Manager Pedro Grifol to White Sox players: Respect game, fans with appropriate effort

“There’s a level of respect to the game for people who pay to watch the game,” Grifol said.

SHARE Manager Pedro Grifol to White Sox players: Respect game, fans with appropriate effort
White Sox manager Pedro Grifol.

White Sox manager Pedro Grifol smiles as he stands in the dugout prior to a spring training game against the Seattle Mariners.

Ross D. Franklin/AP

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Two managers ago, then-White Sox skipper Rick Renteria benched players during spring training for not running hard to first base.

Last season, manager Tony La Russa encouraged players to take it easy while running balls out to preserve their legs.

A case could be made for a middle ground, which is what first-year manager Pedro Grifol wants from the Sox this season. The bottom line? Grifol wants a good effort.

‘‘There’s a level of respect to the game for people who pay to watch the game,’’ Grifol said Tuesday. ‘‘I’m not asking them [on a] ground ball to the pitcher to give me 100% down the line, but give me a good effort. Give me good effort till the play ends. And if it happens to end before you get to first base, OK, then you can shut down a little bit. Just give me good effort.

‘‘Give us, our organization, our culture, the effort that we’re looking for. And that’s what is preached to them.’’

Grifol said that fans deserve it and that kids are watching, ‘‘learning from the way we play the game.’’ When Sox hitters ran half-speed on ground balls last season, it was a bad look.

‘‘I’ve heard all the philosophies in the last four, five years,’’ Grifol said. ‘‘You know, save your legs. But at the same time, you have to respect the game, your teammates and your organization and the fans that come out to watch.’’

Taking 90 feet

The Sox have looked to be aggressive on the bases in the first four games of the spring.

‘‘I envision our team taking advantage of 90 feet whenever it’s given to us,’’ Grifol said. ‘‘Whether it’s on a ball in the dirt, a base hit to the outfield, sometimes you can’t force these things. But when they present themselves, you have to be ready to take it.

‘‘What kind of baserunning team are we going to be? Opportunistic. You give it to us, we’re going to preach taking it. And as far as running hard down the line, that’s expectation.’’

Clevinger, Giolito ‘really strong’

Lance Lynn, who is ahead of the other pitchers because he’s pitching in the World Baseball Classic, is slated for three innings for his second start Thursday before anyone else in the starting rotation makes his first. Dylan Cease will start Friday.

Mike Clevinger and Lucas Giolito pitched two innings of live batting practice Tuesday.

‘‘I was really, really happy with the way those two guys are throwing the baseball right now,’’ Grifol said. ‘‘They look strong, really strong.’’

Michael Kopech, who is coming off knee surgery at the end of last season to repair a torn meniscus, is scheduled to throw one inning of live batting practice Thursday.

Crochet on track

Left-hander Garrett Crochet, who is on course for a possible return from Tommy John surgery by mid-May, ‘‘looked really good’’ and ‘‘pounded the strike zone’’ in his bullpen session. Crochet won’t pitch in the Cactus League.

‘‘He’s comfortable; his numbers are good,’’ Grifol said. ‘‘I’m really excited where he is right now in his quest back.’’

This and that

Seby Zavala’s two-run home run gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead, and Billy Hamilton added a fourth run with a hustle double, steal of third and run scored on catcher Sebastian Rivero’s squeeze bunt.

• First baseman Andrew Vaughn made several plays, starting and finishing a crisp 3-6-3 double play, and second baseman Hanser Alberto made two nice plays on his backhand to go with two hits, including a double.

Tim Anderson made his first fielding error, had a one-hop smash deflect off his glove for a single and lost a bases-loaded pop-up in the sun that dropped in front of center fielder Luis Robert, who picked the ball up and started a double play. Robert also doubled off the center-field wall.

On deck: Guardians at Sox, 2:05 p.m. Wednesday, Glendale, Aaron Civale vs. Davis Martin.

The Latest
Of those shot, 20 were in mass shootings in Greater Grand Crossing, the Near West Side and Austin.
The man, 25, was walking on train tracks about 8:50 p.m. near the 1700 block of East 71st Street when two people approached him and they exchanged gunfire, police said.
“If he were here and he were to see his name on a race car at the Chicago Street Race, it would just absolutely blow his mind,” Alex Maddox said.
The Bulls and Kings were looking for another trade partner, and they found one Saturday night — the Spurs, for whom DeRozan played before joining the Bulls.