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New contract means a whole new type of pressure for Bulls’ Zach LaVine

Zach LaVine had a different way of looking at his boost into a new tax bracket.

When the Bulls handed the All-Star guard a five-year, $215 million extension in July, there was heartfelt gratitude from LaVine but also a feeling of justification.

In LaVine’s mind, the max deal was earned, not gifted.

“I think it’s just a credit to my hard work,” LaVine said. “I think I’ve had the same work ethic and the same goals before the contract, after the contract.”

That’s a great attitude, but it’s about to be tested.

LaVine never has flinched when discussing pressure. If anything, he has welcomed those situations as obstacles that needed to be overcome to get to where he wanted to go.

Becoming the 17th-highest-paid player in the NBA when he’s not even the best player on his team, however, will be uncharted territory.

There are expectations with max players — all-or-nothing expectations that far too often are unobtainable. It’s NBA title-or-bust for LaVine as a Bull.

Just take a glance at some of the company LaVine keeps: Steph Curry will be the highest-paid player in the league this season at $48 million, and he has four rings. LeBron James is fourth at $44.4 million and also has four titles.

Kevin Durant, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kawhi Leonard, Klay Thompson, Khris Middleton and Anthony Davis are in the top 20, and they’ve all hoisted the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

Then there’s the group that falls in the jury-is-still-out category.

Paul George, Luka Doncic, Trae Young and Jimmy Butler reside there.

But LaVine doesn’t want to find himself in the bad-contract-gone-worse area code. That’s the territory of John Wall, Russell Westbrook, Bradley Beal, Damian Lillard and Tobias Harris — all among the 20 highest paid with front offices that regretted doling out those deals. Three of those players eventually had a change of address.

The concerning part about that list is that, besides Harris, they’re all guards — and defensively challenged guards at that. Ring a bell? It’s a scouting report LaVine has carried for most of his first eight years.

There seemed to be a defensive awakening, however, last summer. LaVine was playing with Team USA and wanted to show a different mindset with that group. It carried into the NBA season with LaVine seemingly motivated by defensive-minded teammates such as Lonzo Ball and Alex Caruso.

Then his left knee started acting up.

By February, LaVine was back to the all-too-familiar identity of score first, defend as an afterthought. The numbers verified that, and coach Billy Donovan admitted as much.

But the knee was a valid excuse, especially for a player making $19 million and change.

Max players don’t get excuses. Max players aren’t allowed to be one-and-done in the playoffs. Max players face scrutiny from media and fans on a nightly basis.

It will be interesting to see how LaVine handles that pressure, starting in a few weeks when camp begins.

Throughout his NBA career, the kid from Seattle has been one of the easiest All-Stars to deal with from a media standpoint.

He’s approachable, thoughtful in his answers and honest.

“Obviously, you can’t control everything with injuries, being traded, whatever it is, but I could always control my demeanor, my work ethic and what I brought to the game,” LaVine said. “I always pictured myself as the player that I am, and the player I’m going to be, continue to strive to be, and what comes with that is being compensated at that level.”

True, but with that lavish compensation comes a level of scrutiny that LaVine has never had to deal with.

Ready or not.

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These baseball trivia questions are ageless

Today’s headline was brought to you by the innovative mind of comedian Steven Wright. He’s the guy who also said, “I kept a diary right after I was born. Day 1: Tired from the move. Day 2: Everyone thinks I’m an idiot.” He also asked, “How young can you die of old age?” Oh, and he told us, “I remember when the candle shop burned down. Everyone stood around singing ‘Happy Birthday.’ “

Well, you might have figured out that my theme is not about the brilliant Mr. Wright, but about birthdays

(although the Red Sox had a pitcher named Steven Wright) and aging. A couple of weeks ago, I celebrated my birthday. Getting older is not something that bothers me. It is indeed better than the alternative. Adding another year to my r?sum? just simply widens the gap between my chronological age and my level of maturity. So, now let’s see if I can find nine questions for you on age and birthdays without taking a nap while I’m writing them.

Have fun.

1. In baseball’s first Hall of Fame class, made public on Feb. 2, 1936, Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson, Honus Wagner and Babe Ruth were named as five of the finest players since 1900. Who was the oldest and who was the youngest of the five at the time of this announcement?

2. Here’s a great tweet from Dan Clark: “On Aug. 29, 2001, Serena Williams wins at U.S. Open, Albert Pujols hits a HR and Vlad Guerrero Sr., Craig Biggio and Dante Bichette all record a hit. On Aug. 29, 2022, Serena Williams wins at U.S. Open, Albert Pujols hits a HR and Vlad Guerrero Jr., Cavan Biggio and Bo Bichette all record a hit.” Who is older, Serena Williams or Albert Pujols?

