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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Maddie Lee

‘Winning mindset’: How Cubs shortstop Dansby Swanson’s attention to detail has made itself obvious

Dansby Swanson’s attention to detail has come through in anecdote after anecdote at Cubs training camp. (John Antonoff/For the Sun-Times)

MESA, Ariz. — Before meeting with the Cubs in December, then-free agent Dansby Swanson read through a packet his agents put together on the team, jotting down notes as he went. 

“It was an important meeting for both parties,” Swanson said. “It was important to be prepared going into meetings and to understand fully what I could potentially be getting myself into.” 

He’d taken that kind of approach with every team he considered, looking up and down prospect lists, digging into player performance, finding out how many games individuals played — that was a big one for Swanson, who played all 162 games on the Braves’ schedule last year. 

Swanson is now five spring training games into his Cubs tenure, and in that short time, his attention to detail has come through in anecdote after anecdote. 

“The way the mind works stands out to me,” manager David Ross said. “He’s always thinking about how to get an edge. It’s a winning mindset. Everything he’s talking about or doing is either giving you a hard time about not being perfect, or giving you a little bit of the knowledge that he’s learned in his time in other places. And it’s always surrounded by winning.”

Take Swanson’s pre-pitch routine for example. He’s not just waiting in the infield for PitchCom to tell him what’s coming. He calls his own game in his head, he said after coming out of a spring training game against the Padres on Friday. And when something stands out to him, he talks to the pitcher about it. 

“As an infielder, I see certain things,” he said. “I …. pick their brains on why they do certain things and give my input on what I believe and what I think and things to watch out for. So it’s really us just being able to help one another.”

This particular edge has been part of Swanson’s game for the past three years, he said. He learned a lot about pitching from conversations with Braves catching coach Sal Fasano and catcher Travis d’Arnaud.

“I’m a believer of, if it’s gonna help us win, then I need to know about it and need to be able to help others with it too,” Swanson said. “I just feel like it’s part of my duty, and I kind of enjoy it.”

For Cubs lefty Drew Smyly, who played with Swanson on that 2021 World Series champion Braves team, those kinds of conversations usually happened in between starts, when they were sitting on the bench together, swapping observations about how that day’s pitcher was attacking hitters.  

Smyly, a 10-year veteran, acknowledges that the game can feel slow for an observer, something MLB is trying to rectify with rule changes like the pitch clock.

“But in the moment, in real time, you’ve got a million thoughts going through your head, and it’s sped up,” Smyly said. “And the good players, they’re better at slowing it down and being able to process pitch to pitch and at-bat to at-bat. Dansby’s really good at that.” 

Smyly could see it on the other side, facing Swanson, too. It was almost like going up against a catcher who was thinking along with the pitcher. 

Outside of game action, Swanson’s attention to detail shows up in early work on the field, in the batting cage. 

“All the work that he does has a purpose,” hitting coach Dustin Kelly said. “There’s not a swing that he takes that doesn’t have the exact purpose of what he wants to accomplish. It’s not about getting loose or taking a couple swings to feel his body. From the time he steps in the cage, there’s an agenda of what he wants to get done, how he wants to feel, and the work just dictates off of that.” 

Swanson’s preparation and “winning mindset” were clear to Ross even when the Cubs were recruited. When Ross, president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer and general manager Carter Hawkins met with Swanson and his camp at a Maggiano’s Little Italy in Atlanta, the shortstop pressed them on how the Cubs were going to win and how they were going to make him better. 

Now that Ross sees Swanson every day, his preoccupation with gaining an edge is, if anything, even more obvious. 

“He holds guys accountable to that standard,” Ross said. “That’s the difference. And the details are what matter.”

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