Posts Tagged ‘Jim Thome’

Long Day for the Sox

Monday, July 21st, 2008

After a long day that included a statue unveiling, a major milestone, a trip to the DL for one Sox starter, and two starting pitchers who didn’t see the fifth inning, the Chicago White Sox finally lost to the Kansas City Royals 8-7

After the pomp and circumstance of the pre-game ceremony honoring Harold Baines ended, starters John Danks and Bryan Bannister each labored through the early innings. The bullpen’s for both teams settled the game down. Ultimately, the Kansas City Royals were able to come up with the victory after Esteban German, who seemed to torture the Sox all game long, hit a two-run double in the bottom of the eighth to give the Royals the lead for good.

Ross Gload, a former Sox first basemen, also did damage to his former team by going 1-2 with two RBIs.

“We played terrible,” Sox manager Ozzie Gullien said. “We gotta worry about us. Kansas City showed up and kicked our butts.”

The White Sox did have some good news as Jim Thome collected his 2,000 career hit in the seventh inning. He is now just one of nine players to get 2,000 hits and 1,500 walks.

“That’s a lot of hits,” Thome said. “But the most special thing was hitting it the other way. It’s been something I’ve been working on the last two to three weeks.”

In addition to the loss, the Sox received some bad news on the injury front. Jose Contreras was put on the D.L. retroactive to July 18 due to a sore shoulder. Nick Masset is expected to make the start for Contreras Tuesday night against Texas. Sox right fielder Jermaine Dye was also hit by a pitch and suffered a bruised knee. He is day-to-day. After the game, Sox reliever Adam Russell was optioned to Triple-A Charlotte.

Thanks to a Twins loss on Sunday, the Sox remain in first place going into a series with the Texas Rangers. The Sox are hoping to avenge a series defeat just before the All-Star break.

“We’re in for a dogfight,” Sox outfielder Nick Swisher said. “We need to take care of the things we can take care of.”

Sox Honor Baines

Before the game Harold Baines was given a statue in his honor in right field. Hosted by NBC’s Warner Saunders, Baines unveiled his statue and even spoke about this honor. A man of a few words, Baines thanked his family, friends, and teammates. Coming close to breaking down, Baines was still able to finish his speech.

Former Sox third basemen Robin Ventura was one of many there to honor his former teammate.

“It’s a great deserving honor,” Ventura said. “After everything he’s done in leading the way for the White Sox and went about his business, he’s really shown everyone what it takes to succeed.”

Ventura believes that although he never hit sixty home runs or put up some of the gaudy numbers witnessed in the 90s, he was very consistent throughout his career.

Sox catcher A.J. Pierzynski agreed. “He’s been great for the Sox. He embodies the Sox, and is a class guy.”

A Tale of Two Sweeps

Monday, June 30th, 2008

It seemed only fitting that this year’s Crosstown Showdown ended in the same fashion it started – with a sweep.

“I think it’ll be a different Monday in Chicago,” White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said after the White Sox swept the Cubs on Sunday night in a 5-1 win at U.S. Cellular Field, just one week after being swept at Wrigley Field. “I bet White Sox fans can’t wait to go to work.”

As half the city starts the day feeling refreshed, the other will be asking itself what happened. Last week’s North Side hero, Aramis Ramirez, was 0-13 during this series and the pitching staff – without staff ace Carlos Zambrano – gave up 21 runs.

While Guillen mentioned that he had instructed his pitchers to pound Ramirez inside, it seemed that his Cubs counterpart Lou Piniella had no strategy against the Sox bats as Carlos Quentin, Brian Anderson and Jim Thome each homered in Sunday’s game.

Lou’s frustrations culminated in the second inning when he was ejected for the first time all season after disputing first base umpire Chad Fairchild’s ruling on a checked swing by Joe Crede.

The Cubs’ troubles with the play calls didn’t end there, as bench coach Alan Trammel came out of the dugout to argue with Fairchild’s call on an out in the fifth.

“That’s what happens in the heat of the battle,” said Trammel after the game. “Half the time we see a replay and we’re wrong, and tonight we [and the umpires] just didn’t agree.”

There was nothing disagreeable about Sox starter Mark Buehrle’s performance, as he went seven innings with one unearned run and five strikeouts. It also helped that the Sox defense turned four double plays while the offense added three home runs.

Quentin, who hit his 19th home run of the season, was so amped up he forgot to touch home plate on his way around the bases. Thome was more sentimental about his 522nd career homer in the eighth, as it pushed him past Willie McCove and Ted Williams on the all time list in 16th place.

“It’s very humbling and surreal to be among [McCovey and Williams],” Thome said. “Looking back someday, it will be something to be very proud of.”

Although the Crosstown series ended in a tie, the two teams go back to regular league play with different outlooks. With Sunday’s win, the South Siders look forward to a seven game homestand while the Cubs leave Chicago for the West Coast in the midst of a seven-game road losing streak.

In addition to having starting pitcher Carlos Zambrano out of the rotation, the Cubs’ lineup will be without Aramis Ramirez, who is missing three games in San Francisco due to a family matter in his native Dominican Republic.

“We’ve lost four in a row and need to kind of regroup and try to win a ballgame in San Francisco,” said Trammel after the game.

What a difference a week makes.

More Than a Ballgame - Or Is It?

