When the National League Rookie of the Year results were announced Monday night, Chicago Cubs fans held their breath. For much of 2025, Cade Horton had pitched like a veteran trapped in a rookie’s uniform — fearless, composed, and electric.
In the end, he finished second. But for Horton, and for a franchise searching for its next great homegrown ace, that silver felt like gold.
The 23-year-old right-hander stormed onto the scene this season with a 3.14 ERA, 172 strikeouts, and a poise that belied his age. In a year where Chicago’s rotation was often tested, Horton became its heartbeat — the arm that brought calm to chaos.
“Every time he took the mound,” said manager Craig Counsell, “you felt like you had a chance to win. That’s all you can ask from a rookie.”
The Rookie of the Year went to Arizona’s Jordan Lawlar, whose offensive fireworks captured the voters’ eyes. But across the league, few questioned Horton’s impact. What he brought wasn’t just performance — it was presence.
At Wrigley Field, fans began showing up early on “Horton Day.” Signs with “The Next Big Ace” and “Horton Hears a Win” filled the bleachers. The rookie had become not just a pitcher, but a promise — that the Cubs’ next era might already be here.

His journey has been anything but easy. A two-sport athlete at Oklahoma, Horton once balanced football dreams with baseball reality. A Tommy John surgery nearly derailed it all. But he came back stronger, reinvented his mechanics, and climbed through the minors like a man on a mission.
“I’ve always wanted to prove I belong,” Horton said after the announcement. “Finishing second doesn’t change that — it just means there’s more work to do.”
Inside the Cubs clubhouse, there was no disappointment — only pride. Veterans praised his maturity. Catchers lauded his command. “He’s got that quiet fire,” said teammate Nico Hoerner. “You can feel it before he even throws a pitch.”
The numbers tell one story. The poise tells another. When the Cubs faced elimination games in late September, Horton stepped up, delivering seven shutout innings under immense pressure. It wasn’t just a performance — it was a message: he’s ready to lead.
In a league obsessed with velocity and hype, Horton’s rise has felt refreshingly real. His demeanor is calm, his preparation meticulous, his heart all-in. “He’s the kind of player Chicago falls in love with,” a Cubs insider said. “Blue collar, humble, relentless.”
For Cubs fans, this finish isn’t the end — it’s the beginning. The last time a young pitcher captured hearts like this at Wrigley, his name was Kerry Wood. Horton’s story may not mirror Wood’s exactly, but the echoes are there — the roar of the crowd, the sense of something new awakening.
Cade Horton didn’t need a trophy to validate his season. He already earned something rarer — the belief of a city that lives and breathes baseball.
And in Chicago, belief is everything.
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