Where we stand

Rick Hahn is an ever-present character in all White Sox dealings. He's looming not far from the foreground in every offseason story; it feels unnecessary to dedicate our entire focus to him above the actual players coming in. To do so, would be a furthering of the ever-present cult of the executive, where our fascination and praise has diverted from world-class athletes and their craft. Instead of admiring the works of art, or even the artists, we ogle the work of the curator and then take some bizarre fascination in the operating budget they had to secure the priceless. No thoughts of watching Melky Cabrera popping singles all over the yard, just contemplation of 2 WAR for three years for $42 million. Is it worth the investment for a famous tycoon?

Read More

Minnie Minoso denied again by Hall of Fame voters

 

As written in this space before, the biggest thing working against Minnie Minoso in his quest for Hall of Fame election may be the fact that he's still alive.

Minoso was again denied a spot in Cooperstown Monday when the Golden Era Committee released its ballots on the opening day of baseball's Winter Meetings. Minoso received eight out of 16 votes with 12 needed for election. His vote total actually went down, as he received nine last time around. The committee failed to elect a single candidate.

Read More

We finally get the Konerko send-off we've been waiting for

I loved the Konerko send-off. Was there any doubt? For anyone?

Konerko's contemplative, accounting-for-everything manner always played better for retrospectives than mid-season rallying cries. Sending him off wasn't just rewarding an above-average first baseman for being above-average, but quickly became an homage to White Sox-dom, 1999-2014, with the unexpected and grand flourish of trainers Herm Schnieder and Brian Ball getting acknowledged for keeping Konerko and the roster upright for the last decade and a half. Konerko is the rare star that allows Chicagoans to celebrate championships and true greatness while lauding noble, tragic try-hards who are loyal to the city just for the hell of it at the same time. There was a cheer for a pre-recorded video clip of Jon Garland with a fuzzy drifter beard, a massive Jose Abreu home run and World Series highlights in a four-hour span. It was a rad affair, all things being equal.

Read More

A hand in the Royals' playoff destiny

Anxiety sets in at different times for everyone, but I started to realize the 2012 White Sox might be screwed on the night of Thursday, Sept. 20, a night much like Monday night. The Sox spent the evening blowing an early 3-0 lead in slow-motion. They at least looked like they could escape a tense ninth inning when Matt Thornton came on with two out to face Eric Hosmer, who would finish the season with a .591 OPS against left-handed pitching.

Read More

A surprisingly smooth change in leadership/a note on free agency

Paul Konerko has only officially been the team captain since 2006, but has been dominating the locker room in non-dominant fashion for at least a year longer. His demure and honest post-game interviews, ceaseless personal accountability, slavish devotion to routine and labor, and perhaps most memorably, public self-flagellation have been such steady elements of White Sox culture, that part of processing his retirement has been imagining a non-Konerko leadership. Compared to the Konerkocracy, every clubhouse seems like Brohio. Should we go to Brohio? It's the question of a generation.

Read More

What if the 2004 White Sox stayed healthy?

It's What If week at the mothership, prompting a lot of wondering of what kind of wonderful and interesting things could have happened if ideal conditions had held up for just a bit longer. What if the 1994 strike hadn't happened? is a fun one for White Sox fans. Here, we'll even do that one for free real quick right now: The Sox would have won the 'effin World Series. That's what would have happened.

Read More

The 'Abreu for MVP' campaign--A romantic mistake

Jose Abreu is playing his best ball of the season. Heading into Wednesday night he was hitting .356/.401/.678 during a 36 games with a hit in 37 games stretch, and has taken claim of the league lead in OPS and total bases. A conservative stance might be that a very good hitter is very locked in at the moment and providing a lot of entertainment and excitement. An aggressive stance might be that Abreu is improving, rapidly adjusting to the league and will only continue his ascent into the upper echelon of hitters in the league. A constantly improving hitter is an intriguing concept, you might say

Read More

Frank Thomas memories

As we bask in the tear-stained glow of Frank Thomas’ induction into the Hall of Fame on Sunday, the staff of The Catbird Seat share their favorite memories of the greatest White Sox they have ever seen. We tried to make a rule of one memory per person. We failed. Matt didn’t contribute because he hates Frank Thomas.