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

The stadium is packed with over 39,000 cheering fans – a sellout crowd all hyped up just to see a ballgame at US Cellular Field.

This isn’t just a ballgame however, it’s the Crosstown Classic. To Cubs and Sox fans alike, this six-game series is one of the most intense ones of their lives. They wait anxiously for these two weekends to see Chicago’s best in baseball battle it out. Fights break out constantly between some fans that live or die by this series.

But what about the players? Are these games really a big deal?

22808053080_white_sox_v_rays.jpgWhite Sox catcher A.J. Pierzynski is known for being involved in some controversy, especially in the 2006 Crosstown Classic. On May 20, 2006 Sox outfielder Brian Anderson hit a sacrifice fly to score Pierzynksi who collided with Cubs catcher Michael Barrett while crossing the plate. Barrett, now a San Diego Padre, then punched Pierzynski in the jaw after the Sox catcher reached back and tagged home plate. So far, nothing that extreme has happened this year, but you never know when it comes to the Cubs and Sox.

Pierzynski said he wishes the series could be just like any other.

“You try to look at it as another game but at the same time there’s definitely a different electricity in the air,” he said. “You have two teams in one city split half and half. The fans are very passionate about their team and want their team to win.”

Anderson agrees and said that the series has more of an entertainment aspect than anything, but that he doesn’t want it to affect his game.

“The media hypes it up but we can’t let it get to us and control the way we play.”

Sox outfielder Nick Swisher is new to the Cubs and Sox rivalry and didn’t let the hype get to him on Friday’s game. Swisher hit a grand slam – the sixth Sox grand slam this season – in the bottom of the third to give the Sox an 8-0 lead. It didn’t matter to Swisher that they were playing the Cubs.

“As players we have to treat it as just another game because if we don’t, we get all caught up in the hype and it takes you out of the game.”

White Sox Manager Ozzie Guillen takes the series a little more seriously. Guillen said he was surprised that he hadn’t won a game against Cubs Manager Lou Piniella this year and really wants to beat the Cubs.

“I just want to win because I’m tired of fans calling me names,” Guillen said. “I don’t know why they hate me because we lost against the Cubs. It’s just unbelievably ridiculous. I just want to win to tear the fans away from my butt.”

Guillen also said that the fans shouldn’t take it as seriously as they do.

“(If) fans think this game is more important than the ones we’re going to play in Kansas City and Detroit then they’re wrong. I don’t care what kind of pride they have or how much they think they’re going to be abused for (us) losing against the Cubs. I get abuse too.”

Whether they felt it or not, it was definitely a different kind of atmosphere in the ballpark on Friday. Sox fans were hoping for at least one win against the Cubs and Cubs fans were hoping for another sweep this weekend. What about those fans that are in between?

White Sox General Manager Ken Williams believes that this series is very important to Chicago, no matter what side you’re on.

“I think it reverts back to the Chicago pride thing,” he said. “It’s too bad that the rivalry is so intense that you can’t allow yourself to revert back to a little pride for your city and your neighbor.”

However, deep down Williams wants to win this not only for some city pride but also for himself.

“I’m a competitive person and I want to beat everyone,” Williams said. “When there’s a team eight miles north of you and you are sharing a marketplace, as the person responsible, I want to make sure that we did our fair share. That shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone.”

Sox designated hitter Jim Thome says these games are pretty intense and a lot of fun. He said that they’re big games for the city, especially for bragging rights. However he does believe the main focus for the team should just be winning the division.

Many of the players agree that the fans and the media hype up the series a little too much. Tickets are impossible to get and extremely expensive, and it could be frightening getting caught in just a verbal argument between Cubs and Sox fans.

However, Sox third baseman Joe Crede says this kind of hype is good for both teams.

“Anything that’s positive for the game of baseball I’m all for it,” he said. “It’s fun coming to the ballpark knowing you’re going to have a sellout crowd.”

It’s known that the Sox have nothing against the Cubs and really only care about the game. They don’t take it as personally as the fans do. They just want to play ball and win. The main focus of conversation with the Sox was concentrating on staying in first place.

“(The fans) just need to realize that it’s not just us against the Cubs,” Thome said.

The Sox beat the Cubs on Friday 10-3, the Crosstown Classic continues through Sunday.

Kenny “Stay Out of White Sox Business” Williams vs. Ozzie “The Vicious Venezuelan” Guillen – EliteXC’s next ratings-grabber?

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

Sorry Ozzie, but the Wizard of Oz is already taken and your “I never cared to learn English particularly well” accent makes it hard to forget where you come from. That said, I’m on your side in this thing – outside of my possibly insensitive headline.

Let’s backtrack a little, so we can start at the beginning. I think that’s usually the best place to begin. Specifically, let’s rewind to when Ozzie said this:

Just be ready, because I expect movement Tuesday. I expect Kenny Williams to do something Tuesday. And if we don’t do anything Tuesday, there are going to be a lot of lineup changes. That’s all I’m going to say about the offense.

It can be me. It can be [hitting coach] Greg Walker. It can be the players. It could be anybody. I’m sick and tired to watch this thing for a year and a half. I’m not protecting anybody anymore. Fuck it. If they can’t get it done, Kenny should find someone to get it done. That’s it… If we think we are going to win with the offense we have, we are full of shit. I’m just being honest.

