4 best beaches in Puerto Rico for hikers, private vibes and more

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Ebony Williams | (TNS) The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Puerto Rico is home to vibrant music, culture, history, authentic cuisine and stunning beaches. It’s no wonder it landed on U.S. News and World Report’s list of best beach destinations in the Caribbean for 2024.

The beautiful island lives up to its nickname, Isla de Encanto, the Island of Enchantment. It’s hard not to be taken away by the blue waters and white sandy beaches that are perfect for an escape from reality into the realm of the ultimate vacation mode.

If you’re looking for a great getaway, Puerto Rico is only four hours by air from Atlanta.

Its sunbaked landscape can help turn any vacation from party-centric to romantic. Here are four of the best beaches for those wanting a private vibe, a good hike, lots of activities and the perfect sunset.

Playa Escondida

Perfect for private vibes.

Known as the hidden beach of the island, Playa Escondida is about a 25-minute hike from the Seven Seas Beach through a mangrove forest. The secluded area is best enjoyed just lounging around while taking in the scenery. It’s an ideal spot for grabbing the perfect selfie but not for swimming. Puerto Rican authorities strongly discourage swimming at this beach, known for very strong and dangerous riptides.

Domes Beach

Top choice for sunset chasers.

Sunsets on the beach are not only romantic but also very calming. Almost any beach can make for the ideal sunset destination, but there’s one in particular many deem the most worthy in Rincón. Next to the Punta Higüero Lighthouse, Domes Beach is the top spot for various surfing competitions and has the best view of the Caribbean sunset.

Crash Boat

The best for activities.

This beach in Aguadilla offers a variety of amenities and activities locals and tourists gravitate toward. If you’re looking to surf, go boating, scuba diving, swimming, snorkeling or fishing, this is the best beach for you. It also has a playground for all ages just a few steps from the water — helping increase its appeal to families.

Survival Beach

Best for hikers.

If you’re up for a good hike, check the tidal times before lacing up your boots and heading to Survival Beach in Aguadilla. This beach trail has woodlands, hills, water and plenty of environmental attractions along the way, and takes roughly 15-20 minutes to complete. If taking this trek seems like a great idea, be mindful there are no amenities at this stretch of sand, so be prepared to bring water, food and a first aid kit.

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‘The lifeblood of the community’: States invest to save rural grocery stores

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Kevin Hardy | Stateline.org (TNS)

EMERSON, Neb. — Corliss Hassler rushes in the front door of Post 60 Market and heads straight for the produce case.

“I’m back,” she announces.

It’s around lunchtime, but it’s already her second trip in today — this time, she’s picking up a few items for the Friday fish fry at the local Catholic church.

Hassler is a regular customer and investor in the small grocery store, opened in 2022 as a cooperative. The store provides convenience, sure: It’s the only place in town to buy fresh fruits, vegetables and meats. But it’s also a social hub for the northeast Nebraska town of Emerson, population 891.

“The store is the lifeblood of the community,” Hassler said. “We have to keep our store, we have to keep our schools, we have to keep our churches — and it’s all a struggle right now.”

The market opened four years after the closure of the town’s only grocery store. Some 110 community members bought shares, which funded the transformation of a shuttered American Legion post into a brightly lit store packed with fresh and packaged foods.

Preserving grocery stores has been a perennial challenge for rural communities. Small, often declining populations make it tough to turn a profit in an industry known for its razor-thin margins. Increased competition from online retailers, the onslaught of chains such as Dollar General stores and an aging lineup of independent grocers have only made things tougher.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has tracked the decline of rural grocery stores.

By 2015, USDA research showed a total of 44 counties had no grocery store at all — all but four of the counties were rural.

In Kansas, 1 in 5 rural stores closed between 2008 and 2018, according to the Rural Grocery Initiative at Kansas State University. No new store has opened in half of the 105 communities that lost grocers over that time.

Proposed legislation at Nebraska’s capitol in Lincoln could provide some relief for stores like Post 60 Market.

If passed, the new law would provide grants and loans for small grocers. It’s among several legislative efforts in the region that aim to tackle the complex problem. In neighboring Kansas and Iowa, lawmakers have introduced bills with similar goals, following the lead of states — including Illinois, Minnesota, North Dakota and Oklahoma — that have enacted laws setting up special funds to boost rural grocery stores.

