Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Now a Rockie, Bryant won’t forget past

Former Cubs All-Star grateful for the seven seasons in Chicago

- By Meghan Montemurro

DENVER — Four cameras staked out a spot in front of Kris Bryant’s locker in the Colorado Rockies clubhouse, a sight that was hard for him to miss as he approached after pregame batting practice.

The Chicago Cubs’ fourgame series against the Rockies isn’t Bryant’s first time facing his former team for which he earned every notable personal and team accolade a big-leaguer can achieve. No, that came in early August after Bryant was sent to San Francisco as part of one-third of the Cubs’ opening-day roster being traded at the deadline.

“I enjoyed my time in Chicago, but I don’t know if it warrants a press conference every time I play them,” a smiling Bryant said before Thursday’s series opener at Coors Field.

As Bryant embarks on the next chapter of his career in Colorado, he isn’t forgetting his past.

“I don’t know if that chapter will ever close until I’m done playing baseball because I rely on a lot of what I went through there to make me who I am now and help me in the future with the guys here,” Bryant said. “So I’m not ever going to close that chapter because I had a lot of fun there.”

The Rockies in March

gave Bryant a seven-year, $182 million contract with a no-trade clause. Testing free agency yielded Bryant the big deal he showed he was worth during his seven seasons with the Cubs.

“It doesn’t feel like I thought it would feel, like, I’m still like I was before I got traded or signed a contract, mentally or just competitio­n-wise,” Bryant said. “But I can fall back on the fact that

I know where I’m going to be and I don’t have to hear any rumors or any of that. So there’s a peace in that.”

Bryant was diplomatic when he spoke in the visitors’ dugout at Wrigley Field in September about whether an offseason reunion with the Cubs was still possible post-trade to the Giants. He indicated nothing would be ruled out, and, it turns out, he indeed meant that. Bryant

stated there were “very preliminar­y talks” with the Cubs on “shorter-term stuff.”

His focus now is on getting the Rockies into the postseason, and his foundation with the Cubs will play a part in that.

“It’s just a part of me and it’s part of who I am,” Bryant said. “It’s part of why I’m able to be in the position that I am today, and there’s a lot of gratefulne­ss and thanks to

be had all around . ... A special time in my life, and I won’t ever forget it.”

There won’t be many familiar faces when Bryant looks across to the visitors’ dugout during the four-game series at Coors Field. Righthande­r Kyle Hendricks, catcher Willson Contreras, outfielder Jason Heyward and manager David Ross are his only teammates remaining on the Cubs from the 2016 championsh­ip team. Bryant said he always knew Ross would make a great manager and is very happy for his success, though he couldn’t pass up a chance to rib Ross.

“I mean, it’s hard to see him as a manager because I just think back to ‘Dancing with the Stars,’ ‘Saturday Night Live,’ looking like a fool,” Bryant said. “But a really good friend of mine, and he’s always been in my corner, and I’m always going to be in his corner — just not

when we’re playing each other.”

When informed Bryant had mentioned his stint on “Dancing with the Stars,” Ross joked, “I’m going to kill him.”

“I see the human side a little bit more than like the production side — I mean obviously his numbers you guys get to see and can judge that,” Ross said. “But what I see is a guy who cares a lot about how things are perceived, how his teammates feel about him, how he’s viewed publicly. He cares a lot about being a really good baseball player and he’s a good family guy.”

Bryant wants to do for the Rockies what players such as Ben Zobrist, Jon Lester and John Lackey did for him and the other younger Cubs en route to ultimately winning the 2016 World Series title.

“I really want to embrace that opportunit­y I have here to do that,” Bryant said.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? Colorado Rockies left fielder Kris Bryant, left, jokes with Cubs head athletic trainer P.J. Mainville before Thursday’s game in Denver.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP Colorado Rockies left fielder Kris Bryant, left, jokes with Cubs head athletic trainer P.J. Mainville before Thursday’s game in Denver.
 ?? LM OTERO/AP ?? Bryant, left, is congratula­ted by teammate Ryan McMahon after scoring on a triple by teammate C.J. Cron against the Rangers on Monday.
LM OTERO/AP Bryant, left, is congratula­ted by teammate Ryan McMahon after scoring on a triple by teammate C.J. Cron against the Rangers on Monday.

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