Ian Happ wins the Gold Glove Award, the 1st Chicago Cubs left fielder to receive the honor
Chicago Cubs left fielder Ian Happ’s best all-around season is punctuated by new hardware.
Happ was named the National League Gold Glove Award winner in left field Tuesday. He is the first Cubs left fielder to win a Gold Glove since Rawlings introduced the award in 1957. Only three Cubs outfielders previously earned a Gold Glove: center fielder Bob Dernier (1984), right fielder Andre Dawson (1987 and 1988) and right fielder Jason Heyward (2016 and 2017).
“I grew up watching Omar Vizquel highlights and thinking his accomplishments with the glove were the coolest things in baseball,” Happ said Tuesday on a teleconference. “I was so obsessed with watching (his) defensive highlights and having his model glove. It was a 9¾ (glove) that I had no business wearing.
“To be able to have this one on the mantel and have the award with my name on it is really, really cool.”
The Milwaukee Brewers’ Christian Yelich and Arizona Diamondbacks’ David Peralta were the other finalists.
“It’s been awesome just to be in that one spot and really feel like I’m owning it and taking advantage of the opportunity to go out there every day and get better and better,” Happ said near the end of the season. “I think the metrics support (winning the award). It’s one of those things that you dream of as a kid and a pretty cool trophy.”
Happ graded well in advanced defensive metrics this season. He led NL left fielders in defensive runs saved (13) and ultimate zone rating (8.3). UZR measures a player’s total defensive performance by weighing errors, range and outfield arm.
Happ admitted Tuesday he was following the metrics of his peers in left to see whether he had a shot. He felt like he and the San Diego Padres’ Jurickson Profar were “neck and neck” in DRS at the midway point of the season, but Happ knew he had “an awesome August and kept that going” the final month.
“Before you know it, I was kind of running away with it,” he said.
Happ tallied a career-high eight assists, second-most at the position in the league. He also logged the second-most innings among NL left fielders and easily recorded the most putouts. Happ, coming off his first All-Star selection, will be a free agent after the 2023 season and hopes to stay if the Cubs are willing to sign him to a multiyear deal.
“I’ve been really upfront about the fact I love it here,” he said. “I can’t say this one thing (winning a Gold Glove) is going to be a determining factor of that, but the whole year, putting together (good stats) on the offensive and defensive side and the consistency from both sides of the plate, all those things give you a chance to be somewhere long term. And hopefully the value you generate is appreciated by everybody.”
Happ’s consistency in both phases of the game and his leadership in the clubhouse make him a good bet to be around awhile. He said he believes there have been “internal” conversations about a new contract, but nothing is imminent.
“Ian created that for himself,” Cubs manager David Ross said last month. “He identified what he wanted to be. Part of that was being consistent, part of that was expanding his game and being versatile. I know a lot of that has to do with getting at-bats and moving over to left field and a consistent spot.
“He’s getting such a well-rounded game and you’ve seen growth of a young man that’s gone through a lot of adversity and tried to please a lot of different people. And I think he’s learned over time this is when I’m going to be the best version of me and it’s been a really good version.”
The reliability of playing one position boosted Happ’s defensive consistency. All but 10 of his 142 starts came in left field this season; he started once in center field and nine times as the designated hitter.
It was a drastic change from the Cubs’ previous defensive usage of Happ since he debuted in 2017. He split last season predominantly between center field and left field while also appearing in eight games at second base and two at third base.
With Happ in left and Seiya Suzuki in right field, the Cubs head into next season with strong corner outfielders.
“It creates confidence,” Ross said. “It creates belief, it creates a stability.”
The Tribune’s Paul Sullivan contributed.