“We’re in a global economy and Amazon’s dominating, but that doesn’t mean we should surrender,” said Kansas state Sen. Rob Olson, a Republican.

For two years in a row, Olson has introduced bills that would provide tax incentives for the development of rural grocery stores. A native of rural Kansas who now represents a suburban Kansas City district, Olson said lawmakers should be investing in grocery stores, broadband and housing to improve rural communities.

“If we think about it and we’re smart about it, there’s plenty of opportunities — all throughout the Midwest especially — to grow these economies,” he said.

The pandemic underscored both the importance and fragility of rural grocery stores, said Jillian Linster, interim policy director at the nonprofit Center for Rural Affairs.

“After the pandemic, we have seen a lot of these local grocery stores just struggling to keep the doors open with all the economic and workforce challenges we face in the current economy and the competition from the big-box retailers,” she said.

Based in Lyons, Nebraska, the center has backed bills in both Nebraska and Iowa this session to provide small grants or loans to grocery stores with fewer than 25 employees in underserved communities. The hope is that providing money to replace a broken freezer or leaky roof could make the difference in keeping stores open.

Aside from preserving fresh food access, Linster said, grocery stores serve a wider social role.

“It’s a place where you see your neighbors, where your teenagers get their first job, where there’s a bulletin board with help wanted and things for sale,” she said. “So it’s a really important part of the social infrastructure in our small rural towns.”

Tom Mulholland stands near the site where a 2021 fire destroyed Mulholland Grocery, long a staple of Main Street in Malvern, Iowa. (Kevin Hardy/Stateline/TNS)

‘A service to the community’

Brian Horak knows his customers.

The general manager of Post 60 Market, he knows the busy mom who runs to the frozen foods aisle to find something for dinner that night. He knows the families that only load up their carts on paydays. And he knows when he should check up on someone who hasn’t been in for an unusually long stretch.

Emerson sits at the convergence of three counties, including one of Nebraska’s poorest.

The market can’t compete with the prices of mega retailers like Walmart. But Horak tries to at least beat the costs found at the regional grocery store chain 20 miles away and loads the shelves with plenty of generic options.

Still, some customers will pay with loose change. Others drop in to rummage through the bin of discounted items nearing their expiration dates.

Remote stores like this can struggle to secure vendors. No bakers will deliver fresh bread here, so all the sandwich bread, buns and cupcakes come in frozen. And the store only gets one delivery of fresh food every Wednesday.

“By Tuesday, the bananas start to look pretty sketchy,” Horak said.

But whatever it lacks in variety, the store makes up for in service. Horak will special order just about anything if customers ask.

On a back shelf, he’s set aside a case of Rice-A-Roni for one man, a pack of small Pepsi bottles for a woman in a nursing home and a case of wet cat food for a woman who feeds strays. One man has a standing order for a case of pickled beets every week.

There have been some months when Horak wasn’t sure Post 60 Market’s doors would remain open.

But things changed for the better in January, when a storm blanketed the region with record snow. The two-lane roads connecting Emerson to Sioux City were impassable for days, pushing many locals to try or rediscover Post 60 Market.

“It was kind of a wake-up call,” he said. “People were so happy the grocery store was here.”

The pending legislation could help with a litany of items on the market’s to-do list: a leaky basement, the rubber gaskets that need replacing on the produce cooler — not to mention the dream of a room to butcher fresh cuts of meat.

Named after the town’s former legion post, the co-op sold common shares for $500 and preferred shares for $1,000. While shareholders could one day see dividends, their investments were in reality more like contributions.

Nathan Mueller, who leads the co-op board, said the store just aims to break even.

“At its heart, this is a business,” he said. “But really, the business is being a service to the community.”

Nebraska state Sen. Teresa Ibach said rural grocery stores, whether they’re for-profit, cooperatives or nonprofits, deserve the state’s support.

“I think the trade-off is, if you’re willing to invest in small local communities, we are willing to invest in you.”

