Archive for June, 2008

Monday, June 30th, 2008

White Sox Turn the Table and Sweep Cubs

A trip across town made all the difference for the White Sox.

Swept by the Cubs a week ago at Wrigley Field, they were the ones doing the sweeping in their home park on the South Side of town.

They finished off the three-victory run at U.S. Cellular Field on Sunday night, beating the Cubs 5-1 with homers from Carlos Quentin, Brian Anderson and Jim Thome backing solid pitching from Mark Buehrle.

“It’s going to be a different Monday in Chicago,” White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. “I bet White Sox fans can’t wait to get up for work because I know that was tough for them last weekend. It’s nice to see the fans with a smile on their face.”

Being home turned out to be the biggest factor in the six frenetic games between two first-place teams.

“It’s kind of crazy baseball,” Guillen said.

Cubs manager Lou Piniella wasn’t around for most of his team’s eighth loss in 12 games. He was ejected for the first time this season after arguing an appeal call on a checked swing in the second inning.

And Piniella wasn’t available for comment after the game.

“It was one of those things I think Lou was frustrated,” said bench coach Alan Trammell who filled in for Piniella in the dugout and at the postgame news conference.

The Cubs have their first four-game losing streak of the season and are 16-23 on the road with six more at San Francisco and St. Louis coming up.

“I can’t figure out why that is. We got to correct it if we want to go far,” the Cubs’ Mark DeRosa said. “We’ve got to win on the road, got to be able to go into other people’s backyards and get `Ws.’ We haven’t been able to do it.”

Illustrating the Cubs’ road woes was Aramis Ramirez. He homered four times against the White Sox last weekend but went 0-for-13 at U.S. Cellular the last three games.

Thome’s 15th homer, a two-run blast in the eighth off reliever Jose Ascanio, was his 522nd, moving him past Ted Williams and Willie McCovey into sole possession of 16th place all-time.

The Cubs threatened in the ninth after a walk, and a double by DeRosa. But Jim Edmonds lined to White Sox first baseman Nick Swisher who threw to second to double off DeRosa and douse the threat. Daryle Ward then grounded out to end the game.

The White Sox swept three from the Cubs for only the second time—the first came at Wrigley Field in 1999, two years after interleague play began.

This season the two rivals met as first-place teams for the first time in interleague play and are still atop their respective divisions. The Cubs’ lead in the NL Central was sliced to 2 1/2 games with the loss and the White Sox are 1 1/2 ahead in the AL Central.

Buehrle (6-6) won his fourth straight decision, allowing six hits and an unearned run in seven innings in a matchup of lefties with the Cubs’ Sean Marshall (0-2). Marshall gave up three runs and five hits in seven innings, two of them homers.

“I’m done with this series. I’m kind of glad it’s over,” Buehrle said. “It’s so stressful playing these guys and everything that comes with it. I can’t wait for tomorrow to come in here … kind of relax and get back to normal.”

Quentin, who hit the go-ahead homer Saturday in the White Sox’s 6-5 win, connected for his 19th leading off the fourth to make it 1-0.

Anderson’s fourth homer was a two-run shot in the fifth that just carried over the fence in left center and gave Buehrle a three-run cushion.

The Cubs broke through in the seventh after DeRosa’s ground ball went through third baseman Joe Crede’s legs for an error. After Edmonds singled and Henry Blanco filed out, Ronny Cedeno delivered a two-out RBI single before Buehrle struck out Kosuke Fukudome with two on.

Piniella was ejected after protesting an appeal call from first base umpire Chad Fairchild. When Crede had a check swing at a potential third strike, an appeal was made to Fairchild, who ruled no swing and a ball.

That brought Piniella out of the dugout yelling in Fairchild’s direction. Home plate umpire Rob Drake ejected Piniella, who then began arguing with Drake.

Crew chief Jeff Kellogg came down from third to try to settle the situation. Piniella, known throughout his career for tantrums against umpires, left the field but not before waving at Fairchild and making another angry comment in his direction.

“He (Piniella) stood up for us. I guess the replay showed that he swung and from my angle it looked like he did,” said Marshall, who escaped the inning without a run scoring.

Trammell gave Fairchild an earful in the fifth. The White Sox turned an-around-the horn double play when Fairchild called Cedeno out, even though Swisher dropped the ball after the play. A replay appeared to show that Cedeno beat the throw.



