Mike Stigers took the top job at Cub Foods in the spring of 2019, when no one working for the largest grocery chain in the Twin Cities was certain about its future.
Target was closing in on Cub's crown as the region's grocery king. Hy-Vee, the Iowa giant that dominates much of the Midwest, was opening several new stores a year in the market. Even European discounter Aldi had grabbed a solid share of Minnesotans' grocery dollars.
And what's more, its new owner, United Natural Foods Inc., a wholesale specialist that bought Cub's parent, Supervalu, in 2018, wanted to sell Cub and the other remnants of Supervalu's retail division. Cub employees knew executives like Stigers would be the first to go when a deal came through.
"The communication that we gave to the team every day is that if someone buys Cub, they're going to buy the best grocery company there is and let's be the best grocery company there is," Stigers said recently.
Today, Cub remains atop the Twin Cities market and is churning more profits for UNFI than it did in its last years under Supervalu. UNFI's executives say it's no longer for sale. Cub executives are drawing up plans for new stores to add to the 79 it already has.

Like many large grocery chains, Cub flourished in the pandemic when people who were forced to stay home from work and school changed their eating patterns. "Consumer trends, consumer needs, the pandemic, all of those things together have put the wind at the back of Cub," said Phil Lempert, editor of supermarketguru.com.
But even in 2019, while UNFI was seeking buyers, Cub continued to open and remodel stores, though not as many as the year before. In May that year, Stigers told the Star Tribune, "There's no slowing down the growth of this brand as we look for the correct suitor in the future."
Stigers, 63, began his career as a part-time courtesy clerk at Safeway in 1974 and worked his way up the management ranks at grocers and in other industries. He joined Supervalu in 2011 as president of Shaw's and Star Market grocery stores in New England. Supervalu sold those stores in 2013 and Stigers moved to the Twin Cities to take a leadership role in Supervalu's wholesale business, its largest.