A Republican, Ibach sponsored the legislation that would set aside $4 million over two fiscal years for rural grocers. While the legislation got favorable reviews during its January hearing, Ibach was unsure whether it would advance out of committee.

“It’s got legs and it’s got substance and I hope it does, but we’re halfway through the session already,” she said. “And so who knows what will make it to the floor.”

If approved, the measure could help Greg’s Market in Exeter, Nebraska, about 50 miles west of Lincoln. The store has “a honey-do list a mile long,” said Mitchell Schlegelmilch, who leads the board overseeing its operation.

Just before he heard about the legislation, Schlegelmilch said, a freezer sensor failed, costing some $2,500 in spoiled inventory.

“It was a real punch in the gut,” he told lawmakers at the January hearing. “It just took our breath away.”

Investors aren’t looking to make money or even get their money back, Schlegelmilch said in an interview. Greg’s Market just aims to break even. So something as seemingly small as the failed sensor could pose an existential threat.

The legislation “gave me a sense of relief that maybe there is hope,” he said.

Community members in Emerson, Neb., transformed a shuttered American Legion hall into Post 60 Market, a cooperative grocery store serving the town of 891 people. (Kevin Hardy/Stateline/TNS)

Investing in grocery stores

Kathryn Draeger says rural communities need more than just dollar stores and gas stations.

“We need places where you can buy a kiwi, an onion, potato, beets,” she said.

The director of regional sustainable development partnerships at the University of Minnesota, Draeger works with grocery stores across the state. Aside from the health benefits of fresh food, she said, rural stores are key to building more resilient supply chains since they can procure products from a variety of small vendors.

Draeger advocated for a state program to improve healthy food access that began offering grants to rural and urban stores in 2017. Last year, the state agriculture department funded 15 projects at a cost of $426,862 — though nearly five times as much was requested.

“I believe every rural grocery store we lose is at our own peril,” Draeger said. “There’s so much public good in these small private businesses. That is why this public investment in this private sector is really important. “

Draeger recalled one Minnesota grocer who had to choose between fixing her broken front tooth or her store’s leaky roof.

“She chose the roof,” Draeger said. “So she worked at the cash register at the store she owned without a tooth for over a year.”

Just as important as money, though, is leadership, said North Dakota Democratic state Sen. Kathy Hogan. She co-sponsored a new law last year that made $1 million available to help preserve rural grocery stores. That money will only help if communities have strong leaders willing to work together, she said.

“Sometimes people think money is the answer to everything,” she said. “The secret of the success of this is not so much money but local organization.”

Republican state Sen. Janne Myrdal, another co-sponsor, said the legislation was inspired by the work of grocery stores, communities and schools in the northeast corner of the state. After struggling to find vendors willing to make small deliveries to remote areas, three stores formed a cooperative that can demand more inventory and better prices from suppliers — benefiting consumers, schools and businesses.

“As a conservative, I love seeing that happen,” Myrdal said.

The legislation required a local match from organizers and aims to pull multiple retailers and community organizations together to help stabilize deliveries and costs.

“I don’t believe in just handing out money from the government,” Myrdal said. “It has to rise from the bottom up.”

A town missing its ‘centerpiece’

People like to say the town of Malvern, Iowa, punches above its weight.

Though it’s home to fewer than 1,300 people, the town touts miles of bicycle trails, a community garden and public art sculptures. On Main Street: two restaurants, medical clinics, a bank, a pharmacy and even a fitness center.

But a fenced-in gaping hole is an obvious reminder of what’s missing: the town’s staple grocery store, lost in a 2021 fire.

Tom Mulholland was the fourth-generation owner of Mulholland Grocery, which traces its history to the 1870s.

Since the fire, the community has rallied around him. Meta, parent company of Facebook and Instagram, funded a documentary short film about the effort to rebuild the grocery store last year.

But even with an Oscar-winning documentarian as the director and scores of headlines, Mulholland has struggled. He’s faced problems with insurance, finances and construction headaches that set the rebuild back.

When the store was open, it was a hub of activity. People would drive long distances to buy from his meat counter. And in times of crisis, such as a recent flood in the area, customers would hand him cash, knowing he’d get it to the folks who needed it most.

“It’s those little things about being human and caring about your community and others that add up,” he said.