Now, call me crazy, but I don’t see what all the fuss is about. Outside of the f-bomb that Ozzie dropped (an f-bomb that you will often see represented as a [bleep] on high-falootin’ sports websites, but you get the full effect of here on CSR… fuck it, you know?) what exactly is so wrong with his statements? Sounds like a frustrated manager blowing off some steam after a loss where his team left about 342 men on base.

phpxx8konpm.jpgShould we take it more slowly? I see a manager who’s fed up with a bunch of underperforming power hitters – a manager who pledged to play a different kind of baseball when he came here, and who played that kind of ball all the way to a World Series Championship in 2005. And now his team is back to that same, pre-2005 style – wait around for a three-run homer.

They can’t make anything happen with small ball, so if the big boppers don’t hit, these White Sox won’t get it done. And how are those big boppers doing, again? Oh, yeah… Jim Thome and Paul Konerko are hitting .212 and .205, respectively, and have combined for 16 homers and 52 RBI; which is only 13 RBI short of Josh Hamilton’s power stats.

By the way, Hamilton is just one dude (I know that could be confusing if you don’t follow the AL very closely). And if you’re not convinced that Thome and Konerko combined equal one good power hitter, note that rookie phenom Carlos Quentin is only two homers and four RBI away from out-performing the Thome/Konerko combination.

So Ozzie tells us, albeit in an angry tone, that if nobody new is gonna be brought into town, he’s going to shake things up. To wit – fuck it.

And what’s wrong with this, exactly? Is pointing out that many of the Sox current hitters have now sucked when it matters for a year-and-a-half a big no-no? When a team can’t hit, should a manager pretend everything is hunky dory? I think not.

Which brings us to Kenny Williams’ response. Specifically, by email to the Chicago Tribune, this:

It’s just not a good idea to throw your boss under the bus, especially when that boss has had your back as much as I have had his. I expect this team, if the leadership remains positive and the players stick together and continue to play hard, it will be a fun summer.

Maybe I’m missing something. Is suggesting that a general manager should do something to fix a broken team the equivalent of “tossing him under the bus”? And moreover, Kenny Williams hired Guillen, knows the volatile manager well and has – as he felt the need to mention – “had his back” consistently over the last few years. Is this sort of comment out of character, or in any way surprising?

Ozzie didn’t say, “Kenny fucked this thing up, and he needs to fix it.” That would be throwing his GM under the bus.

The fact is, Kenny put together a team that he thought would have a fast, base-stealing leadoff man in Jerry Owens; a tough, grind-it-out two hitter in Nick Swisher; a still-powerful middle of the order with Jermaine Dye, Thome and Konerko; and then a ton of upside in the bottom half with Orlando Cabrera, Joe Crede, AJ Pierzynski and whatever mess ended up at second base.

As it turns out, Owens never panned out, Swisher is the biggest disappointment ever (with Cabrera a close second) and the only power hitters getting anything done are Dye and Quentin. It’s not that Kenny should have seen this coming, necessarily – most people were more concerned about the team’s pitching going into the season, and it’s been the supposed “back end of the rotation” (Danks, Floyd and Contreras) keeping the Sox afloat all year.

But now – now that this group of hitters is failing, rather miserably – isn’t it fair to suggest that the GM do something? I think it is – and I think it’s unfair, and unwise, for said GM to take such clearly off-the-cuff comments so personally. Maybe there’s nothing he can do right now, and that’s fine; then go speak to Ozzie privately, and tell him to go ahead and make some lineup changes, because roster changes are just not realistic.

But to snap back, to make this into a two-way controversy, was stupid. It’s the same stupidity that led Williams to tell Frank Thomas to “stay out of White Sox business.” And it’s probably the same stupidity that makes him a good, smart, tough GM and that makes him so partial to Ozzie as a coach.

They’re a couple of loose cannons, and these spats will happen. Nobody is right, nobody is particularly wrong. Outside of everyone overreacting to it, I’m not sure there’s a whole hell of a lot of news here.

As this article is being posted on the web, Ozzie and Kenny are sitting down to discuss this. Here’s basically how I see this meeting going:

Kenny: So, what’s the problem Ozzie? Why are you throwing my name around the news.

Ozzie: Sorry Kenny, I’m just pissed about how nobody on this fucking team can hit, and it’s really fucking getting to me. I’m just not sure how I can keep this shit-train on the winning tracks without at least one guy that gets on base and makes things happen.

Kenny: I know, I know, things are rough. But right now, there’s just nothing I can do about bringing anyone new to town, and we really don’t have much help in the minor leagues, so I’m gonna need you to just do what you can for now with what we have. I know there’s a problem, and I’m gonna try to fix it. But for now, just try to hold on to first place.

Ozzie: Ok. But if they keep leaving runners on base, I’m probably going to lose my temper again.

Kenny: That’s totally cool with me, just so long as you don’t mention my name when you’re yelling and swearing.

Ozzie: Ok, cool. Hug it out?

Kenny: Sure.

They hug.

It’s kinda like in high school, when you and your best buddy got upset at each other, and screamed “fuck you” back and forth a few times; and then you rolled around on the ground a little until somebody twisted an arm or cut themselves, and then you looked at each other and were like, “alright, we’re cool.”