Monday, June 30th, 2008

White Sox Turn the Table and Sweep Cubs

Chicago White Sox fans celebrate their team's three-game sweep of the Chicago Cubs after a baseball game in Chicago, Sunday, June 29, 2008. The White Sox won 5-1.

A trip across town made all the difference for the White Sox.

Swept by the Cubs a week ago at Wrigley Field, they were the ones doing the sweeping in their home park on the South Side of town.

They finished off the three-victory run at U.S. Cellular Field on Sunday night, beating the Cubs 5-1 with homers from Carlos Quentin, Brian Anderson and Jim Thome backing solid pitching from Mark Buehrle.

“It’s going to be a different Monday in Chicago,” White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. “I bet White Sox fans can’t wait to get up for work because I know that was tough for them last weekend. It’s nice to see the fans with a smile on their face.”

Being home turned out to be the biggest factor in the six frenetic games between two first-place teams.

“It’s kind of crazy baseball,” Guillen said.

Cubs manager Lou Piniella wasn’t around for most of his team’s eighth loss in 12 games. He was ejected for the first time this season after arguing an appeal call on a checked swing in the second inning.

And Piniella wasn’t available for comment after the game.

“It was one of those things I think Lou was frustrated,” said bench coach Alan Trammell who filled in for Piniella in the dugout and at the postgame news conference.

The Cubs have their first four-game losing streak of the season and are 16-23 on the road with six more at San Francisco and St. Louis coming up.

“I can’t figure out why that is. We got to correct it if we want to go far,” the Cubs’ Mark DeRosa said. “We’ve got to win on the road, got to be able to go into other people’s backyards and get `Ws.’ We haven’t been able to do it.”

Illustrating the Cubs’ road woes was Aramis Ramirez. He homered four times against the White Sox last weekend but went 0-for-13 at U.S. Cellular the last three games.

Thome’s 15th homer, a two-run blast in the eighth off reliever Jose Ascanio, was his 522nd, moving him past Ted Williams and Willie McCovey into sole possession of 16th place all-time.

The Cubs threatened in the ninth after a walk, and a double by DeRosa. But Jim Edmonds lined to White Sox first baseman Nick Swisher who threw to second to double off DeRosa and douse the threat. Daryle Ward then grounded out to end the game.

The White Sox swept three from the Cubs for only the second time—the first came at Wrigley Field in 1999, two years after interleague play began.

This season the two rivals met as first-place teams for the first time in interleague play and are still atop their respective divisions. The Cubs’ lead in the NL Central was sliced to 2 1/2 games with the loss and the White Sox are 1 1/2 ahead in the AL Central.

Buehrle (6-6) won his fourth straight decision, allowing six hits and an unearned run in seven innings in a matchup of lefties with the Cubs’ Sean Marshall (0-2). Marshall gave up three runs and five hits in seven innings, two of them homers.

“I’m done with this series. I’m kind of glad it’s over,” Buehrle said. “It’s so stressful playing these guys and everything that comes with it. I can’t wait for tomorrow to come in here … kind of relax and get back to normal.”

Quentin, who hit the go-ahead homer Saturday in the White Sox’s 6-5 win, connected for his 19th leading off the fourth to make it 1-0.

Anderson’s fourth homer was a two-run shot in the fifth that just carried over the fence in left center and gave Buehrle a three-run cushion.

The Cubs broke through in the seventh after DeRosa’s ground ball went through third baseman Joe Crede’s legs for an error. After Edmonds singled and Henry Blanco filed out, Ronny Cedeno delivered a two-out RBI single before Buehrle struck out Kosuke Fukudome with two on.

Piniella was ejected after protesting an appeal call from first base umpire Chad Fairchild. When Crede had a check swing at a potential third strike, an appeal was made to Fairchild, who ruled no swing and a ball.

That brought Piniella out of the dugout yelling in Fairchild’s direction. Home plate umpire Rob Drake ejected Piniella, who then began arguing with Drake.

Crew chief Jeff Kellogg came down from third to try to settle the situation. Piniella, known throughout his career for tantrums against umpires, left the field but not before waving at Fairchild and making another angry comment in his direction.

“He (Piniella) stood up for us. I guess the replay showed that he swung and from my angle it looked like he did,” said Marshall, who escaped the inning without a run scoring.