Mulholland, 63, could have walked away from the store. But he said it’s too important to the community — and his family. The morning after the fire, he wrote an apology to his ancestors on Facebook.

In an interview, he said: “My great-grandfather and my grandfather, everybody put in so many decades of sweat and tears and frustration and joy. And on my watch, it disappeared.”

After two years, people around town have grown weary of waiting for a store.

“In here it’s a big topic of conversation,” said Janella May, who owns C&M’s Cafe with her husband.

It’s a Main Street institution known for its ice cream and Cheeseburger Saturdays — $4.99 for a burger and fries. Weekday mornings, the place is home to a coffee klatch — a few older men around town have their own key to get in before the place opens.

“We need it here,” she said of the grocery store. “It’s important.”

Without Mulholland Grocery, Malvern residents must drive 15 minutes to reach another small-town grocery store or a half-hour to reach supermarket chains over near Omaha.

The absence of the grocery store is a sharp contrast to Malvern’s otherwise encouraging trajectory.

Some $40 million worth of new projects are in the works in the town, including public school renovations, a new subdivision and a new early education center.

“We’re a growing town,” said Jay Burdic, the president of Malvern Bank.

The third generation of his family to own the bank, Burdic is bullish on the community’s future.

But every day brings a reminder of what’s missing: His desk overlooks Main Street, directly across from the empty grocery store lot.

“It was the centerpiece of our Main Street,” he said. “And now it’s just a hole in the ground.”

Stateline is part of States Newsroom, a national nonprofit news organization focused on state policy.

Dita Von Teese’s Las Vegas residency taps into showgirl glamour and history

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Burlesque superstar Dita Von Teese has revived the stage at the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas in Nevada by paying homage to the long-running, classic Las Vegas showgirl revue, “Jubilee!,” while adding her own brand of sophisticated humor, glamour and the seductive art of the strip tease.

“Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue” includes lively music, two dozen dancers, costumes and accessories adorned with thousands of Swarovski crystals and thousands of pounds of vintage orange and pink feathers, custom Christian Louboutin shoes, a bejeweled mechanical bull, a glittering birdcage with a water feature and martini glasses large enough for a grown woman to sexily splash around in.

The Los Angeles resident’s first Las Vegas residency, which launched in late October 2023, has been a hit and recently expanded to four evenings a week (Wednesdays-Saturdays), with added dates currently stretching into mid-June.

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese uses numerous vintage Las Vegas showgirl costumes in her first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” which has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese uses numerous vintage Las Vegas showgirl costumes in her first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” which has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese uses numerous vintage Las Vegas showgirl costumes in her first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” which has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese uses numerous vintage Las Vegas showgirl costumes in her first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” which has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese performs her famous bull riding routine atop a mechanical bull adorned with jewels during her first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” which has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese’s first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” includes vintage feathers from Las Vegas showgirls and has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese’s first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese brought her famous martini glass routine to her first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” which has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

Burlesque performer and model Dita Von Teese’s first-ever Las Vegas residency, “Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue,” has taken over the Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas and will run various nights through June 15. (Photo by Fiestaban Photography)

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“I’m excited because I’m up against these massive conglomerate shows here and I’m just a little show,” Von Teese said during a recent phone interview. “OK, it’s really a big show, but compared to everything else here. I’m proud of what we’ve created and word is getting out. It is difficult to compete sometimes with the Cirque du Soleils of the world. It’s also not easy to make a showgirl revue and burlesque revue in this day and age and have people understand what it is until they see it. Once they see it, it’s like ‘Oh, this is totally relevant.’ It’s not just a ‘girlie show.’”

Von Teese is quick to point out, too, that there’s an equal number of men and women included in the program. It features a variety of acts that tip the hat to classic Las Vegas-style stage shows with showgirl dancing and a circus performance, paired with the myriad of original StripScapes with props created by Von Teese and her longtime creative partner Catherine D’Lish over the past 23 years.

A longtime admirer and collector of all things vintage, Von Teese said she couldn’t pass up this opportunity, especially when she discovered she’d have access to all of the costumes and accessories created by famous Hollywood designers Bob Mackie and Pete Menefee. The duo created the outfits for “Jubilee!,” the last true showgirl production, which ran from 1981 to 2016 at the Horseshoe Las Vegas and they’ve been stored at the venue since.