Collin: My memories of the White Sox — and of baseball in general — begin in earnest around the year 1996. While I attended games in years prior, probably as early as 1993, and watched games with my dad, I don’t have a lot of solid memories of Frank as a rookie, of the ALCS against the Blue Jays or of the unfortunate way ‘94 ended.

In 1996 I was 9 years old and finally starting to understand the game as somewhat of an observer, so the first memory of Frank that sticks out in my mind — and I’ll use Baseball Reference as a bit of a refresher on the date — is Sept. 15, 1996.

On that day, Frank Thomas was invincible.

The White Sox were playing in Boston and Tim Wakefield was on the mound. This was my first real look at Fenway Park and I remember being in awe, even just from watching on TV, of the gigantic Green Monster. I didn’t quite understand at the time that, while the wall towered over the rest of the stadium, it wasn’t impossible to knock a ball over the wall as it stood closer than most normal left field walls.

If that weren’t enough for me to take in, Wakefield’s odd delivery — my dad did his best to describe the intricacies of the knuckleball to me — was fascinating. How could a ball that moved so slowly and was delivered seemingly so simply give big league hitters fits?

Wakefield’s knuckleball didn’t give Thomas fits on that day at Fenway.

1st inning: Thomas homers over the Green Monster off of Wakefield.

3rd inning: Thomas homers over the Green Monster off of Wakefield.

5th inning: Thomas homers over the Green Monster off of Wakefield.

It was an unbelievable sight, particularly for a baseball-obsessed 9 year old. Thomas could take that crazy dancing ball and hit it over the highest point imaginable. And not just once, not just twice, but three times!

The White Sox ultimately lost the game, as Baseball Reference’s box score reminds me, but it didn’t matter. To that 9 year old, Thomas solved the riddle of the knuckleball and conquered the unconquerable Monster.

My other Thomas memory occurred 10 years later at a game I was lucky enough to attend. It was the year after the 2005 World Series title and Thomas was back at U.S. Cellular Field for the first time in a different uniform.

I remember being way up in the upper deck, but among 40,000 White Sox fans to give Thomas a standing ovation when he stepped in the batter’s box against Jon Garland for his first at-bat in Chicago as a member of another organization.

So what did he do? If you’re reading this, I’m sure you know, but he launched a solo home run that gave Oakland a 1-0 lead. Sox fans, of course, stood and cheered the entire time he rounded the bases, a particularly odd sight for a visitor.

In the fifth inning he duplicated the feat, taking Garland deep for the second time — another solo shot — that extended Oakland’s lead to 4-0. Fans stood and cheered once again, though slightly more subdued this time.

The White Sox ultimately won the game, coming back from a 4-0 deficit to win in 10, but the story of the night was Thomas’ return. He put on a show and got a deserved welcome from a packed Cell full of fans who appreciated his Hall of Fame career.

James: There’s not an immediate signature Frank Thomas memory that comes to mind for me. He’s not David Freese. He didn’t win a playoff game (though he did tie Game 4 of the ALCS) or hit a walk-off blast to clinch a playoff berth. He had his clutch moments, but wasn’t particularly known for them, since a machine has no sense of the moment. I remember him popping out with the bases juiced to end Game 2 of the ALCS when he was with the A’s in 2006 and my heart just ached for him. That was his chance.

