Yardbarker
x
5 ways Pedro Grifol can manage the White Sox better than Tony La Russa
Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

At the time of the Tony La Russa hiring, the main rationale for bringing on the then-76-year-old was his championship track record as a head coach. Many said that his prowess in managing games would more than make up for any clubhouse rifts stemming from the age gap between La Russa and his players.

Two years and many headaches later, the overwhelming majority of Sox fans can agree that TLR was not the skilled in-game manager he was billed to be. There’s a myriad of examples we can and will get into, but the bottom line is that the White Sox lost several games between 2021 and 2022 where poor decision-making played a significant factor.

Now, with 53-year-old Pedro Grifol set to take over the reins, there is an opportunity for the White Sox to pick up some wins solely through improved managerial decisions. A common theme across all areas was La Russa’s indifference toward analytics, using certain advanced metrics sparingly. Grifol professed his appreciation for analytics in his introduction presser, which hopefully will elevate his team’s performance across the board.

Ultimately, we can boil down the multitude of ideas into five central themes.

#1: Lineup Decisions

Leury Garcia started 88 games for the 2022 Chicago White Sox. 88 baseball games. Let’s not mince words—that can’t happen again. La Russa played a guy with a .210/.233/.267 final batting line for more than half the season, hardly entertaining other ideas before finally benching Leury consistently beginning in July. Grifol can boost the lineup simply by identifying his best players and playing them as much as possible without wasting time on sunk costs.

While injuries were a significant hamper on the roster last season, TLR also had plenty of chances to formulate a consistent lineup structure, and failed. Players would bounce all around the lineup from week to week, with Jose Abreu in third or fourth and Tim Anderson at leadoff (when healthy) being the only exceptions. A lackluster lineup will find a hard time catching fire without proper time to settle in, and Grifol should look to maintain a persistent structure as much as possible.

#2: Bullpen Flexibility

Old school through and through, La Russa had a rigid understanding of when certain bullpen arms can pitch. For example, Chicago’s previous manager believed Craig Kimbrel would always struggle when not in the ninth inning.

Furthermore, he struggled to pitch his best reliever, Liam Hendriks, outside of the ninth inning when extremely high-leverage situations called for it. Flexibility in arm usage can be a huge positive, as the White Sox proved when they won 8-3 on June 10, 2022, after TLR green-lit an analytics department recommendation to use Reynaldo Lopez as an opener.

La Russa also deferred to same-handed matchups even when not appropriate, including one prime example we will cover in the next section. While he would sometimes cite unique handedness splits in making certain decisions, he seemed to forget about them at other times.

#3: Intentional Walk Decisions

Pedro Grifol: Please never intentionally walk a batter on a 1-2 count. Infamously, Chicago’s favorite Hall of Fame manager decided to walk Trea Turner on a 1-2 count on June 9, 2022. Unintimidated by the lefty-lefty matchup, Max Muncy strolled to the plate and promptly hit a three-run bomb. The South Siders would go on to lose 11-9.

Even worse, Bennett Sousa also has reverse splits, meaning he performs better against right-handed batters. La Russa would walk Oscar Gonzalez in another two-strike count in August, but got away with it that time. Whether they’re a fan of advanced analytics or not, any fan would direct Grifol to avoid two-strike intentional walks in 2023.

#4: Bunt Less

Data analysis in recent years has shed light on the inefficacy of bunting in baseball. In nearly all situations, run expectancy goes down if a sacrifice bunt is executed. Yet the Sox were eleventh in baseball last year in sacrifice bunts, laying down 16 of them. A quick peek at the teams at the top of the list vs. the bottom reveals a sharp divide in which the best offenses bunt the least. The 2022 correlation may be exaggerated, but it will always be there to some degree.

#5: Bring Energy

Any athlete can attest to the spark an energetic coach can provide when the team rallies around them, both in the middle of games and practice. The South Siders were in desperate need of a fire lit under them in 2022, but never got it. In fact, their leader could barely stay awake at times.

Armed with relatively youthful energy and bilingual speaking abilities, Grifol should face no difficulties motivating his squad in 2023. Here’s hoping he can sustain a winning culture in the process.

This article first appeared on Sox On 35th and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

+

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.