And it’s cool. Seriously cool – not like when girls say they’re cool and then talk about each other behind their backs for the next month, but just cool. Maybe you’re not as close as you once were, maybe you’re even a little closer.

It doesn’t much matter. The season keeps moving.

There is the possibility, of course, that Guillen is crazy like a fox – that all this is just his way of flipping the script on the media. Because an interesting thing has happened here…

The White Sox sit in first place, a half-game ahead of the Minnesota Twins in what has become essentially the worst division in baseball. Sure, the AL Central was supposed to be murderer’s row this year; but Cleveland can’t hit, Detroit can’t pitch and Minnesota has no players to speak of, so the Sox have gotten ahead by just playing decent baseball and getting some fantastic innings from their 3, 4 and 5 starters and their made over bullpen.

There are a lot of obvious problems with this team, a lot of questions that should be receiving media coverage:

Why are Thome and Konerko stinking it up for the second straight year? What’s the deal with Nick Swisher, the best-marketed flop in MLB history? Why did we trade a young, workhorse pitcher for an over-the-hill, son-of-a-bitch shortstop that can’t hit and calls the official scorer to complain about errors? How come our GM put together a team that has to sit around and wait for homers when he says he hates teams that have to sit around and wait for homers – isn’t that why we sucked in 2004?

Instead, what you’re reading in the Chicago papers is something more like this: “What’s Ozzie’s problem? He’s got a first place club, and he’s being this hard on them? Why’s he throwing his GM under the bus?”

In a good division the Sox would be in the middle of the pack, and there are more than a handful of local writers who would be happy to skewer everyone involved. Instead, again, Ozzie is the subject of virtually every bit of skewering. If he doesn’t mind it, I don’t see the problem, and I’m sure the players aren’t bothered by dozens of sports media outlets jumping to their defense.

I’m not going to sit here and tell you that everything Ozzie does is planned out to the Nth degree as a ploy to distract the media – that would be ridiculous. But don’t think he doesn’t know how everyone will respond when he swears a little and criticizes everyone from his veteran sluggers to his longtime hitting coach to team management.

Then again, maybe I’m wrong. Maybe it’s just a manager on the edge, flying off the handle because he’s sick and tired of watching his hitters take strike three with a runner in scoring position in extra innings. And I wouldn’t have a problem with that either.

Maybe Ozzie isn’t some sort of crazy genius. Maybe he’s just the Vicious Venezuelan. But he’s got a first-place team and a GM who’s now paying attention, so let’s not put him on the firing line just yet.

A quick aside, on Jay Mariotti

I’d just like to point out the irony and hypocrisy inherent in Mr. Mariotti’s column today.

First of all – I think Jay is the best sportswriter in Chicago, by a longshot, and arguably the best sportswriter going right now. He’s a true wordsmith – he hails back to a time when sportswriters were writers too, a time that’s easy to forget when you’re stuck reading the Mike Downey’s of the world (and if you don’t know who Mike Downey is, consider yourself lucky and don’t waste your time looking for his barely legible pap.)

In Tuesday’s column, though, Mariotti once again screams for the firing of Ozzie Guillen – something he’s done repeatedly and ridiculously for years, since long before Guillen inappropriately called him a fag. And he’s using the word “we” with his accusations: “We are sick and tired of [Guillen];” WE drive right past US Cellular field, not because of hatred for the Sox but “because Guillen works there.”

Why? Because Guillen makes people angry; because Guillen speaks the truth, tells people what he thinks, even when it’s unpopular or a little inappropriate; because he doesn’t want to see Ozzie “get away with insubordination” towards his suddenly admirable GM Kenny Williams and ownership led by Jerry Reinsdorf.

It’s bullshit. It’s utter bullshit, and WE ARE NOT WITH YOU, JAY. Don’t lump us in with your hatred, because it’s personal.

Isn’t this the same Kenny Williams that you’ve hound-dogged about every move and criticized at every step? The same Reinsdorf who you’ve called the worst owner in sports in the past? And as for insubordination… you’ve had your fair share of flare-ups, Mariotti – yet the Sun Times keeps you around, don’t they? Could it be because you’re good at your job?

Mariotti, for all that he does right, is hated by fans who read his columns because he’s a jerk, and he often writes about truths that they don’t want to hear. Does it make him a bad columnist? Absolutely not. In fact, one could argue it makes him an even better columnist.

Likewise, people hate Ozzie because he sometimes goes a little crazy and speaks too much truth. Does that make him a bad manager? His record and his World Series ring say a definitive “no.” He told us he’d be back to his “old self” this year, and presumably this is exactly the kind of thing he meant.

So can you make an argument to fire Guillen? Sure. But maybe Mariotti should take a step back and think about exactly what was so wrong with what Guillen did. And think about whether he, in a similar situation, might have done a very similar thing.

And let’s just hold off on calling the pot black, Mr, Kettle.

Nothing Less Than Great

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Like a kid in a toy store, Jim Thome walks around the Chicago White Sox clubhouse with an ear-to-ear grin. He’s happy to see everybody and when asked how he’s doing he responds with a smile and says he’s nothing less than great.

Thome, the Sox designated hitter, has a way of brightening up the locker room and making everyone feel at home.

“I’m just so blessed and fortunate,” Thome said of his success as a professional baseball player. “It’s a thrill and an honor. I never fathomed this.”