3. Since 1901, who is the oldest batter to homer while wearing a Chicago uniform?

a. Charlie Root b. Ernie Banks c. Carlton Fisk d. Omar Vizquel

4. Jan. 31 is a great baseball birthday date, and not just because Tommy La Stella was born on that date. Which of these Hall of Famers was not born on that date?

a. Ernie Banks

b. Nolan Ryan

c. Jackie Robinson

d. Hank Greenberg

5. Since 1901, who is the oldest Chicago pitcher to win 20-plus games in a season?

a. Grover Cleveland “Pete” Alexander

b. Mordecai Peter Centennial “Three Finger” Brown

c. Early “Gus” Wynn

d. Eddie “Knuckles” Cicotte

6. Three of the four players listed had four hits on their birthday while playing for Chicago. Who was the one who celebrated his birthday with five hits?

a. Mike Kreevich

b. Mike Caruso

c. Mike Fontenot

d. Brant Brown

7. Ichiro Suzuki, Nomar Garciaparra, Bartolo Colon, Todd Walker and Todd Hollinsworth were all born in the same year. What year?

a. 1970 b. 1971 c. 1972

d. 1973 e. 1974

8. Frank Thomas was born on May 27, 1968, the exact same day as what other Hall of Famer?

a. Trevor Hoffman

b. Jeff Bagwell

c. Greg Maddux

d. John Smoltz

9. Today is the birthday of some great players. Your job is to determine which of the following were born on Sept. 10.

a. Randy Johnson

b. Joey Votto

c. Roger Maris

d. Paul Goldschmidt

e. All of them

f. None of them

Thank you to all of you for your kind emails and your attention to my weekly fun. I hope you learned something, had a few laughs and appreciated some oldies but goodies. I close with a terrific tweet from Bill Simmons, who wrote: “I’ve been following sports my whole life and one thing never changed — the aging near-the-end superstar improbably thriving one more time is still the greatest thing to watch.”

ANSWERS

1. Honus Wagner was the oldest, born on Feb. 24, 1874. Babe Ruth was the youngest, born on Feb. 6, 1895. Christy Mathewson was born on Aug. 12, 1880. Walter Johnson was born on Nov. 6, 1887. Ty Cobb was born on Dec. 18, 1886.

2. Serena was born on Sept. 26, 1981 (age 40), and Albert was born on Jan. 16, 1980 (age 42).

3. When Pudge Fisk homered in his first game of the season for the Sox on April 7, 1993, he was 44. Charlie Root was the oldest to homer for the Cubs. He was a 42-year-old kid when he homered on July 16, 1941. Root, a pitcher, was famous for giving up Babe Ruth’s “called shot” in the 1932 World Series.

4. Hank Greenberg was born on New Year’s Day 1911, and the other three were born Jan. 31.

5. I loved the names of these guys. It was Early Wynn, who, late in his career, won 22 games for the White Sox in 1959 at the age of 39. He led the American League in wins and also in innings, throwing 255 2/3.

6. The three Mikes had four hits apiece. Brant Brown of the Cubs celebrated his 25th birthday with five hits on June 22, 1996. He went 5-for-9 as the Cubs beat the Padres 9-6 in 16 innings.’

7. They were all born in 1973, and they will all be 50 next year (hopefully).

8. If I were writing a quiz for the Houston Chronicle, the question would read: “Jeff Bagwell was born on May 27, 1968, the exact same day as what other Hall of Famer?”

9. They all were, and they all make and made baseball magical.

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Matt Eberflus measures everything — but how will the Bears measure him?

Matt Eberflus has found a way to measure almost anything on a football field.

When his player tackles someone along the sideline, Eberflus watches to see how far he pushes him out of bounds. At the least, the ballcarrier has to tumble across the 6-inch chalk border that surrounds the field and land on the other side.

“From the green through the white,” he told the Sun-Times. “That’s a way we measure intensity.”

In the open field, Eberflus measures the last three yards of the possession. Does the tackler accelerate to the ball-carrier and drive his feet? Does he perform a hamstring tackle? Unlike most coaches, Eberflus teaches that the tops of a player’s shoulder pads should be level with the ball-carrier’s waist. The defender must drive through the player’s hips, wrap up near the hamstrings and take three firm steps while taking him to the ground.

Any additional tacklers need to try to force a fumble. Eberflus measures whether they do, and which technique they try: the punch, the hammer or the rake. The punch is an uppercut through the fat part of the ball and the hammer is a downward strike. The rake is more violent — peeling back a ballcarrier’s fingers and reaching for the tip of the ball to dislodge it.

“If you’re not punching the ball on every play, the way we coach it, that’s a mistake,” Eberflus said.

The coach watches exactly where defenders are punching: former Bears cornerback Charles Tillman has taught Eberflus’ teams both in Indianapolis and Chicago to try to time the punch to coincide with a ball-carrier’s rocking motion as he runs. Don’t punch where the ball is, Tillman preaches, punch where it’s going to be.

“Are you really stripping it every play?” Eberflus said. “Not just sticking your hand out there to appease me, but are you really going after it?” he said. “We coach that every single play.

“It’s all measured, so you can coach details every single play. What you’ll see is that when you do it on offense, defense, and kicking, your team will understand the exact standards because everything is on the table. You don’t hide anything.”

Those defensive tenets helped the Colts finish second in the NFL in takeaways over Eberflus’ four-year stint as defensive coordinator — which in turn landed him his first-ever head coaching job.

