Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Details matter to White Sox manager

- TYLER KEPNER

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Ask Pedro Grifol about his mentors, the folks who put him on the path to managing the Chicago White Sox, and he starts with his grandfathe­r. Pedro Antonio Grifol, who emigrated from Cuba, delivered newspapers in the early mornings and worked all day as a high school janitor in Miami. But his day really began, he would tell young Pedro, when he picked him up from school.

“He taught me discipline, and the work ethic in whatever it is you’re going to do — and the details,” Grifol said. “From the way I put my socks on, the way I tied my shoes, my grandfathe­r was like, ‘No, you put your socks on like this, this is the way it goes.’ I mean, I’m talking about detailed stuff.”

Grifol, 53, spoke this month while watching his team practice before an exhibition game at Camelback Ranch. He had just held a lengthy morning meeting in the White Sox clubhouse, preaching the same lessons as his grandfathe­r: Details matter.

The excitement of reporting to camp had faded, Grifol explained, and the buzz for the start of the season was still a couple of weeks away. This was the time to sharpen focus, he said, not to lose it. Hitting the cutoff man, running the bases well, picking up signs — those must be priorities.

“Sometimes when you have too much talent, you start forgetting the little details of the game,” Elvis Andrus, a veteran infielder, said later. “It’s something that Pedro and all the coaches notice, and they know that for us, as talented as we can be, if we don’t pay attention to little details and fundamenta­ls, that’s when it gets ugly during the season.”

Things got ugly for the White Sox last season — and not the good kind of ugly, the “Winning Ugly” of Tony La Russa’s 1983 division champions. The 2022 White Sox lost eight in a row last April under La Russa, and eight in a row again in September under Miguel Cairo, after a heart issue forced La Russa to leave the team.

After running away with American League Central under La Russa in 2021, the White Sox stumbled to an 81-81 record. When General Manager Rick Hahn interviewe­d Grifol, then the bench coach for the Kansas City Royals, for the manager’s job, he got a stinging indictment of his team.

The Royals were vastly inferior, at 65-97, but they won 10 of 19 games against Chicago.

“You could tell by the second inning what kind of day we were going to have against you,” Hahn said, describing what Grifol told him in the interview, “whether you guys were all there — present, high-energy, focused — or if this was going to be one of these days that if we kept it quiet, and we didn’t prod the sleeping horse, you guys were just going to coast through this game. And we were going to get you.”

Injuries were partly to blame: Lineup mainstays like Tim Anderson, Yasmani Grandal, Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert all played fewer than 100 games, and some cornerston­e players, like starting pitcher Lucas Giolito and third baseman Yoan Moncada, regressed sharply. With minimal roster changes — Jose Abreu and Johnny Cueto left via free agency; Andrew Benintendi (Arkansas Razorbacks) and Mike Clevinger arrived — this core gets another chance, and they are counting on Grifol to lead.

“Last year was a down year — it was a lost year, in all honesty,” starting pitcher Lance Lynn said. “We’ve got a lot of guys with a lot to prove, and he’s got the ability to push guys where he needs to.”

Grifol showed that skill as a freshman catcher at Florida State in 1989, when he helped the Seminoles reach the College World Series. They returned two years later, and school officials thought so highly of Grifol last year that they offered him the head coaching job.

Other coaches have left major league staffs recently — even during the season — for the life-changing money of a major college program. Grifol stayed with the Royals, sensing that his time would come soon.

“It was security, it was a lot of money, but he didn’t want to look in the mirror and say, ‘I cut myself short,’ ” said Eduardo Perez, a broadcaste­r and former major leaguer, who roomed with Grifol at Florida State and remains a close friend. “Managing in the major leagues has been his dream for a long time. He believed in his ability and believed in the process.”

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