While Chicago is busy with transfer stories and preparing for the new season, a touching news has made the Cubs community “burst” this morning. It is not a new contract, not a blockbuster from the leadership — but an unexpected gesture from star Nico Hoerner, who secretly spent $817,000 to buy back a breakfast restaurant that was about to go bankrupt… and then gave it all back to the elderly couple who helped him during his college years.
Before becoming a pillar of the Chicago Cubs, Nico Hoerner was a poor student, living frugally and struggling with living expenses. During that difficult time, he often visited a small breakfast restaurant on the corner of Maple & 3rd, owned by Walter and Elaine Higgins, both in their 70s.
Knowing the young man’s situation, always carrying a worn-out but determined baseball glove, Mr. and Mrs. Higgins often gave Nico food for free or for half the price. One day when he had no money, Mrs. Higgins gently pushed the pancake plate towards Nico and said:
“Just eat, boy, when you have success, come back and repay the favor.”
Nico has never forgotten that sentence.
“The restaurant is about to go bankrupt”… and the decision that made the whole restaurant family cry
Last week, Nico heard from an old friend that Mr. and Mrs. Higgins’ restaurant was at risk of closing due to tax arrears, increased costs, and a sharp decline in customers after the pandemic. At that time, the couple even prepared to clean up the tables and chairs, accepting their fate.
Nico immediately visited the restaurant. Without warning. No media. Just walking through the old wooden door — the place that had served him breakfast for two years.
Mrs. Higgins laughed when she saw Nico: “It’s been a long time since you’ve been here.”
But when she learned the reason, she burst into tears on the spot.
According to a source close to her, Nico met with a lawyer that day, paid the full purchase price of $817,000, and promised to pay operating fees for three months to help the owners get back on their feet.
And then, the very next morning, he returned with the ownership certificate… to hand it directly to Mr. and Mrs. Higgins.
“I promised to repay you. Today is the day to keep that promise. This is still your shop. I just helped it survive.”
Mr. Higgins — who rarely shed tears — hugged Nico and cried like a child.
Within hours, the story was all over Chicago social media. Cubs fans called him “the hero without a cape,” “the nicest man in Wrigley Field,” and “the epitome of gratitude.”
One fan commented:
“We didn’t just get a great player — we got a great person.”
Many of Nico’s teammates also shared the story with congratulations, affirming that this is the true nature of Nico: humble, thoughtful, and never forgetting those who helped him.
While the MLB world is often mentioned with million-dollar contracts and pressure to perform, Nico Hoerner’s story reminds people of something simple: gratitude.

Even at the peak of his career — as one of the best defensive players in the NL and increasingly a Cubs mainstay — Nico still chose to return to the place where his dream was nurtured, to repay with actions, not words.
And that old couple, after many sleepless nights worrying about bankruptcy, now stood behind their familiar kitchen counter, smiling brightly in the small breakfast shop they thought was lost forever.
Chicago may be cold. But today, the heart of this city is warm — thanks to a football player who never forgot the breakfast of his poor childhood, and the people who once reached out to help him.
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