Another thing Thome never fathomed was hitting 500 career home runs, a feat he achieved Sept. 16, 2007. His two-run home run off the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim’s Dustin Moseley gave the Sox a 9-7 victory.

“It was the best,” Thome said. “To do it on a walk-off and have your teammates waiting for you is a thrill. You couldn’t have dreamed it any better. Really.”

Thome’s inspiration is his family, and the slugger said his mother, Joyce, and father, Chuck Jr., are very important to him.

“I was just a big baseball fan and I liked a lot of different players,” Thome said of his childhood growing up in Peoria, Illinois. “But (my hero) I would say is my dad.”

Thome added that being able to be a part of the organization itself is very inspiring.

“When you put that uniform on not only do you represent your family’s name but you represent the organization, the city, the fans, and giving back.

“It’s playing hard and working, coming here to work every day and to try to get better for all those reasons.”

The next aspiration is to win a championship, which Thome said would be the ultimate goal and that it really should be every ball players. His winning spirit has definitely traveled through the clubhouse and he has motivated many of his teammates.

“I’m just grateful I can tell my kids I played with him,” said Sox third baseman Joe Crede. “I looked up to him when he was with Cleveland, and he was portrayed as such a nice and great guy in the game.

“He seemed like a guy you would want to play with. You wanted to root for him. To play with him and experience the things he is experiencing at this time in his career is a true honor.”

His popularity hasn’t gone to his head, though. Thome is very grateful for what he has and for the fans.

“I think you respect where you came from and how hard you worked in order to get here,” he said. “Never lose track of that.”

A White Sox Road Trip

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Stepping foot inside a major league ballpark is an annual pilgrimage for me. Two dozen or so new parks have been built since the 1990’s, so there is plenty of product. And when I found myself in Tampa Bay, FL last week, my trip would not be complete without a trip to the Trop.

The White Sox are in town, which makes me feel a bit more at home. As I pull into the parking lot, I soon realize I might as well be at 35th and Shields. The familiar grey and black unis are a comfortable fashion statement amongst the tailgaters in Aisle 6. I hate to break the color barrier as I slip on my Irish Green “Wrigley Field” T-Shirt, but being a Cub fan is a daily burden. We can’t selectively show our support, we must demonstrate it at all times. I get a few awkward glances as I head to the ticket window.

Where are the hometown jerseys? I see about a half dozen Frank Thomas jerseys on Floridians before I see the first Ray. You want to know why a franchise is floundering? Check out how many of their jerseys are worn by fans. I don’t have any scientific evidence to back this up, but have you been to St. Louis recently?

Based on advice given by a colleague, I buy the cheapest ticket I can, $11, and promptly walk towards the visiting dugout. The White Sox are finishing batting practice and I want to get a closer look. Nick Swisher is raking the ball, Javier Vazquez - tonight’s starter - is long tossing in the outfield. Jim Thome runs over to sign some autographs, and within seconds he is right in front of me. I am as empty handed as one can be during one of these sessions - no pen and with nothing to sign. A middle-aged guy from Boca next to me has a backpack filled with baseballs and a separate insert stacked with Sharpies. I quickly back away as I realize I am taking up valuable signage space from serious-minded professionals.

We’re still about 20 minutes before first pitch, so I decide to take a stroll around the old ball yard. Within minutes I come to a conclusion - this might be the worst ballpark in America. Worse than Phoenix. At least the one in Anaheim is outdoors. With more concrete then the Millennium Falcon, the Trop has as much charm as a hospital ER. As I take a lap around, I feel as though I am at the County Fair. The only thing missing are the pig races and butter cow. With no franchise history to speak of, plastered on the walls is a collage tilted “100 years of baseball in St. Pete”.

In case you were wondering, the old St. Louis Browns held spring training in Tampa. They hosted the Cubs on Feb. 27, 1914 in the first baseball game ever in the area. The Cubs traveled to Florida via steamboat. They are just six years removed from their last World Series.

I shouldn’t complain all that much. The advantage to attending a game in a place devoid of baseball interest is for $11, I get to sit wherever I want! I pick a spot 5 rows behind the visiting dugout. A “greatest moments in Rays history” montage is playing on the jumbo screen as the hometown boys take the field. I think the only thing shorter would be a Cesar Izturis Cubs highlight DVD.

By the ninth inning, the Sox are up 9-0 on the Rays. Paul Konerko and Jim Thome both hit home runs. Vazquez gets out of a few jams. The Sox are a much improved team that should contend all season. They seem to be playing with more confidence than last season. It’s hard to tell against a team like Tampa - are the Sox this good, or are the Rays this bad? The few folks who follow the team tell me this game is out of character for them, the team finally has some good, young talent. All I know is by the sixth inning, I’m ready to leave. The ballpark feels like a bus ride to Des Moines, there is a guy two rows in front of me wearing a Ryne Sandberg jersey with the name “Urban” stitched on the back and I’ve got a plane to catch.

Before I feel the urge to defend the Sandberg family name, I head to the parking lot. I see the Cubs beat the Pirates 3-2. A group of a dozen kids are playing tag in front of the exit doors as I walk out.

All I can think of is get me back to Chicago. Get me back to outdoor baseball. The White Sox are good.

It’s going to be a fun summer.

