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Chicago Sun Times
Chicago Sun-Times
26 Apr 2023
https://chicago.suntimes.com/authors/daryl-van-schouwen


NextImg:Manager Pedro Grifol on White Sox slump: ‘I didn’t anticipate it being like this’

TORONTO — These are tough times for all involved with the White Sox, from the front office to the players. Then there’s Pedro Grifol, who won general manager Rick Hahn over during the offseason hiring process for a new manager.

Grifol, a 52-year-old baseball lifer, realized his life long dream and was named the White Sox’ 42nd manager on April 3. The icing on the cake, he said in spring training, was that he was handed the reins to lead a talented team expected to contend for the postseason.

Twenty-four games in, and Grifol’s Sox are pondering the magnitude of climbing back to the .500 mark where they finished an extraordinarily disappointing 2022 season under Tony La Russa. The Sox were 7-17 and riding a six-game losing streak going into a series finale against the 15-9 Blue Jays Wednesday afternoon. The Sox trailed 3-0 in the fourth inning.

“Yeah, I really didn’t anticipate it being this way,” Grifol said in the Rogers Centre’s visitors dugout before the game.

“But you don’t control the cards you’re dealt. You control how you respond to it. And that’s the only thing we can control.”

The losses can beat you up, and Grifol’s tone has been slightly less feisty and defiant during during his pre- and postgame sessions with media. But he’s delivering an upbeat message, confident a team he believes is talented enough will turn things around.

He has to be.

“I’ve been on teams that you go through a streak like this and you know the season is over,” Grifol said. “This doesn’t feel that way. It doesn’t feel that way at all.”

The Sox ranked 27th in run differential at minus-41, had lost six in a row and 14 of 18 games. They’re not hitting and they haven’t pitched well, either.

Perhaps because they trail the first-place Twins by seven games in the American League Central, “it just doesn’t feel” like the season is lost, Grifol said.

“I don’t know why,” he said. “This is a good team, there’s talent here. There’s care here, there’s work here. We just have to be professionals and grind this thing through.”

Grifol said adversity is educational and how it’s dealt with matters.

“We’re not going to panic through this thing,” he said. “I’ll reflect and work and make adjustments and be hard on myself but I’m definitely not going to panic.”

Grifol said he’s not and won’t be a big clubhouse speech maker, although there are times it will be called for. He has a clubhouse full of veterans like Lance Lynn, Joe Kelly, Kendall Graveman, Tim Anderson, Elvis Andrus and Andrew Benintendi who have all faced adversity.

“You can’t get to a point where you just give up with your work,” Graveman said. “That’s the most important thing, because this game, you lose this many in a row and you show up to the field and you just feel lethargic. But you have to be mentally strong enough to show up each day and get better as an individual. That’s the major part of any streak like this.”

“There are a lot of guys in here with a ton of service time and are getting paid a lot of money to play this game. With that comes some wisdom and knowledge. I don’t think anyone in this locker room has given up on the season. You have be in on the goal of having a winning streak the opposite of this and win a bunch of games, and get back into focus, build our record and get to the right spot.”