If anything, Frank was the first to teach me about sample size. My older sister is my only sibling, and being the oldest, she got first pick of anything, including who she got to pick to be her favorite player. So her favorite Bulls player was Michael Jordan and mine was Scottie Pippen, and her favorite White Sox player was Frank Thomas and mine was Robin Ventura. Robin gave me plenty to love, and I got into plenty of trouble emulating him by sprinting toward a stuffed White Sox ball on the floor, grabbing it all in one motion and firing off-balance toward the fireplace (which I had decided would play the role of Frank) before flying into the living room couch. But most of the time, I was keenly aware what a raw deal this was. I cheered for a very good player, and my big sister got a legend. If you were a White Sox fan your favorite player was Frank Thomas, I just had to pretend like Robin was just as good like he was my kid or something.

My only respite from this was going into games in person, where for the handful of games my family would make it out to every year, Robin had a tendency to go bezerk, where Frank seemed like he must be pressing to impress my sister. This came to a head on April 22, 1996. The Sox roughed up Bobby Witt of the Rangers for five-run first inning, of which neither Frank nor a slow-starting Ventura took much part in, but Robin teamed up with Harold Baines for back-to-back shots to put the nail in Witt’s coffin in the sixth, once again giving me the upper hand on my sister, in terms of seeing our favorite player perform for us. When Ventura homered again off a young Rick Helling in the eighth, and Frank and Karkovice were the only Sox starters without hits (Frank walked, of course), she had just about had it. As much as I don’t like to revel in my sister’s displeasure, I was a bit amused, because I knew her complaints were absurd--no one would ever use one game to argue Frank wasn’t awesome.

Frank was so huge, he needed so little extension to smack something four miles, I felt like we hardly ever saw him get unmoored. Hawk was always saying “He just muscled that one into center field” or “he didn’t even get all of it and he got it out of here,” or “he just poked that one to right and it carried out.” “Well, let’s see him, get all of one and see if leaves the stadium, dammit!is what I always thought. To top it off, Frank was so unfailingly patient, that it seemed like he wasn’t even interested in selling out for a moonshot. For a dinger-loving child this was very frustrating, and Frank’s unfailing perfection encouraged this kind of selfishness.

So, I always treasured August 13, 1993. The Sox were fending off the Kansas City Royals in the AL West and trailing at home after that contemptuous little jerk Mike MacFarlane* had put the Royals up with a sixth-inning home run off Jason Bere. Trailing 4-2 by the time the eighth had come, and with Royals closer Mike Montgomery trying to work a two-inning save, the Sox started a rally with back-to-back hits from Ron Karkovice and Warren Newson, and shot ahead for good when Monty hung Frank a breaking ball, and I mean really hung it. Frank seemed to lurch and extend his arms in a way he almost never got to, and rocked his hips forward and out as he connected, sending a booming two-run, go-ahead shot out to left. As SportsChannel fired up the replay, it showed the ball disappeared in the second half of its flight, into a cloud of fog that had begun rolling into the stadium. “He hit it into the night,” Wimpy cackled. That’s an image and description that has never left me. It seemed magical, like Frank had banished the ball with a spell.

*I don’t think Mike MacFarlane is actually a contemptuous little jerk. He was a very good offensive catcher. Hawk just called him a “Sox Killer,” and I took it very literally, and he moved strange, like a spider. Growing up, I was afraid of spiders.

Nick: As far as individual memories go, I always will remember seeing him and Raines go back-to-back at Yankee Stadium in...I think ‘95. Oddly, another one of the specific memories I have of him was not with the White Sox, but rather when he was with Oakland in 2006 and he hit two homers off of Johan Santana while in the process of sending home the hated Twins in the playoffs.

The fact that I will always think of Thomas as someone who never got enough credit may belie my age. He won his back-to-back MVP awards when I was 6 and 7-years old respectively. After that it was an exercise in his performance very slowly eroding into his 30s, and it seemed like no matter how well he did he would just be compared unfavorably to when he was better.

In many ways he was a symbol of injustice - blamed when the White Sox pitching was never good enough to support what was usually a good or very good offense. The hometown newspaper literally owned the local rival, and that local rival was insecure and looking for excuses - so they, a team usually winning 70-or-so-games would write hit pieces about the best player on the South Side team winning 80-or-so games. Thomas probably didn’t deserve to win the MVP award in ‘97 over Ken Griffey Jr - but he definitely deserved to finish ahead of Tino Martinez for second.