Keys to Sox Success is Within

Tuesday, August 1st, 2006

So Good At Something So Hard

Home runs aren’t a bad thing. In fact, if it weren’t for the long-ball this season the Sox would probably be in third place and double-digits behind the Tigers. However, while the home run is what’s kept the Sox in the hunt, the dependence on it has contributed to some of the recent woes, and can very well be what dooms them in the end.

I know what you’re thinking: how can a play that gives a team one run with one swing of the bat be a bad thing? Hell, how can any hit be a bad thing? It’s all about the approach.

Have you ever heard someone defend a suspected steroid-user with the statement, “they still have to hit the ball.” Hitting a baseball coming 90-mph from 60 feet away is one of the harder things to do in sports. Hitting that ball a long way is even more of a feat.

What point am I trying to make? That it’s harder to hit the ball over the fence than to simply make contact. And if one is capable of hitting the ball over the fence at an astounding rate (162 entering Tuesday, most in the major by 16), then that player (or in this case, team), shouldn’t have much problem hitting up the middle, or to the right side, or for a sacrifice fly, or even make contact.

The offense of the White Sox have had problems doing that. They have problems making consistent contact. They have problems going the other way. They have problems simply putting pressure on the defense. But they can hit the ball out of the park. Which is harder.

It doesn’t make sense. If they are so good at doing something so difficult, shouldn’t they be really good at doing something easier? What if they put their mind to it, especially when they are having trouble doing the harder thing? Maybe that’s the problem.

When you hit a lot of homers, you run the risk of expecting a lot of homers. And with expectations comes reliance. And when you don’t meet those expectations and fail to rely on anything else, then it’s pressing time. So instead of looking to do the little things, the easier things, a team may remain too faithful to something bigger.

And it’s somewhat understandable. When you have a pitching staff that has struggled as the Sox’s staff has (4.63 ERA puts them 18th out of 30 teams), you’ll find yourself down bigger margins. And if not, you’ll fear — even expect — your staff to let in a few runs. At that point what’s a couple measly runs when you may very well need 6, 7, 8, 9 to win?

And so the cycle continues.

The Sox offense needs to go back to 2005. No, not small-ball.

Variety.

There are usually two opposing trains of thoughts on last year’s offense. You have some who believe the Sox scored purely by bunting and sacrificing. Then there’s the person who didn’t watch any games and looked at the stats only see the 200-plus homers. They in turn saw small-ball as a bunch of crap.

Both sides were wrong. It was about variety.

One inning the Sox would plate one run with a walk, stolen base, bunt and sac fly and then they’d follow that up the next inning with solo shot. And then the next inning with a single and a hit-and-run, and then surely some aggressive base-running that caught the opposition off guard. And then some innings, they would just hit the crap out of the ball. Hit, after hit, after hit.

This was the 2005 offense. If they didn’t hit the ball out, they would find alternative ways to score. And when they couldn’t do that, they would extend at bats and wear out the opposition. And when they did hit the ball out, it came natural. It wasn’t forced. Or expected. Or relied upon.

The 2006 Sox, for this final stretch run, need to go back to their 2005 ways. Where every player, every play, every pitch, was a compliment to each other. But it all starts with…

Calling Ozzie Guillen

The Ozzie 2005 version, as entertaining as he was off the field with the media, he was even better on the field. He wasn’t predictable, managed with his gut, and was never complacent. He was aggressive, made a decision and didn’t hesitate and entertain the thought of how it could backfire.

Guillen has been anything but this season. He can talk about needing to bunt and make that the lone aspect to small-ball, but it’s more than that, and it starts with him.

What happened to the manager that called for hit-and-runs, tried bunting for hits, did suicide squeezes, called for steals to get guys in scoring position. That aspect was missing this weekend, with a perfect example coming with Pablo Ozuna on first with two outs. No steal. Not even an attempt.

Thome was up after all, and that always means a home run is possible. So why risk getting Ozuna thrown out and taking the bat out of Thome’s hands when Thome can hit a homer and bring in two runs?

Because not doing it is something last year’s team would never do. Ozzie 2005 steals that base to get the runner in scoring position and let Thome know that a single is all that is needed. A single is easier to get after all. Or at least you would think.

Getting the Southpaw Right

Criticize Javier Vazquez for combusting after five. Complain about Freddy Garcia losing 6 miles on his fastball. But if you are going to put blame on a single Sox player, look no further than Mark Buehrle.

A definition for consistent over the years, Buehrle has been flat out bad (0-5, 11.48 ERA in July). And unlike Garcia, who is clearly laboring, or Vasquez, who will at least give you quality through five, Buehrle doesn’t have an injury excuse or one inning he has to avoid.

Instead, he looks healthy and is being tattooed nearly every inning, giving even a powerful offense like the Sox no chance. As Buehrle — the leader of this staff goes — goes, so does the staff.

And as 2005 proved, pitching wins.

From “Small Ball” to Powerhouse

Saturday, July 8th, 2006

Notice anything about the White Sox this year compared to last? Oh yeah, they are scoring a lot more runs. As of July 6 (85 games), they lead both leagues in runs (506), scoring 5.95 runs per game. Last year, through 86 games, the Sox had scored 413 runs (4.80 runs per game), good enough for 10th in baseball. So what are the Sox doing differently this year?Why so many more runs?

Last year the talk seemed to be that the Sox were good at playing “small ball” or “smart ball.” Are they doing more of that this year?