Trammell gave Fairchild an earful in the fifth. The White Sox turned an-around-the horn double play when Fairchild called Cedeno out, even though Swisher dropped the ball after the play. A replay appeared to show that Cedeno beat the throw.



Friday, June 27th, 2008

Chicago Picks Their Rose

Derrick Rose arrives for a news conference after being selected by the Chicago Bulls as the first overall pick in the NBA basketball draft Thursday, June 26, 2008  in New York.

Derrick Rose grew up a few miles from the United Center. Now he’ll call the arena home.

The Chicago Bulls took Rose with the No. 1 draft pick on Thursday, opting for the point guard who led Memphis to the NCAA championship game over Kansas State forward Michael Beasley.

“It’s been amazing just waking up in the morning, knowing that today is my day and knowing that I’m going to have a chance to be in the first two picks,” Rose said. “Man, it’s been crazy running around, making me feel important. You really don’t want the day to end.”

That the Bulls went with Rose wasn’t a big surprise.

General manager John Paxson had hinted that they were leaning toward the dynamic floor leader who averaged 14.9 points and 4.7 assists while helping Memphis win a record 38 games in his lone season.

“I think he’s a special type of talent,” Paxson said. “I do feel the point guard position is really tough to come by. I think he had the unique strength component and speed component that a lot of point guards in this league don’t have. … He’s 19 years old and we feel like for the next 10, 12 years we’ve got a position covered that is really important to have.”

Not that choosing him over Beasley was easy. Both players probably could have jumped to the NBA from high school if league rules still allowed.

Instead, Beasley delivered one of the best seasons ever by a freshman, becoming just the third to lead the nation in rebounds at 12.4 per game while averaging 26.2 points. He had the second-most rebounds and third-most points by a freshman in NCAA history, helping Kansas State to its first NCAA tournament victory in 20 years.

He is projected to be a prolific scorer, something the Bulls certainly could use, and Paxson had said he would probably make a bigger impact next season.

Yet they saw Rose as a better fit after a disappointing 33-49 season.

The Bulls lacked leadership last season, and they are trying to pick up the tempo under new coach Vinny Del Negro without sacrificing much on defense— areas where Rose could help. They were also thinking long-term with the pick.

“He’s going to make guys better,” Del Negro said. “Guys that have his ability—length, create, finish with contact—are only going to benefit everybody on the team.”

Although Paxson said the Bulls will try to bring him along slowly, Rose believes he’ll be a quick study.

“I think I’ll come in and lead the team,” Rose said. “That’s how I feel.”

Can a 19-year-old rookie do that?

“I think I can be a leader on the court and off the court,” Rose said. “Age doesn’t really matter. It’s about how effective you are, and I think I’m getting better with my leadership skills.”

Rose is just the second guard taken with the first pick since Magic Johnson in 1979, joining Allen Iverson in 1996, and he’s the Bulls’ first No. 1 pick since Elton Brand in 1999. The Bulls went with Arkansas forward Sonny Weems in the second round, taking him with the 39th pick and sending him to Denver in a three-team deal involving several future draft picks that landed Chicago the rights to center Omer Asik from Portland, the 36th selection.

A product of city’s South Side, he had Memphis in position to win the national championship before things ended on a sour note. Rose scored 14 of his team’s 16 points during one stretch as the Tigers built a nine-point lead late in the title game against Kansas, but he missed one of two free throws with 10.8 seconds left. Mario Chalmers then hit the tying 3-pointer, and the Jayhawks won in overtime.

Even so, Rose made a convincing case that he was one of the top players in the draft. He was particularly good during the NCAA tournament, averaging 20.8 points after a solid regular season and now, he’ll try to help his hometown team pick up the pieces after a brutal season.

“Of course there’s pressure,” Rose said. “But I’m used to playing in Chicago. I think that will work to my advantage.”

Rose grew up in the rough Englewood neighborhood and starred at Simeon Career Academy. He’s old enough to remember the end of the championship dynasty but also saw Chicago hit the bottom of the NBA.

The Bulls thought they were on the right track after three straight playoff appearances but derailed as individual agendas took hold last season.