“These vintage costumes nobody can ever make again,” Von Teese said. “They’ve been carefully archived since ‘Jubilee!’ closed in 2016 and we have people who worked on ‘Jubilee!’ working on our wardrobe team, so everything is still perfectly cared for and they’ve rarely seen the light of day so there’s very little fade.”

“Every time I step into the wardrobe area, which is so massive, it’s so exciting and it feels like I’m getting high,” she continued. “I get like glamour eyes. For a vintage-lover like me, this has been a dream because I also discovered not only the ‘Jubilee!’ archives, but things from the show before, which was in the ’60s or ’70s. There’s a whole top floor with four huge rooms filled with vintage costumes.”

Von Teese and her crew took their time looking carefully through the wardrobe to select which costumes would be a part of the acts within the show.

“I’ve always been the person, whether it’s clothing or even a old house or building with history, I want to touch the walls and I want to think about the past,” she said. “Ever since I was little, I’ve always been really interested in things and what their past lives were.”

While it is inspired by “Jubilee!” Von Teese admits her new show is nothing like it. There’s subtle nods throughout since one of Von Teese’s favorite things to do in Las Vegas, aside from visiting The Liberace Museum, was to go see “Jubilee!” when she was in town.

“I loved it because it was high-camp and really it was the last revue of its kind,” she said. “It was the one with the Ziegfeld-style and this real showgirl stuff from the past. It was quintessential Las Vegas and there’s been nothing like it. I’m really excited that we have this show now on The Strip because people try to do a little vintage Las Vegas, but, I’m sorry, I don’t think unless you live vintage culture, you don’t get into the minutiae and details and understand why it was good. But I do.”

While using vintage costuming and the old-school “Jubilee!” props and practical staging, Von Teese is also bringing in some newer technology as she has incorporated her video projection mapping striptease act, which was originally created by Ali Mahdavi for her at The Crazy Horse Paris.

“It’s the most tedious part of the night for me,” she admits. “It’s just very precise in the body positions because we’re not quite at the point with nudity, where you can have the mapping follow you precisely, so I really have to hit those marks.”

Fans of Taylor Swift’s 2022 “Bejeweled” music video will be delighted to know that Von Teese has included the very martini glasses that she and Swift swirled around in during the video into her Las Vegas show.

“I need to text her and have her come out because she’d love this,” Von Teese said, noting that working with Swift, who also directed the “Bejeweled” music video, was a wonderful experience.

“She’s so smart and savvy and lovely,” she said while adding that Swift took to the moves easily as the pair did a lesson together to get the performance down for the martini glass scene. “I was so impressed with her directing that video. Usually pop stars are like ‘Hey, can I borrow that glass’ or ‘Can I copy that?’ It was great to have someone say ‘Let’s do this side by side so people can know where it came from.’ You don’t get that everyday in Hollywood.”

‘Dita Las Vegas: A Jubilant Revue’

When: 9 p.m. Wednesdays-Saturdays through June 15

Where: Jubilee Theater at Horseshoe Las Vegas, 3645 Las Vegas Blvd., Las Vegas

Tickets: $59-$378 at Ticketmaster.com/DitaVegas

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Chicago Cubs prospect updates: Matt Shaw focusing on 3rd base, while Brennen Davis is ‘super ready for a fresh start’

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Matt Shaw understands the value in defensive versatility.

It’s the same messaging second baseman Nico Hoerner delivered to Shaw and other 12 Chicago Cubs prospects while meeting with them during the organization’s annual development camp at Wrigley Field last week. Hoerner explained how much it helped that he was able to play multiple infield positions and in the outfield.

Hoerner’s perspective resonated with Shaw, the Cubs’ first-round pick last year.

“You look at guys like that, they’re in the organization that have been really successful, you’re like, OK, that makes sense, that’s the type of guy they want,” Shaw said last weekend at the Cubs Convention. “And so you want to be that guy.”