The table below shows how many SBs, SB attempts and sacrifice hits per game the Sox have had at about the half way point the last two years.

It sure looks like “small ball” is not the reason why the Sox are scoring about 1.1 more runs per game. Stealing is way down and even sacs are down (the 2005 data was through 77 games). Maybe there is some other reason. The table below shows the Sox on-base percentage (OBP) and slugging percentage (SLG) at mid-season in both 2005 and 2006.

So the Sox are getting alot more runners on base this year and hitting for alot more power than last year (another, better measure of power than SLG, called “isolated power” or SLG - AVG has also gone up for the Sox from .158 to .189). Since OBP and SLG are the two big ingredients in scoring, when you improve in these, you score more runs. The following formula provides a pretty accurate relationship between team OBP & SLG and runs per game (it explains 90% of the difference across teams over the years 2001-05).

R/G = 17.875*OBP + 11.11*SLG - 5.92

The formula predicts that the Sox in the first half of 2005 should score 4.54 runs per game (meaning they scored about 5.7% more than predicted). For 2006, it predicts 5.73 runs per game (meaning they are scoring about 3.9% more than predicted). So it sure looks like the higher OBP and SLG are the source of the greater scoring, since the Sox offense follows the formula fairly well. But what caused the increase in OBP and SLG? What has changed with the Sox since last year?

It is pretty clear that the one big change this year is having Jim Thome (.416 OBP & .648 SLG). Rowand is no longer in center field, but his replacement, Anderson, has not hit very well. The rest of the starting lineup is pretty much the same.

Podsednik leading off is certainly not the reason for the offensive explosion. So far this year he has a .349 OBP (less than the team OBP) and he has stolen 27 bases (while being caught 12 times). Last year before the All-Star break, he had a .369 OBP while stealing 44 bases (with 9 caught stealing).

Maybe Thome has had a good effect on the rest of the players. Here is how the other seven guys who were regulars last year have done in the first half of both seasons.

Generally, they are doing better. Thome gets on base alot more (.416 OBP) than the previous DH, Carl Everett (.317 OBP), did in the first half last year. Players normally hit better with runners on base, so having Thome helps, although sometimes players hit better with runners on simply because they are facing sub-par pitchers who put more guys on in the first place. Thome is a patient hitter who often walks.

This year the Sox are walking in about 8.8% of their plate appearances while last year it was 7.53% (so their walk rate is about 17% higher since 8.8/7.53 = 1.169).

Thome by himself is partly responsible for the increased walk rate. But even if you take him out of the equation, the Sox walk rate is 7.9%, still higher than last year.

So the Sox are being more patient which helps explain why their SLG has risen as well as their AVG (from .262 to .289).

Thome’s approach may have rubbed off on the other guys. If they have adopted his style of hitting, that might explain this high-power offense.

Two for Two

Thursday, June 8th, 2006

The deal that brought Jim Thome to the White Sox for Aaron Rowand was really a four-man exchange. The White Sox got a new DH (Thome instead of Frank Thomas) and a new centerfielder (Brian Anderson) instead of Rowand. With Thome having an MVP-caliber year, it’s easy to assume that the White Sox came away much the better. But as good as Thome has been, Anderson has been bad. Meanwhile, Rowand and Thomas have put together solid years for their respective new clubs, Philadelphia and Oakland.

So how does this 2-for-2 deal stack up for the Sox? Based on statistics so far, it’s surprisingly even.

Thomas and Rowand combine for the higher batting average, but Thome and Anderson (Thome really), have a small edge in on-base and slugging percentages. The Sox duo has scored and driven in more runs, but that is partly due to the overall strength of the White Sox lineup. Thome, along with Paul Konerko and Jermaine Dye, give the White Sox the best 3-4-5 hitters in baseball. Anderson has at least played good defense, and he can be always be shipped to AAA and replaced with someone who is unlikely to hit any worse.

And with the Phillies eating a large part of Thome’s salary, the dollars involved are about the same. All in all, with the White Sox heading toward the post-season, I doubt that Reinsdorf or Williams are complaining much about these moves.

And I doubt the other teams involved are complaining either. Frank Thomas, with his power and high walk totals, is a perfect fit for the A’s. His $500,000 salary makes him one of this year’s best baseball bargains for a team known for its cost-conscious ways. Along with Nick Swisher and Eric Chavez, Thomas gives Oakland a solid 3-4-5 combination of their own. Oakland remains in contention in the sad sack AL West.

The Phillies are also in the playoff hunt as Aaron Rowand’s style of play has already made him a fan favorite. Plus, by dealing Thome, the Phillies have made room for Ryan Howard, who so far this year has 21 home runs and 53 RBIs, exactly matching Thome’s output with the Sox.

It looks like this was of those win-win-win situations.


Peter Bernstein
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Peter Bernstein teaches Economics at DePaul University and is a regular contributor to the Chicago Sports Review. His essay on steroids in baseball is appearing in the NY Times magazine, Front Page. Reach him at pbernstein@rcfecon.com.

Other Articles by Peter Bernstein

Forget and Forgive

Wednesday, May 24th, 2006

As Frank Thomas prepares to again leave town after this series, it’s worth again recalling the degree to which things went beautifully upon his return.