Luol Deng and Ben Gordon turned down five-year contract extensions and Kobe Bryant trade rumors surfaced as the season started. Players bickered with each other and their coaches. Scott Skiles got fired in December, interim coach Jim Boylan was let go at the end of the season, and the Bulls’ coaching search dragged on about two months before they finally hired Del Negro after high-profile flirtations with Mike D’Antoni and Doug Collins.

The team’s luck—and Rose’s career path—took a dramatic turn on May 20.

Rose signed with agents Arn Tellem and B.J. Armstrong, the former Bulls player, and told them he hoped to play for Chicago. That drew laughter, but a few hours later, there were gasps. The Bulls won the draft lottery despite 1.7 percent odds, and a long shot turned into a strong possibility.

Chicago still has issues to address, starting with Deng and Gordon.

They’re restricted free agents, and even if Gordon leaves, the Bulls still have a crowd in the backcourt. Kirk Hinrich and Larry Hughes have large contracts, and Thabo Sefolosha made a case for more playing time last season.



Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

O’s Halt Cubs Home Winning Streak

Baltimore Orioles' Ramon Hernandez, center, celebrates with teammates Kevin Millar, left, and Adam Jones  after scoring against the Chicago Cubs in the fourth inning of a baseball game in Chicago, Tuesday, June 24, 2008.

Brian Roberts might have been playing a lot of games at Wrigley Field instead of making a stop with the Baltimore Orioles’ on their first visit to the historic ballpark.

Rampant offseason trade rumors had him on the verge of joining the Chicago Cubs—and whether they were on target or not—he showed Tuesday night why he attracted so much interest.

Roberts had three hits to reach 1,000 for his career, closer George Sherrill struck out the side after the Cubs loaded the bases in the bottom of the ninth and the Orioles ended Chicago’s 14-game home-field winning streak with a 7-5 victory.

“It’s a great atmosphere,” Roberts said. “The fans love their baseball. … What we dealt with for four months you think about it a little bit. It’s just a fun night to be part of.”

The Orioles led 7-1 before it got tense over the last few innings, especially the ninth.

Chicago loaded the bases off Sherrill on Geovany Soto’s single, a walk to Mark DeRosa and Ryan Theriot’s infield single before the left-hander found his strikeout pitch and got his 26th save in 29 chances.

He struck out Ronny Cedeno, Kosuke Fukudome and Henry Blanco to end the game.

“It makes it a little more stressful, but I don’t get nervous out there,” Sherrill said. “I get nervous when it’s someone else, not me.”

Cubs manager Lou Piniella, whose team lost at home for the first time since May 17, wasn’t happy with his team’s final three at-bats.

“It was a good comeback. We got too far behind. … We didn’t have three good at-bats with the bases loaded. We didn’t swing at strikes,” Piniella said.

“We got to put the ball in play and we couldn’t,” Blanco said. “You do the best you can. This guy has 26 saves in the big leagues and you knew it wouldn’t be easy.”

Roberts had two singles and his sixth triple of the season, giving him 1,000 hits.

“I didn’t really think about it. But if it is a big hit, it makes it a little more significant,” Roberts said. “It didn’t seem like it at the time, but later in the game it turned out to be.”

Roberts, for sure, heard the trade rumors. He couldn’t help but do so during the offseason.

“I thought I was going to be a Cub in December,” Roberts said before the game. “I didn’t know what was going to happen. … Once the season started you just kinda go out and play your spot and the rest will take care of itself. I really haven’t thought about in a long time.”

Jeremy Guthrie (4-7) allowed only four hits and a run over the first six innings as the Orioles took a 7-1 lead.

But he was driven out in the seventh when Jim Edmonds hit a three-run homer after singles by Derrek Lee and Aramis Ramirez, slicing the lead to 7-4. After a walk, reliever Jim Johnson got DeRosa to hit into Chicago’s fourth double play of the night to douse the rally.

Ramirez hit an RBI single in the eighth and the Cubs still had two on before Sherrill relieved and got pinch-hitter Matt Murton to fly out.

Cubs’ starter Sean Marshall (0-1)—just recalled from Triple-A—lasted only 4 2-3 innings, giving up seven hits and four runs. The Orioles went up by six with three unearned runs in the sixth off reliever Michael Wuertz.

Luke Scott hit a two-run triple, a liner that got by right fielder Kosuke Fukudome in the fourth. It followed a walk and single by Ramon Hernandez.

