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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Daryl Van Schouwen

White Sox new manager keen on creating new culture in 2023

White Sox manager Pedro Grifol (left) talks with Sox catcher Yasmani Grandal during the Blackhawks game on November 03, 2022 in Chicago. (Getty Images) (Getty)

Lucas Giolito talked about it often last season. The White Sox needed to have fun again. They had to bring joy back in the clubhouse and dugout.

That is only one layer of clubhouse culture, an element players insist matters more than outsiders might think. First-year manager Pedro Grifol, with his fresh voice and leadership after two seasons of Tony La Russa, will change it simply by being who he is. The players will welcome a change after a La Russa-led 81-81 season fell flat on its face.

It’s Grifol’s job to create a strong culture for his players.

“They first have to understand what culture is,” Grifol said. “Someone recently described it perfectly to me. He said culture is what it looks like, what it acts like and what it feels like, right? What it feels like is you can’t wait to get to the clubhouse and perform. What it looks like is when you’re watching us from up there, you want people to say ‘These guys are together, these guys are fighting together, they’re playing to win every single night.’ And obviously what it acts like is these guys are professionals. They respect the game, they respect the fans, they respect what they do and they really respect our team.”

Even when the Sox were rebuilding and losing under manager Rick Renteria, a culture was in place and a sense of unity was evident. Especially when they won in 2020 under Renteria, the Sox were full of life and a vivid example of the organization’s “Change the Game” motto.

Some of that was lost in 2021, even when the Sox won the AL Central. A lot of it was when they flopped in ‘22. Injuries, hitting slumps, poor defense and baserunning will do that. Lacking energy can contribute, too.

“This was is an extremely talented ballclub,” said Grifol, who knew the Sox well from coaching against them six series a year. “It was a really difficult club to prepare for. Because if the energy was high, they could beat anybody in the game. And if the energy wasn’t, we were able to have some success against them. So my job and my staff’s job is to make sure that that energy is high every night and we’re prepared to win a ballgame.”

With shortstop Tim Anderson, the team’s energizer and batting champion who made the team go, limited to 79 games because of injuries, a leader was lost. Anderson was around the team while sidelined but wasn’t engaged in his usual, spirited manner.

Yoan Moncada (104 games), Yasmani Grandal (99), Luis Robert (98) and Eloy Jimenez (84) were also hurt a lot.

“There were a lot of injuries, so very rarely did we play a full Chicago White Sox team,” Grifol said. “Them going 81-81 and at times playing with not the energy they’re capable of playing with, you almost look at them like, damn, you guys really are talented. Because you had the injuries, the energy was off and on and you still won 81 games.”

La Russa promoted a culture of family, as Renteria did before him, but didn’t demand players to always run out ground balls, which became a bad look. Grifol says he’ll be big on accountability, which means “that you collaborate with everybody, you empower people to do their job and if you do that, it’s an easy conversation when they’re not doing it.”

“If you don’t empower people to be part of the process, you don’t communicate with people, you can’t hold anybody accountable.

“When we hit the field in spring training, the level of intensity to our practices, the level of intensity to our cage work, the details, attacking margins are going to be extremely critical in developing the culture and the chemistry of this club. I think these players are hungry for it. I think they want it, and once we get started, they’re going to see how prepared they’re going to be to ... kick somebody’s butt.”

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