Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

■ Last 10 years was best of times for Cubs, worst for White Sox.

Meanwhile, it was the worst of times for the Sox

- Paul Sullivan

The 2010s weren’t the greatest decade in Cubs history in terms of winning percentage, though it certainly felt that way for most Cubs fans, most of whom weren’t around in the 1930s, the last time they played as well over a 10-year stretch.

And while it might not have been the worst decade in White Sox history, the Sox’s .459 winning percentage in the 2010s was as bad as most of their fans have experience­d and the worst for the franchise since the ’30s, when they won at a paltry .446 clip.

Where the Cubs and Sox will go in the 2020s is anyone’s guess, but here’s a look at what Chicago baseball fans experience­d over the last 10 years and what lies ahead in the next decade.

What Sox fans will remember

Only an absurdist novelist could invent the goings on at 35th and Shields in the 2010s. The Ozzie Guillen-Ken Williams feud that led to Guillen’s departure to Miami. The disastrous signings of the two free-agent Adams — Dunn and LaRoche — and the addition of teenager Drake LaRoche to the clubhouse that led to another heated controvers­y. The surprising decision to hire Robin Ventura as manager and the not-so-shocking decision to rebuild after four years of diminishin­g returns. The brilliance of Chris Sale on the mound, interrupte­d briefly by the craziness of Sale tearing up uniforms before a game or ripping management over Drake LaRoche. In the end we’ll remember Tim Anderson’s bat flips, Paul Konerko’s farewell, Jose Abreu’s consistenc­y and Lucas Giolito’s remarkable turnaround, along with an entire decade of not making the postseason.

What Cubs fans will remember

Where they were, who they were with and which loved ones they were thinking of on Nov. 2, 2016, when the Cubs finally ended the 108-year championsh­ip drought with their Game 7 World Series win in Cleveland. Kris Bryant to Anthony Rizzo for the final out. Jason Heyward’s rain delay speech. Joe Maddon pulling Kyle Hendricks. Even Rajai Davis’ home run off Aroldis Chapman, the “oh, (bleep)!” moment of truth to remind Cubs fans nothing ever comes easy. Aside from the World Series, there was also the “Schwarbomb” from Kyle Schwarber that landed on top of the video board during the 2016 NLDS clincher over the Cardinals and that earned a plexiglass cover as if it were a moon rock. Jake Arrieta’s dominance in the 2015 turnaround season. Maddon’s theme trips. “Try Not to Suck.” They’ll probably forget much of the first half of the decade, including the lost year of the Mike Quade era. But we can’t forget Carlos Zambrano’s explosions or John Lackey’s sneer or the 2015 opening-night fiasco at Wrigley Field in which bathroom issues led some fans to treat the ballpark like an outdoor urinal.

What’s the same for the Sox since 2010

Pitching coach Don Cooper remains a constant. He’s a living, breathing monument to the Sox’s status-quo approach to most personnel decisions. General manager Ken Williams was bumped upstairs to executive vice president, handing Rick Hahn the reins for the last seven sub-.500 seasons. Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf is still in charge, though less talkative and seemingly more impatient as 2005 gets farther away in the rearview mirror. The ballpark nickname, “The Cell,” is long gone, replaced by the nickname-proof Guaranteed Rate Field, where the arrow on the logo was pointing down, an ominous sign for the new era. The Sox have yet to post a winning season since the name change. Attendance stabilized a bit during the rebuild and should increase after an offseason spending spree. Still, the lack of many postgame drinking and dining options within walking distance remains an obstacle with no foreseeabl­e solution. Hawk Harrelson is gone, but Steve Stone is still around to liven up TV broadcasts.

What’s the same for the Cubs since 2010

Almost no one but the Rickettses, Pat Hughes and Len Kasper. With veteran bullpen coach Les Strode let go after the 2019 season, the Cubs waved goodbye to their last uniformed link from the aughts. Wrigley Field survived the decade intact, albeit with some drastic cosmetic surgery, including the video board that ended the “Old Wrigley” era. Amazingly, the Rickettses have so far declined to sell naming rights to Wrigley. Can that last another decade? President Crane Kenney gave up a share of his power when Theo Epstein became president of baseball operations in 2011, but Kenney succeeded in his vision to modernize Wrigley Field and deliver his oft-cited “wheelbarro­ws of cash” for new revenue streams. Instead of complainin­g the Cubs won’t spend, fans now wonder why the billionair­e owners won’t go over budget to win in 2020. WGN is gone as a broadcast partner after a lifetime of televising Cubs games, replaced by the much-hyped and still-unaired Marquee Network. Notable fan Ronnie “Woo” Wickers is still here, albeit without the amplified, ear-splitting chanting from his glory days of wooing. Murphy’s, Bernie’s and the Cubby Bear are still Wrigleyvil­le pillars, though the competitio­n for pre- and postgame drinking options is much greater than it was.

What to expect from the Sox in the 2020s

You have to believe the Sox will become an annual contender by the mid-’20s if Luis Robert, Eloy Jimenez, Michael Kopech, Yoan Moncada, Nick Madrigal and Andrew Vaughn are all together and meeting expectatio­ns and the offseason additions of Yasmani Grandal and Dallas Keuchel pay off. At least one championsh­ip seems attainable if all goes to plan, though rebuilds are harder than the Astros, Cubs and Royals made it look in the 2010s. GM Rick Hahn will be around for most of the decade, but the big question is whether manager Rick Renteria can hang on if the Sox don’t climb to respectabi­lity this year. It wouldn’t be surprising to see Jose Abreu as the Sox manager in the late 2020s, even with an interprete­r by his side. That’s assuming Paul Konerko doesn’t want to return to the game by then, as he would be an obvious choice as a future Sox manager. The educated guess is Don Cooper will still be around as Sox pitching coach at the end of the ’20s, just because.

What to expect from the Cubs in the 2020s

There’s no reason a team with the Cubs’ resources shouldn’t be able to contend the rest of the decade and win another World Series. The so-called “window of opportunit­y” should remain open a few more years, making this offseason a key to the Cubs’ future. Theo Epstein is a motivated architect who hasn’t really begun to make changes outside of new manager David Ross and the coaching staff. Expect a busy start to 2020. As for the Rickettses, they aren’t going anywhere soon. The four siblings all seem to enjoy the family toy just as much as when they bought it in a Sam Zell-orchestrat­ed money dump. Crane Kenney, their top adviser, is also entrenched and might one day get his own statue in Gallagher Way — if Tom and Todd Ricketts make it happen. Few of the current players will be around in 2029, with the possible exception of Javier Baez, their next megadeal candidate. Ronnie Woo will still be here, naturally, just because.

 ?? NUCCIO DINUZZO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? From top to bottom: The 2010s brought a World Series to the Cubs, an unforgetta­ble playoff homer from Kyle Schwarber, a White Sox rebuild fueled by Eloy Jimenez and a farewell to fan favorite Paul Konerko.
NUCCIO DINUZZO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE From top to bottom: The 2010s brought a World Series to the Cubs, an unforgetta­ble playoff homer from Kyle Schwarber, a White Sox rebuild fueled by Eloy Jimenez and a farewell to fan favorite Paul Konerko.
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