Face of the franchise? Tim Anderson tops deep list of White Sox candidates

“Go down the list of our players,” Brooks Boyer said. “They’re trying to change the perception of the White Sox, and we’re OK talking about it.”

SHARE Face of the franchise? Tim Anderson tops deep list of White Sox candidates
White_Sox_Convention_Baseball_2.jpg

White Sox shortstop Tim Anderson is greeted by fans during the team’s annual fan convention Friday.

AP

As the White Sox evolve into something more than just a young group of unproven talent and into, as they say they are, a postseason-contending team, there are probably a half-dozen candidates to be the 2020 “face of the franchise.”

For Brooks Boyer, whose job it is to market this blossoming team, it’s something of a dream. In recent lean years, broadcaster Ken Harrelson could lay claim to such a title. Nothing against Hawk, who will enter baseball’s Hall of Fame this summer, but it’s time to move on.

“Who’s the face of the franchise? It’s to be determined,” said Boyer, the Sox’ longtime vice president for marketing. “There are so many candidates.”

That sure seems like a good problem to have. Shortstop Tim Anderson, left fielder Eloy Jimenez, third baseman Yoan Moncada and right-hander Lucas Giolito are young stars or budding stars who are one bunch of swagger, intellect, smarts and style wrapped into one. Jose Abreu is a proven veteran and the Sox’ best player over the last six seasons. Luis Robert and first-round draft picks Nick Madrigal and Andrew Vaughn have arrows pointing up.

“We’re trying to change the perception of the team,” Boyer said of the “Change the Game” theme. “It’s not just TA. Yoan Moncada plays louder, faster, bolder. And Eloy. . . . Go down the list of our players. They’re trying to change the perception of the White Sox, and we’re OK talking about it.”

Anderson, though, set himself apart by winning a batting title, being active in the community, making a year-round home in the south suburbs with his wife and daughters, working hard at his craft and playing with an edge.

You’ve seen the bat flips, you’ve seen the edge. It’s how he rolls. Young fans like it, and, as everyone knows, baseball needs young fans. Anderson is doing a Bat Flipping 101 clinic at SoxFest on Saturday.

“I showed that to you last year,” Anderson said of his edgy style at the first day of SoxFest on Friday at McCormick Place. “I’ve been telling you that since last year. Don’t think otherwise. I go out and play hard and give it all nine. I’m coming to the ballpark ready every day.”

When Anderson missed a month with a high ankle sprain last season, something intangible was noticeably missing. Teammates said it was the presence Anderson took to the field.

New teammate Nomar Mazara said he admired Anderson’s style from the other side of the field the last few years as a Ranger.

“Let me tell you something, a player like that, you don’t try changing,” Mazara said. “It was the same with [ex-teammate] Rougned Odor. He’s my guy. People think he’s like a bulldog, but he’s a cool guy. It’s the same with Tim. Don’t change his game, don’t change his personality. If people get mad at him, I say, Why, because he’s beating your [butt]?”

Anderson enters 2020 with a batting title in his pocket and, more important, with knowledge.

“Learned some more things, learned some things about myself,” he said. “I learned how to hit baseballs. Certain pitches, what swing I need to have on that pitch. Being consistent and more so knowing myself. And taking care of myself mentally, as well, because that’s going to eliminate all that frustration [of failure].”

The overriding mood at SoxFest among Anderson and teammates echoed what manager Rick Renteria has been saying: They believe they are playoff-worthy.

“I’ve got the same feeling,” Anderson said. “I’m excited; you’re excited. We’ve got the pieces. The door is wide open for us. All we have to do is go out and take it.

“You see the lineup from top to bottom. It’s a playoff lineup, right? Why not put that expectation on it? Why not set the bar high? The whole goal is to win a championship.”

Lofty, indeed. But there’s no shortage of faces to try to make that happen.

The Latest
The Hawks finished their season 23-53-6 — with the most losses in franchise history — after a 5-4 overtime defeat Thursday in Los Angeles. They ripped off three third-period goals to take the lead, but conceded late in regulation and then six seconds into overtime.
In moments, her 11th album feels like a bloodletting: A cathartic purge after a major heartbreak delivered through an ascendant vocal run, an elegiac verse, or mobile, synthesized productions that underscore the powers of Swift’s storytelling.
Sounds of explosions near an air base in Isfahan on Friday morning prompted fears of Israeli reprisals following a drone and missile strike by Iran on Israeli targets. State TV in Tehran reported defenses fired across several provinces.
Hall participated in Hawks morning skate Thursday — on the last day of the season — for the first time since his surgery in November. He expects to be fully healthy for training camp next season.