That’s what’s so crazy about his Hall of Fame process. All of a sudden everybody appreciated him ahead of guys who sometimes - fairly or unfairly - overshadowed him in the latter half of his career.

A guy who had so many almosts- only won a World Series while on the DL, finished lower in MVP voting a few times than he should have, had the World Series canceled when he was the best hitter on the planet, the 2000 team collapsing in the playoffs, etc. - all of a sudden cracked the Hall on his first try when so many deserving players did not. Guys like Jeff Bagwell and Mike Piazza, who were frequently Thomas’ equal in many ways, are in danger of not making the Hall after multiple tries.

A horrifying injustice was avoided. Thankfully. And at the end of the day, this was a guy who was just a pleasure to watch play - the pitches in on his hands that he would muscle over the infield, the walks on pitches just a hair off the corner, and of course the titanic bombs he crushed to be followed with that glowing smile...I’m so glad and lucky to have watched him play. There are a lot of “almosts” in his career, but fortunately, he got this one and it was a no-doubter.

 

Ramirez shines in rare spotlight provided by All-Star Game

Apparently the greatest tragedy of the White Sox playoff drought has been depriving Alexei Ramirez of a bigger stage. As a reserve for Derek Jeter, I was wondering what opportunity he would have to flash his skills in just a few innings barring a grounder into the 5.5 hole, and that concern only doubled when Ramirez was tasked with facing Friend of Jordan Danks, Death to Right-Handers specialist Pat Neshek his first time up.

Read More

White Sox have two players not named Chris Sale selected for AL All-Star Team

Every year, the MLB All-Star teams produce the kind of results you expect when you try to make a dish while using four recipes at the same time. There's the popularity-driven fan selections, the surprisingly afflicted-by-media-narratives player's vote, possibly biased manager's selections, a final vote that tests which fanbase has the best combination of wi-fi speed and free time, and then the frantic substitution of ingredients that comes when players decide en masse that they would much prefer four uninterrupted days off, all things considered.

And then we count up All-Star appearances like merit badges while considering Hall of Fame candidacies. It's beautiful.

So, Jose Abreu and Alexei Ramirez made the AL All-Star Game. Good for them. That is nice. Hope they have a good time.

Abreu is the third best hitter of the AL 1B/DH crop by wRC+ (his is a beefy 151). Behind Miguel Cabrera's reputation selection and Edwin Encarnacion and an absolutely on fire Victor Martinez, there's plenty of room for Abreu, who attracts plenty of popular attention by subsisting entirely on home runs. Again, good for him, though I wonder if he gets to bring Moises Sierra with him as his personal assistant. 

There also still the issue of whether or not Abreu will participate in the Home Run Derby. Selfishly, as someone who misses the days of White Sox players smacking 500-foot home runs in front of large audiences, but am also in favor of the man doing whatever the hell he wants. He might be coming out of his shell, though, I mean, he did a shuffle dance in the dugout after a home run the other day. There's a showman deep down there somewhere.

Alexei Ramirez is also Minnesota-bound, thanks to the American League shortstop crop falling back to his level. Ramirez is basically having his 2010 and 2011 seasons but with older legs and range, and Erick Aybar and Alcides Escobar are outhitting him and are solid defenders in their own right. 

Ramirez seems to be profiting off either some league-wide appreciation of his reliably solid play, or flip-flopping the order of his super-hot and ice-cold months for once. Right now he is ice cold, when people were deciding who they were going to put in this game, he was the hottest. Miss those days.

Suffering the indignity of the Final Vote, is Chris Sale, who was left out of the AL supply of starting pitchers in favor of Mark Buehrle and Scott Kazmir's dips in the rejuvenation pool. Undoubtedly, a major factor in Sale's exclusion is his lower innings count due to his DL stint, because this is the point in the process where we suddenly decide to be really persnickety about numbers.