Shaw estimated that 99% of his defensive reps this offseason have been at third base. Only three of his 38 starts last year came at third, all with Double-A Tennessee near the end of the season.

“It’s just something I wanted to do,” Shaw said. “I did shortstop, obviously, the last couple of years and I haven’t been able to get a lot of reps at third. So now I was, like, might as well spend some time get used to the position and get comfortable there.”

With how the Cubs’ big-league roster is constructed, third base represents the clearest pathway to the majors for the 22-year-old Shaw, who crushed pitching after being drafted in June en route to reaching Double A on Aug. 30. One defensive question mark coming into the organization centered on his arm strength. Shaw agreed that he “absolutely” needs to continue working on it.

Defense and arm strength have been the focus of Shaw’s offseason work. Part of his routine has included throwing a football to build strength.

“You read stuff and what people don’t realize is that you got six, seven months in the offseason to work on these things so it’s just something you look forward to coming to spring training and the season is that you’ve had a lot of time to work on it,” Shaw said. “You just kind of slowly piece it together and get a little bit better. And over the long term, it makes a big difference so that’s something I’m really excited for this spring.”

Cade Horton ready to build off debut season

Horton isn’t a big goal setter.

The Cubs’ top pitching prospect prefers staying within the process and taking everything one day at a time.

“If I go and get better each and every day, then it’ll ultimately lead to where I want to be in the end,” Horton said.

The Cubs have not been afraid to aggressively promote prospects. Horton experienced that firsthand last year during his first season in professional baseball. He opened with Low-A Myrtle Beach, with whom he made four starts before earning a promotion to High-A South Bend. He posted a 3.83 ERA with 12.4 strikeouts per nine innings, prompting an early-August promotion to Tennessee. In four starts spanning 14 1/3 innings, Horton owned a 1.26 ERA and struck out 38.2% of the batters he faced.

The Cubs showed they were willing to give big starts to young talent when they called up lefty Jordan Wicks in September.

“You go out there and you just try to compete, and at the end of the day, promotions are out of your control,” Horton said. “So I like to focus on what I can control and that’s going out there, staying in my routine and going out there and competing.”

The 2023 season represented the first time Horton focused solely on pitching. He learned to develop a routine and how he wants his week to look between starts while continuing to develop his changeup and curveball.

Horton hasn’t talked to the front office yet about the opportunities that could be in front of him.

“There is a possibility out there, but also I have to go out there and perform and do what I do,” Horton said. “So there’ll be a time and place for that but nothing yet.”

Brennen Davis ‘super ready’ for a fresh start

Describing the last two years for Davis as challenging might be underselling what the organization’s former top prospect has endured.

Injuries have limited Davis, 24, to only 105 games at Triple-A Iowa the last two years, sidelined by back surgery in 2022 and a hernia/core-muscle procedure in 2023 that kept the outfielder out three months until mid August.

“I feel like we talked about this last year, but I’m super ready for a fresh start,” Davis said with a smile. “2024 is going to be a big year for me.”

Davis said his right side had been bothering him since 2021 when he had first complained about it. Then, when he went into surgery, his left side showed an old injury, likely from compensation. Ultimately both sides were repaired.

“It’s not ideal, but I was able to play through it for a good bit but never really felt quite 100%,” Davis said.

Davis spent the beginning of the offseason building back strength. Although it took time to get to a place where he physically felt comfortable, Davis said he’s well past that point with spring training one month away.

“It’s a great opportunity,” Davis said. “I need to handle my stuff. I know I’m a great player and everybody’s seen me perform. I just need to show everybody why they think so highly of me.”

As Davis works to regain his form, external projections have seen the 2021 Futures Game MVP fall down prospect rankings. Baseball America doesn’t have him in the Cubs’ top 10 preseason rankings after putting him at No. 2 this point last year, while MLB.com had Davis at No. 19 at the end of the season.

Davis isn’t worrying about outside perspectives.

“It’s all noise,” Davis said. “The goal has been the same goal since Day 1 — be a big-leaguer and be able to help the big-league club win. The rankings, I said it when I was at the top and I’ll say it now: It’s somebody’s opinion. It’s not who you are as a baseball player. It’s the value that you are bringing to the team based on how well you perform on the field.”

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