Chicago Sun-Times

SOX FANS TURN OUT IN FORCE, LEAVE WITH MIXED EMOTIONS AFTER SEASON-ENDING LOSS

Team may have dropped series to Astros, but ‘our future is really bright’

- BY MADELINE KENNEY, STAFF REPORTER mkenney@suntimes.com | @madkenney

Sharon Bresnahan took a minute Tuesday afternoon before Game 4 of the American League Division Series to admire the stone outside Guaranteed Rate Field she and her twin sister bought after the 2005 World Series.

Before every game she attends, she taps the stone that reads, in part, “Thx 05 White Sox Sharon & Sheryl.”

Bresnahan said her late sister, Sheryl, who died of a brain aneurysm in 2006, would be at the game in spirit.

“We’ve been lifelong White Sox fans, I brought her with me,” said Bresnahan, who pulled a photo of her twin out of her red purse.

Bresnahan was hoping for a win, but the Astros beat the Sox 10-1.

Bresnahan and other White Sox fans experience­d a mix of emotions after their beloved team was eliminated from the postseason.

They were heartbroke­n, of course. But they also were happy to experience October baseball on the South Side — something that hasn’t happened in more than a decade. And they’re hopeful for what’s to come.

“Our future is really bright, so I’m really excited,” Bresnahan said.

It wasn’t quite ideal “taking in a ballgame” conditions Tuesday — with overcast skies and chillier temperatur­es — but that didn’t deter White Sox fans from flocking by the thousands to Armour Square for the early afternoon game to cheer on their team.

Many took off work or skipped school to be at or near Guaranteed Rate Field, including Christian Pera, 28. He and a colleague had to take a conference call from the tailgate.

“They said, ‘Maybe you guys should get off and we’ll talk later,’ ” said Pera, who works in real estate.

Many hoped Guaranteed Rate Field would be as electric as it was Sunday night when the Sox came back and beat the Astros 12-6. The parking lots, where people were tailgating before the game, were certainly setting the same tone. Inside, the crowd was deafening at times, particular­ly after Gavin Sheets gave the Sox a 1-0 lead on a home run to dead center field.

But when the Sox fell far behind, some fans started trickling out of the ballpark by the sixth inning.

“Very disappoint­ing,” one fan muttered to another.

Some puffed cigars and cigarettes to take the edge off the disappoint­ing outcome as a chorus of groans from those inside the park roared.

One fan, David S., who didn’t want to give his full name, had planned to attend Game 4 on Monday, but the postponeme­nt due to weather ruined that plan as he couldn’t get off work in time to get to the 1 p.m. start Tuesday.

Still, he biked to Guaranteed Rate Field since he wanted to experience the atmosphere of being surrounded by so many fellow fans. By the time he arrived, though, things were grim. “It’s looking like a funeral now,” said David, of Gage Park.

He preferred to look at the bright side of things, however.

The Sox, he said, “brought a lot of great joy to me from what happened last year to now this and that, it brings me pride to my city and where I’m from, the part of town I’m from. I’ve loved it.”

“With all the stuff we’re going through, the crime and the pandemic … it feels good to have something to root for. I’m a proud South Sider, born and raised here.”

Jeremy Roberson, 25, was excited to be at his first Sox playoff game — but he had hoped for a better outcome.

“I enjoyed it for as much as I can, but in the end you want to see your team win,” said Roberson, who wants the Sox to make some improvemen­ts this offseason. “It could’ve been worse, but it could’ve been better. I’m somewhere in the middle right now, I’m frustrated.” As for what’s next?

“I’m going downtown, and I’m going to find something to drink,” Roberson said.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? FAR LEFT: White Sox fan Sharon Bresnahan said her late sister, Sheryl, who died of a brain aneurysm in 2006, would at the game in spirit.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FAR LEFT: White Sox fan Sharon Bresnahan said her late sister, Sheryl, who died of a brain aneurysm in 2006, would at the game in spirit.
 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? ABOVE: Sox fans tailgate in a parking lot outside Guaranteed Rate Field before Game 4 of the American League Division Series on Tuesday.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ABOVE: Sox fans tailgate in a parking lot outside Guaranteed Rate Field before Game 4 of the American League Division Series on Tuesday.
 ?? MARK CAPAPAS/SUN-TIMES ?? LEFT: An Astros fan stands among a crowd of Sox fans Tuesday inside the ballpark.
MARK CAPAPAS/SUN-TIMES LEFT: An Astros fan stands among a crowd of Sox fans Tuesday inside the ballpark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States