There's plenty to say about the way position players are selected for these teams, but at least there seems to be a vested interest in giving the fans what they want. For pitchers, this need to reward short relievers with shiny numbers gives us fun hijinks like Matt Thornton in the All-Star Game, but also creates situations where some of the most talented pitchers in the sport are getting squeezed out because they only threw 87 innings, in favor of guys who have thrown less than 40. Sean Doolittle is a marvel, Greg Holland is a dream-killer and Dellin Betances is a monster, but these guys are all relievers, and relievers for a reason.

Sale will either win the Final Vote or be one of the 19,000 late substitutions, so it's immaterial. As is all.

 

Follow The Catbird Seat on Twitter @TheCatbird_Seat

A cautionary Sale

A good laugh was had by all this week at the continuing and well-documented decline of Justin Verlander. It's more than a guilty pleasure. Verlander has terrorized the division nearly relentlessly since his full-season debut in 2006.

Watching him struggle is not just thrilling because it's like watching the laws of physics lapse, but it hints that life may be moving forward from the prolonged stretch of the Tigers basing yearly contention around two superstars. Miguel Cabrera and Verlander have both exited their 20's, and exited anything resembling affordability, and have the Tigers chasing diminishing returns with less funds to spread around elsewhere. And despite their very genuine and well-funded efforts, the Tigers could pass through the primes of these two MVP winners without a World Series championship.

Read More

Chatting With The Reason I'm A White Sox Fan

I've alluded to it frequently, but I am a White Sox fan despite having never lived in the Chicago area. In fact, I lived in the same house in southern Connecticut until I graduated from high school. However, my father was born on June 4th, 1942 in the suburbs of Chicago. Since today is his birthday, and since he can offer a perspective ranging further back than anyone on our staff can, I thought it would be appropriate to get some of his thoughts and memories on the record. To this day, conversations with him prompt me to write about things that he has pointed out to me, or ideas that emerge from our discussions. And after all, I would probably have been a Yankee fan but for his influence.

Read More

The Franchise Returns

After a month of anxiety and nailbiting and waiting for the news of grisly setback, Sale's return resembled his other arm fatigue absences. Rather than rusty, he was rejuvenated. The reduced workload had transformed him from Cy Young-caliber at 92-95 mph velocity, to a Perfect Game threat at 94-97 mph. The single he allowed with two outs in the sixth was all that spared us from an internal conflict of whether to demand rest for the most valuable player on the team, or to gawk at an unstoppable force chasing history.

Read More

On Jerry Reinsdorf and Donald Sterling

When the psychotic ranting of Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling went public this week, I think we all felt a little ashamed that such a person a) lived and breathed and b) was somehow richer than everyone everywhere. But the moment that NBA Commissioner Adam Sliver banned Sterling from the league for life, our horror and embarrassment turned into collective celebration. Racists be banished! Our faith in society restored!

Read More

Adam Eaton: Blue-Collar Hero?

White Sox centerfielder Adam Eaton is a blue-collar player in the blue-collar collar part of town. Just ask him.

“[W]e play on the South Side,” said Eaton shortly after the start of the season. “Those are blue-collar people, it’s our job to give them a show and give them 110 percent.” Because working-class people demand unattainable proportions of effort!

The week before, Eaton called the Sox “A hard-nosed team on the blue-collar side of town.”

Eaton is not alone; he’s just the latest manifestation of White Sox blue-collar hero with an affinity for the local proletariat.

For example, Jake Peavy said last season “I love, love our fan base. I love the blue-collar attitude…because that’s who I am, that’s the way I was raised.”

Sometimes the media gets in on the act, like when Bruce Levine wrote last year that Paul Konerko “has always been ‘The Man’ of the blue-collar White Sox fan base.”

My question for the purveyors of White Sox blue-collar enthusiasm: Who have you been hanging out with?

Read More