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Rogers: Williams era ending with a whimper for White Sox

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CHICAGO (MCT) — With their crosstown rivals in an organized retreat for the first time in anyone’s memory, the White Sox spent 117 days in first place and went into the last weekend of the season with a division title in their reach.

The weather was beautiful and there should have been a special feeling in the stands at U.S. Cellular Field. But good tickets were available in bunches and you had to wonder: What has happened to Chicago as a baseball town?

When the White Sox lost to 20-game winner David Price and the Rays on Sunday, allowing the Tigers to clinch a share of the American League Central with three games remaining, the attendance was 26,831. The total for the season: 1,965,955, putting Jerry Reinsdorf’s team alongside the Royals, Mariners, A’s, Indians, Astros and Rays in drawing less than 2 million.

Like manager Robin Ventura and the players, the fans seemed numbed by the late-season fade in which the Sox have lost 10 times in 12 games.

When Orlando Hudson struck out against Fernando Rodney for the final out in a 6-2 game, there was barely a noise from fans, only a few hundred of whom stuck around to see if the players would come back onto the field to throw thank-you T-shirts into the seats.

It wasn’t supposed to end this way.

Not the season. Not the Ken Williams era.

Williams seemed half-hearted when he commented on a report two weeks ago that he will step aside to allow Rick Hahn to become the White Sox’s GM at season’s end. He didn’t exactly deny it; he just said that any decision (or announcement) would wait until after the season, as the focus was on doing something great this year.

You can’t fault the effort from Reinsdorf, Williams, Ventura and the players, but three games out with three to play behind a Tigers team that has awakened at the right time (winning six of the last seven) is the end of the line. Gordon Beckham admitted it was time to “pray for a miracle.”

Beckham was one of three so-called homegrown players in the White Sox lineup Sunday, along with Cuban imports Alexei Ramirez and Dayan Viciedo. The Rays hit their homegrown guys 1 (Desmond Jennings), 2 (B.J. Upton) and 4 (Evan Longoria), and they were difference-makers, as they often are.

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