bases
    .279/.366/.472 Slash Line
    72.2 bWAR

    No Playoff Games
  • Major Accolades and Awards:

    All-Star (1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972 & 1973)
    Gold Glove (1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 & 1968)
    Highest bWAR for Position Players (1967)
    Highest On Base Percentage (1964 & 1966)
    Most Walks (1964, 1966, 1967 & 1968)
    Most Sacrifice Flies (1963, 1967 & 1969)
    Most Putouts by a Third Baseman (1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 & 1969)
    Most Assists by a Third Baseman (1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 & 1968)
    Most Double Plays Turned by a Third Baseman (1965, 1966, 1967 & 1968)
    Most Total Zone Runs by a Third Baseman (1965, 1966, 1967 & 1968)
    Highest Range Factor per Game by a Third Baseman (1961, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 & 1968)
    Highest Fielding Percentage by a Third Baseman (1968)

  • Other Points of Note: Top Ten MVP Finishes:
    8th in 1963, 8th in 1964, 4th in 1967 & 5th in 1969

    Finishes 4th in Rookie of the Year Voting in 1960
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