Overcast
63°
Morris, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

Rogers: White Sox’s Sale should employ lesson well

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(MCT) — You almost never can boil a baseball season down to one game, let alone one pitch. But when I break down what happened to the White Sox down the stretch in 2012, when a potentially great season for rookie manager Robin Ventura turned into a learning exercise, I find a clear turning point.

It came on Sept. 2 at Comerica Park. A 1-2 slider from Chris Sale came in to Delmon Young at ankle height on the inside part of the right-handed hitter’s batter’s box and was golfed over the left-field wall, not far from the foul pole.

It was the fourth consecutive slider Sale had thrown Young, who is known as a fastball hitter, and it spoiled what had been a great battle between the young White Sox lefty and the most consistently dominating pitcher in the majors, Justin Verlander.

“I’d thrown him quite a few sliders before but he was swinging the bat pretty good,” Sale said. “He had been swinging at that pitch (out of the strike zone). I guessed wrong, he guessed right. He got the upper hand on that one, for now.”

Young’s two-run homer broke a 1-1 tie in a game Verlander would win 4-2, giving the Tigers a tie for first place in the American League Central. There were still 30 games left in the season, and the Tigers wouldn’t charge to their title until the last two weeks, but the Sale-Verlander matchup wasn’t just another game.

Until that drive by Young, that game had been an edge-of-the-seat experience for hardcore fans of the White Sox and Tigers — and me too. It was high drama we had seen coming for a couple of weeks since Jim Leyland shuffled his rotation to move Verlander in front of Anibal Sanchez.

Leyland knew the game carried a lot of weight, and he was right. It finished a three-game sweep for the Tigers, who would have trailed the White Sox by six games if Ventura’s team had won all three. That series sent a message to both teams that the one built to go the distance was the one Miguel Cabrera, Prince Fielder, Verlander, Max Scherzer, Sanchez and Doug Fister led.

Previous Page|1||

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.

Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all