Fukudome hit his sixth homer leading off the fourth to make it 2-1.

Roberts singled in the fifth and scored on Nick Markakis’ RBI double. Markakis moved up on a fly ball and scored on Kevin Millar’s RBI single that finished Marshall and made it 4-1.

Scott was initially credited with a double in the sixth when he hit a high pop that shortstop Theriot signaled was his. But when left fielder Eric Patterson called him off late, Theriot got out of his way and the ball dropped. The official scorer changed the ruling to an error on Patterson and one out later, Alex Cintron hit an RBI double.

He scored when Roberts drove one into the gap in right center for a triple. Markakis then delivered an RBI single.



Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Will the Bulls Take Rose or Beasley?

In this Nov. 17, 2007 file photo, Kansas State forward Michael Beasley drives during a college basketball game against Western Illinois in Manhattan, Kan. Derrick Rose or Michael Beasley? The Chicago Bulls have the No. 1 pick in the draft and a choice to make, one that should become a little clearer this week.

Derrick Rose’s response was as direct as one of his passes.

The best player in the draft? He reiterated it’s Michael Beasley.

“Hands down he is,” Rose said after working out with the Chicago Bulls on Thursday.

The No. 1 pick? It could be Rose.

While he was quick to praise Beasley again, just as he did at the NBA’s pre-draft camp, Rose also made it clear he would love to play for his hometown team.

The Chicago Bulls have the top pick in the draft next week and an important decision to make. Do they go with Beasley, the forward from Kansas State who would give them a scoring presence? Or Rose, the point guard from Chicago who led Memphis to the NCAA championship game?

While Beasley indicated earlier in the week that he would visit Miami, which has the No. 2 pick, Rose had no other trips planned. The workout on Thursday was his first—and perhaps only—one.

“Right now, he’s not scheduled to work out with the Heat,” said Reggie Rose, his older brother. “This might be the last stop, I hope.”

Reggie Rose said they are willing to visit Miami, but, “This might be it.”

If the Bulls are it, that would be just fine with Derrick Rose, who grew up on the city’s South Side and played at Simeon High School before leading Memphis to the NCAA final in his lone season with the Tigers.

Rose averaged 14.9 points and 4.7 assists while leading Memphis to an NCAA Division I record 38 victories and was particularly good during the NCAA tournament. He averaged 20.8 points and dominated Kansas in the championship game until the final seconds of regulation.

Memphis was leading by two when Rose stepped to the line with 10.8 seconds left and a chance to seal the victory. Instead of making it a two-possession game, he made one of two free throws. That gave Kansas a chance to tie it and the Jayhawks’ Mario Chalmers did just that after Memphis couldn’t foul, sending the game into overtime with a 3-pointer that crushed the Tigers.

“It was real tough knowing that I was one of the reasons we lost, not hitting a free throw,” Rose said.

Now, he could be the man who helps the Bulls rebound from their most disappointing season in years. Expected to contend in the Eastern Conference after three straight playoff appearances, Chicago lost 49 games as players bickered with each other and their coaches.

Scott Skiles was fired in December, and interim coach Jim Boylan lost his job at the end of the season. The Bulls finally hired Vinny Del Negro after a two-month coaching search in which they seemed ready to go with Mike D’Antoni and then Doug Collins.

Along the way, Chicago’s luck took a turn for the better when it defied 1.7-percent odds and won the lottery.

“When I signed with (agent) Arn Tellem, we were in a room,” Rose said. “He was like, ‘Which team do you want to play for?’ And he was like, ‘I know your hometown.’ Everybody in the room started laughing because we thought it was impossible. That night when the Bulls got the No. 1 pick, I was looking at the TV like this can’t be true.”

Rose said he never owned a Michael Jordan jersey growing up. He paid closer attention to LeBron James and the two could have something in common in the near future: No. 1 picks who got drafted by the local team.

“I would love to play here,” Rose said. “It’s a dream come true. You get to bring the Bulls back to where they’re supposed to be, hopefully, take it step by step and make progress.”

But if Beasley’s the best player, why should the Bulls take Rose?

“I think I can control the team a little bit more,” Rose said. “I think I’m a leader. And I think I’ll push the players and everyone else to have that attitude.”

If Chicago doesn’t pick him?

“I’ll be hurt a little bit, but my goal is to be playing in the NBA,” Rose said.



Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

My Cousin Vinny is the New Bulls Coach

Vinny Del Negro

Vinny Del Negro has been offered the Chicago Bulls head coaching job, according to a person within the league who is familiar with the situation.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because an announcement had not been made Monday.

An official announcement, which could come this week, would end a nearly two-month search that included courtships of Mike D’Antoni and Doug Collins.

Del Negro, the assistant general manager of the Phoenix Suns who has never been a head coach, would take over a team that went from 49 wins to 49 losses this past season and missed the playoffs after making the second round in 2007.

sluggish start cost coach Scott Skiles his job in December, and interim coach Jim Boylan was fired April 17. Former Minnesota coach Dwane Casey and Sacramento assistant Chuck Person also recently interviewed.

Messages left for Del Negro and Bulls GM John Paxson were not immediately returned.

Del Negro, who played collegiately at N.C. State, was drafted in 1988 by Sacramento and also played for San Antonio, Milwaukee, Golden State and Phoenix, averaging 9.9 points in 771 NBA games. He also played in Italy.

The Bulls were poised to make an offer to D’Antoni in early May only to see him jump from the Phoenix Suns to the New York Knicks before hearing chairman Jerry Reinsdorf’s presentation.

Collins, who coached a young Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen in the late 1980s before the championship run, also entered the picture, embracing the idea of a second opportunity in Chicago after the Bulls won the draft lottery and a shot at Derrick Rose or Michael Beasley.

The sides publicly acknowledged interest and said there would be more talks once Collins’ broadcast duties with TNT were finished. That happened when the Los Angeles Lakers beat San Antonio, but a potential deal unraveled.

Collins told Reinsdorf to look elsewhere June 6.

“I called Jerry this afternoon and said, ‘Let’s move forward and make sure we stay the friends that we have been for 25 years,”’ Collins said at the time. “It had to be a home run, and both of us had a little angst over it. So we both agreed it wasn’t the best to keep going this way.”

The Bulls, too, need a change of direction after unraveling just as the season tipped off.

A first-round sweep of Miami—Chicago’s first series victory since the championship era—and a six-game loss to Detroit in the second round last year gave the Bulls high hopes that quickly crashed. The Kobe Bryant trade rumors and failed contract negotiations with Luol Deng and Ben Gordon—who turned down five-year extensions worth more than $50 million—left Chicago in a funk it could not shake.

The unselfishness and hard-nosed defense that defined recent teams was missing. Players bickered with each other and lashed out at coaches as the losses mounted, and some skipped practices and shootarounds.

Joakim Noah, last year’s first-round pick, lashed out at assistant Ron Adams in January and was initially suspended one game before teammates voted to make it two. Noah also clashed with Ben Wallace, who was traded to Cleveland.

And just last month Noah was arrested in Gainesville, Fla., for having an open container of alcohol and also was charged with marijuana possession.

Tyrus Thomas skipped practice, Chris Duhon missed a shootaround the day after he attended a Duke-North Carolina game, and Andres Nocioni had words with Boylan during a game. Duhon is an unrestricted free agent who probably won’t be back, and Paxson figures to make some moves whether the No. 1 pick is involved or not.

“Hardly a year goes by when you don’t do something. But first we have to decide what we want to do with the pick,” Reinsdorf said last week. “And then we listen to offers for it, and then we’ll think about what else we’re going to do.”



Monday, June 9th, 2008

White Sox Win 6th in a Row.

Chicago White Sox's Paul Konerko hits a two RBI double in the third inning against the Minnesota Twins' during a baseball game Sunday, June 8, 2008 in Chicago. The Sox defeated the Twins 12-2.

Ozzie Guillen took his shots, and now, his hitters are taking theirs.

Nick Swisher and Alexei Ramirez homered, and Joe Crede had another big day at the plate as the Chicago White Sox routed the Minnesota Twins again, 12-2 on Sunday for their sixth straight win.

The latest outburst came exactly one week after Guillen lashed out at his struggling hitters. Since then?

Fifty-four runs during this streak. They’ve scored 10 or more in three consecutive games for the first time since July 15-17, 2000, against St. Louis and Milwaukee. The 15 hits Sunday gave Chicago at least 15 in three straight games for the first time since July 23-24, 1932, against Cleveland.

