Chicago Sun-Times

ANAIN CHEMISTRY

Sox are off to rough start, but you wouldn’t know it by how much fun their infielders have with one another

- STEVE GREENBERG sgreenberg@suntimes.com | @ SLGreenber­g

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — White Sox shortstop Tim Anderson had to be held back, first by second baseman Yoan Moncada, then by first baseman Jose Abreu and finally by both teammates. Anderson tried, unsuccessf­ully, to snake his wiry body through the tiny gap between them.

‘‘ I was going to put him in a headlock,’’ Anderson said after the game had ended.

Lest you think this is about Anderson’s altercatio­n Saturday with Royals catcher Salvador Perez, it’s not. This took place the night before, in the second game of a fivegame series between the teams. The man Anderson was going after was Sox third baseman Yolmer Sanchez.

During a pitching change, Sanchez had snuck up behind Anderson and whacked him in the head with his glove.

‘‘ He slappedme,’’ Anderson said, laughing. ‘‘ He slapped me in the head. He slapped me in the head, so I had to go chase him down.’’

There is a chemistry between Anderson and the playfully irascible Sanchez that can’t be denied. Frankly, there’s a chemistry between Sanchez and anyone who’s willing to listen to his nonstop barbs and prattle.

Fortunatel­y, that seems to include all the Sox. But it reaches another level with the much softer- spoken Anderson.

‘‘ He’s a great guy,’’ Sanchez said. ‘‘ We have a great relationsh­ip.’’

A special relationsh­ip exists on the right side of the team’s infield, too, between Abreu and Moncada. They are countrymen, both from Cuba, one a powerhouse hitter, the other the linchpin of this Sox rebuild. Abreu is a giant in Moncada’s eyes, a mentor and then some.

‘‘ Yoan listens to Pito,’’ said manager Rick Renteria, using Abreu’s nickname.

But where on- field chemistry is concerned, one of the biggest keys going forward for the Sox is what continues to develop between Moncada and Anderson. They turned slick double plays in the series finale Sunday, one of the 4- 6- 3 variety, the other a 6- 4- 3, to quell Royals rallies.

Each middle infielder has exceptiona­l range. Each has a box full of physical tools, though Anderson is tied for the most errors ( six) of any fielder in baseball this season. Their work together — call it a chemistry course — has been improving, Sox coaches say.

‘‘ It’s very comfortabl­e,’’ Anderson said. ‘‘ We’re still working. We’re still learning each other’s range, and we’ve got a lot of work to do. We’re going to continue to get better.’’

They’re getting closer off the field, too. On more than one day in Kansas City, Moncada was lying on the floor, eyes closed, in front of his locker- room stall when Anderson roused him— with the head of a bat to the stomach once and with a tip of the shoe to Moncada’s glorious hair another time. Before one game, Anderson shoved his phone in Moncada’s face, forcing him to watch who knows what. ‘‘ Yoan’s my boy,’’ Anderson said. The Sox use the word ‘‘ family’’ a lot. Their infielders sure fight like a bunch of hungry siblings— particular­ly during pitching changes, as Sanchez and Moncada displayed while shoving each other in the chest Sunday.

Old- schoolers might not love the antics. Some opposing players might scoff. The Sox are cool with it all.

‘‘ These guys are family,’’ said bench coach Joe McEwing, who managed the team for three games in Kansas City while Renteria was in Texas after the death of his mother. ‘‘ I love it.’’

When the chemistry is right, aw hack with a baseball glove can be construed as less head slap than love tap. That’s the vibe the Sox are going for these days. It’s not so bad to be around.

 ?? AP ?? Shortstop Tim Anderson and third baseman Yolmer Sanchez are good friends, even though Sanchez talks nonstop and Anderson is much quieter. ‘‘ He’s a great guy,’’ Sanchez said. ‘‘ We have a great relationsh­ip.’’
AP Shortstop Tim Anderson and third baseman Yolmer Sanchez are good friends, even though Sanchez talks nonstop and Anderson is much quieter. ‘‘ He’s a great guy,’’ Sanchez said. ‘‘ We have a great relationsh­ip.’’
 ?? EZRA SHAW/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Second baseman Yoan Moncada sees first baseman Jose Abreu as more than a Cuban compatriot. He sees him as a mentor.
EZRA SHAW/ GETTY IMAGES Second baseman Yoan Moncada sees first baseman Jose Abreu as more than a Cuban compatriot. He sees him as a mentor.
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