The only real awkward moment I felt was watching the massive slugger walk by his former GM on the way into the Sox batting cages behind the home team dugout. And perhaps that was a sense of awkwardness that we in the media helped fuel all along, with our insinuations, our questioning, our need for a scuff on the pearl that was the Sox in 2005. Perhaps it was more awkward for us than it was for them.

While both Ken Williams and Thomas continue to read off the “We’re grown men and it’s over” cue card, the first night of Thomas’ return to town should be recalled as a brilliant concoction of selective amnesia.

  • Frank forgot the recent past and professed to us in the media prior to the game that, “This will always be my home,” and that his stay so far in Oakland “…has felt like a six week road trip.”
  • The Sox organization decided to forget the recent feuding and focus on the 16-year tour Thomas served brilliantly with the club. They put together a video montage of his career and stats on the Jumbotron before his first at bat. It was clever on a couple fronts. For one, this organization is now a winner, and winners don’t gloat. Secondly, they learned from the classless way Jim Thome was treated upon his return to Cleveland last month, and didn’t lose perspective.
  • The fans forgot the recent past and the bitter comments, and treated Frank to an ovation that even partially continued into his two-homer performance.
  • Frank forgot that he is now a player in decline, and acted like the old Frank, with his 27th multi-homer game. He also preceded the contest by signing autographs for at least thirty minutes. He was the last Oakland player to the clubhouse after batting practice.
  • Jon Garland forgot that waist-high fastballs on the inner-half are Scooby Snacks for the Big Hurt. (I’m not saying this was selective amnesia, or even that the fix was in, but it sure looked like it.)

    It was refreshing to see that Sox fans and brass were able to put last year in perspective, and honor a man who made coming to the South Side for a game worthwhile through the many years when he was the only attraction.


    And yet, after it all, the one thing the Sox didn’t forget was that nostalgia and respect are lovely, winning is paramount.And aside from the ball-bludgeoning ways that are still a part of this team just as they were while Frank sat in the three-hole, the way the Sox won — with a bunt single to first in the 10th — was symbolic of the way the team has grown and diversified since the absence of the Big Hurt.And, frankly, that absence really started at the beginning of last year.

    Still, it was refreshing to see that Sox fans and brass were able to put last year in perspective, and honor a man who made coming to the South Side for a game worthwhile through the many years when he was the only attraction.

    A larger portfolio of stars shouldn’t diminish perhaps the brightest one.

    And a pile of trophies should never make this organization forget the guy that helped build the case to hold them all.

    As Easy as 3-4-5

    If baseball was all about pitching, well, then the Detroit Tigers and their nine shutouts and gaudy team ERA would be in first place.

    Nevermind.

    Still, production out of the middle of the order is also nice.

    And though my theory that Derrek Lee really does mean a significantly better Cubs team, and maybe more than handful of wins, because he is the Cubs closest incarnation of Albert Pujols — which, while a lesser Pujols, still is the closest they come to a one-man wrecking crew — there is yet a reason to blame the core of the Cubs batting order, even without Lee.

    In the absence of Lee, the Cubs typical 3-4-5 hitters, Todd Walker, Aramis Ramirez and Jacque Jones, have combined for 18 home runs and 61 RBI.

    The White Sox, on the other hand, have a 3-4-5 of Jim Thome, Paul Konerko and Jermaine Dye that have played to the tune of 42 home runs and 115 RBI.

    This is not a fair comparison I realize, because each Sox player is arguably a superior hitter. Still, it’s worth noting, because the Sox haven’t pitched to their potential, with a team ERA well over four, and neither have the Cubs for reasons of both poor health and youth.

    Yet one team is contending, the other is off the map.

    The point: Sure pitching wins. But offense can in fact carry a team for a time. The Cubs have been dealt a difficult situation, and have risen to few challenges.

    Subtracting by Subtracting

    Last year the Northsiders led the league in percentage of runs scored by way of the home run. Over forty percent of the time, in fact, the teams’ runs were a direct product of the long ball.

    Jim Hendry believed this year he might have at least lessened that problem, putting together a lineup with a little more speed, and a little less pop. They were bound to hit fewer home runs, we knew. Unfortunately, they forgot about the whole “percentage” aspect to that home run “problem.”

    Sure, they hit fewer home runs, but the percentage has stayed nearly the same.

    Now they just score fewer runs.

    Biting Humor

    The Score 670 had good timing in more ways that one when they wrapped up a deal to become the Sox’ broadcast partner starting this year.

    Not only do they get the defending champs with a revamped, exciting team and growing fan base, they get all the little entertaining and wistfully idiotic moments that covering an Ozzie Guillen-coached team can provide. Well, so they thought. Ozzie has been himself so far this year. Sure, that means quotable, but he has also in some ways become a caricature of himself, so even his quotable stuff isn’t that, umm, quotable.

    Still, it is with a certain degree of shock that one of the first “controversies” of the season could arise out of discussions regarding Joey Cora and Ryan Dempster, with, of course, a few Ozzie quotes involved, though essentially just to defend his kids.

    To a man, these are two of the most pleasant, amiable, easy-going people in either organization.

    Dempster has admitted being wrong on some things and has even apologized to Mike North — not a common theme among current players on either team — and this will blow over, if it hasn’t already.

    Go figure.

    But who knew sports radio was capable of twisting stories and igniting controversies?