The most important number, though, is this: zero. That’s how many losses the White Sox have since Guillen’s tirade in Tampa Bay, and their lead over second-place Minnesota in the AL Central is now 5 1/2 games.

“You want to pull your own weight, individually or as a unit,” Chicago’s Paul Konerko said. “You don’t have to score 10 runs every game. We should be able to score four to six runs a night on average to give these guys a chance to win. … We’ve got to have some easy games, and the offense has to pull their weight on that.”

The hitters did just that, and Guillen was in a much better mood than he was a week earlier.

“I said in spring training I think this team can be special,” he said. “I don’t know how far we’re going to get, but this team has a chance to be special.”

After winning the first two games of this four-game series 10-6 and 11-2, the White Sox quickly jumped on the Twins, who dropped their fourth straight and matched their longest losing streak since Sept. 12-16.

Swisher’s three-run homer off Kevin Slowey (2-6) in the second made it 3-1 and Chicago broke it open with five more in the third, with Paul Konerko’s two-run double highlighting that rally. Ramirez added a two-run shot in the fifth, giving Chicago 16 homers in this streak.

“Another day of not being able to get through the first part of the ballgame,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. “Slowey, I think he tried everything. Good pitches, bad pitches, they seemed to be hitting just about everything we threw up there.”

That was more than enough for Gavin Floyd (7-3), who struck out a career-high nine and walked one while allowing two runs and six hits in seven innings.

He had plenty of support from an offense that roughed up Slowey for eight runs in three innings—after the start was delayed 89 minutes by rain.

“They hit just about everything—whether it was a good pitch, medium pitch or a very poor pitch,” Slowey said. “It’s tough. I’m sure some of the older guys will tell you and they’ve said it to us young pitchers, that you’ll go through stretches and it’s sometimes inexplicable.”

Swisher, whose average has hovered around .200, has a seven-game hitting streak. He pumped his fist after rounding first on the homer and had more to celebrate in the fifth when he added an RBI double.

Crede, meanwhile, continued his surge.

He is 10-for-15 with 12 RBIs in his last four games after going 2-for-4 and driving in two runs on Sunday. After hitting homers in three straight games for the first time in his career, including two each on Friday and Saturday, Crede doubled and singled and scored twice.

One week earlier, Guillen unleashed a tirade that seemed to be aimed at general manager Kenny Williams and hitting coach Greg Walker after watching his team go 5-for-39 with runners in scoring position while dropping three of four at Tampa Bay. Guillen called for roster changes while saying his job and Walker’s could be in jeopardy



Friday, June 6th, 2008

Fukudome leads Cubs to 5-4 win over Dodgers

Chicago Cubs' Ryan Theriot. left, scores on a single by Kosuke Fukudome as Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Russell Martin waits for the ball during the ninth inning of their Major League Baseball game, Thursday, June 5, 2008, in Los Angeles.

It’s always an intriguing showdown when one of the former stars of the Japanese League faces another in a major league game. So far, Kosuke Fukudome is having more fun than Takashi Saito when the Chicago Cubs play the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Fukudome opened the scoring with a solo homer and drove in the eventual game-winner with a one-out single in the ninth against the Dodgers’ All-Star closer, leading the Cubs to a 5-4 victory on Thursday night. It was his second hit in as many at-bats against Saito.

Fukudome got a 2-2 slider down in the zone and grounded it through the right side of the infield to enable the Cubs to regain the lead after they squandered a 4-0 margin.

“He kept fouling off those fastballs, so we tried to get him to quit on a backdoor slider and (Saito) left it down over the plate,” catcher Russell Martin said. “If it’s a couple of inches to the left, it’s probably a double play. But he found a hole, and that was it.”

Ryan Theriot opened the ninth with a double down the right field line against Saito (3-2). One out later, Aramis Ramirez was hit by a pitch on the hand—or at least umpire Eric Cooper thought so—and manager Joe Torre argued to no avail along with Martin.

It nicked something. I don’t know it was his the knob of the bat or his hand,” Martin said. “I know it didn’t nick him as hard as he made it look, but that’s what you’re taught to do. If it flicks off something, throw your hands up and you’ll get the base. He definitely has a career in Hollywood, that’s for sure.”

The Cubs have won 10 of 11 and lead the majors with a 39-22 record, their best start since 1977 when they had an identical record. They began this recent surge with a three-game sweep of the Dodgers at Wrigley Field, and are 17-3 against NL West teams.

Bob Howry (2-2) was credited with the victory after pitching one inning. Kerry Wood, the fifth Cubs pitcher, escaped his own bases-loaded jam in the ninth by striking out Matt Kemp to record his 17th save in 21 chances and send the Dodgers to their 11th loss in 14 tries.



Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Konerko Finally Comes Through in the 15th

Chicago White Sox's Paul Konerko watches his game-winning two run home run which scored Carlos Quentin during the 15th inning of a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals in Chicago, Wednesday, June 4, 2008. The White Sox won 6-4.

Paul Konerko was just glad he put an end to the game. Now he hopes he can halt his season-long slump, too.

Konerko hit a two-run homer in the 15th inning Wednesday night, sending the Chicago White Sox to a 6-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals.

His teammates went a little nuts in celebration.

“I felt like a rookie again,” Konerko said. “I got a pie in my face, I got champagne and beer and whatever the heck on my head and all that. I have to go back to the trainer now. Toby Hall got me pretty good with some shaving cream and I got to get it (his eye) cleaned out.”

Konerko, batting only .198 when he came up against Jimmy Gobble (0-1), hit his seventh homer, a drive to left field to score Carlos Quentin, who had drawn a leadoff walk.

Konerko is now 5-for-6 with four homers in his career against the Royals’ left-hander.

“I can’t say I was even happy, more just like relief because we won the game and it was over and I did something positive for the team,” Konerko said.



Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Derrick Rose or Michael Beasley?

If anyone watched Derrick Rose and Michael Beasley play this season, they would have realized that both of these players were worthy of the #1 pick in this years NBA Draft.  However, since the Chicago Bulls can only choose one player, I am going to give John Paxson the answer to his questions.  WHO SHOULD BE THE #1 PICK?

First, the Chicago Bulls will not make a mistake by choosing either one of these players.  They are obviously great talents that should transfer to the NBA game.  Second, the Chicago Bulls should only trade out of this pick if they can land the #2 pick and other players.

When comparing who is a better fit for the Bulls, we need to understand the current Bulls Roster as it stands.

Guards:  Shannon Brown, JamesOn Curry, Chris Duhon, Ben Gordon, Kirk Hinrich, Larry Hughes, Thabo Sefolosha

Forwards: Luol Deng, Drew Gooden, Joakim Noah, Andres Nocioni, Tyrus Thomas

Centers:  Aaron Gray

The Bulls roster is obviously guard heavy.  John Paxson will need to trade a guard or two to provide front line help.  The obvious choice would be Ben Gordon or Kirk Hinrich.  Each would provide value to teams that need a point guard and a scorer.  The Bulls have not had a low post scorer that commands double teams since a young Elton Brand graced us for a few seasons.  This is the #1 reason why the 2007-2008 Bulls were bad.  There was no reason for NBA teams to double the post.  Because of this, the Bulls FG % was one of the lowest in the NBA because their guards had to take low percentage jumpers while be guarded.  Michael Beasley would command a double team.  He also is fast enough to spread the floor and take any power forward off the dribble.

Another reason why this Bulls team struggled is because they had too many droughts in scoring during games.  The Bulls would have opponents make 10-0 runs during most of their games.  The reason why they could not stop these runs is that no big man on the Bulls can get to the foul line.  Michael Beasley had 12 games this year in which he shot over 10 free throws.  He also shot at a respectable clip of 77%.  Derrick Rose shot 71% as a guard.  The Bulls need someone that can get to the line, command double teams and be a beast on the boards.

Beasley averaged 26 points and 12 rebounds a game in a very tough and physical Big 12.  Rose averaged 15 points, 5 boards and 5 assists in a very mediocre league.  He also shot a terrible 33% from 3pointers and 71% from the line.  Do I think Rose will learn how to shoot….yes.  However, the Bulls will struggle to score and win games without a low post scorer.

Chicago has been buzzing about Derrick Rose because he played and grew up in the windy city.  However, I am not sure that helps a young kid develop by having friends, family around.  I think it would be best for Rose to go to Miami and learn from Pat Riley (MAGIC) and play with Dwayne Wade.

They are both great players…but…with the 1st pick in the NBA draft, the Chicago Bulls should select Michael Beasley from Kansas State.