The main tenet of his H.I.T.S. system — which has found a way to, Eberflus believes, quantifiably measure hustle, intensity, takeaways and smarts by grading game film — is that he’s always watching.

Sunday at Soldier Field, the 52-year-old will have his first exposure with the ultimate measurable: wins and losses as an NFL coach. Because a rebuilding Bears team figures to have much more of the former than the latter, it raises the ultimate conundrum for someone whose coaching ethos is based on grading the ungradeable. Beside wins and losses, what would the Bears consider a success?

Eberflus’ boss has an idea.

“Resilience,” general manager Ryan Poles said. “I’ve been on teams, a Super Bowl team and teams that, ya know, anywhere in between. And the teams that can just stay level and look at “What are the solutions?” instead of just pointing at the problem and being negative with like, ‘Look at that! It’s not good.’ No. ‘How are we going to fix it?’

“So as an organization, as a team, as a locker room, as a staff, just being resilient through the ups and downs and just continuing to fight and have that arrow pointing up.”

o o o

Eberflus collects sayings the way other men his age collect vinyl records or bottles of Bordeaux. He uses so many of them, so often, that those inside Halas Hall not only have favorites, but former favorites.

“It’s about the takeaways,” linebackers coach Dave Borgonzi said. “He says that one every day.”

“To get the ball, you have to be fanatical,” defensive line coach Travis Smith said.

“Together, we can,” safeties coach Andre Curtis said.

Secondary coach James Rowe, who spent last season as Eberflus’ cornerbacks coach in Indianapolis, lists one specific saying as the most important. It’s actually just two words, said twice apiece: “Player-coach, coach-player.”

It’s what separates Eberflus from his predecessor, Matt Nagy.

“You can be a player’s friend, for sure, no doubt,” Eberflus said. “But you have to be his coach first.”

Nagy held dance contests and Saturday night ice cream parties for his players. He conceived of “Club Dub” in the locker room after the game — though Joe Maddon’s Cubs get credit for the inspiration — where he’d stand in the center of a circle and motion his right arm to the ground like he was spiking a football.

“Boom!” the players would scream.

When the Bears won, Nagy was inspirational. When they lost, his players said they wanted to win for him. But something was missing. Nagy was 39 when the Bears hired him; Eberflus was 51. Perhaps the age gap breeds more of a professional distance.

“The coach is there to serve and to help the player,” Eberflus said. “That’s your job. And you have to have the right mindset as a coach because it’s not about you. It’s about the player.

“The player is the product we put on the field. And that’s the product of the Bears. So he comes first — whatever we can do to help him to be his very best. And the coach has to show that to the player.And when he does, there’s a relationship built. They have this relationship where it’s a partnership — coach-player, player-coach partnership.”

o o o

Eberflus was a 22-year-old assistant at Toledo when head coach Gary Pinkel held a football in the air and, in a moment of coach zen, sent a simple message.

“Guys,” he said, “it’s all about this.”

Pinkel’s zeal for takeaways — and against turnovers — was a success. He retired in 2015 as the all-time leader in wins at Toledo and Missouri. At the time, only two coaches could make the same claim about two Division I-A schools: “Bear” Bryant and Steve Spurrier.

Eberflus, his defensive coordinator at Missouri from 2001 to ’08, took Pinkel’s focus on takeaways to the NFL. He was the Cowboys’ linebackers coach in 2014 when Rod Marinelli, the former Bears assistant, was named defensive coordinator. Eberflus at first wanted to be just like the man he called a “master coach,” but then he decided he wanted something unique. His H.I.T.S. principle, which combines elements of Marinelli’s tracking of player “loafs” and Eberflus’ meticulous film grading, was born.

“Most people just look at scheme, like, ‘OK, he did his job and completed pass and all that,’ ” Eberflus said. “Well, we don’t look at the game that way. We look at the game a different way.”

At Halas Hall, that meant teaching the system to the defensive assistants who didn’t follow him from Indianapolis and creating offensive grading points.

The meetings took hours. He was met with wide eyes.

“The coaches had the same response as the players — ‘Gosh, I didn’t know it was like that,’ ” Eberflus said.

Eberflus spent his first few months at Halas Hall coming up with ways to measure offensive performance with the same level of obsession he did defense.

Just as cornerbacks must tackle the right way, receivers must block them properly.

“There’s no house guests here,” Eberflus said.

Just as defenders’ punches at the ball are meticulously measured, so are the steps ballcarriers take to thwart a takeaway. They must keep five points of pressure on the ball — their fingertips, palms, forearms, biceps and chest — and clasp their hands when they run through traffic.

When Smith interviewed for the Bears’ defensive-line job, he asked about Eberflus’ takeaways secret. Eberflus said he was fanatical about it. It wasn’t until Smith got to Halas Hall that he saw what that looked like.

“Watching how we practice and how we attack the ball, it makes sense,” he said.

It’s tangible. Which means it can be measured.

“Then everybody knows what the standard is,” Eberflus said. “As opposed to saying, ‘Hey, just play hard.’ Or, ‘Hey, take the ball away.’ “

o o o

Eberflus didn’t raise his two daughters by shouting aphorisms and measuring hustle, although he does have one go-to phrase that makes sense for a protective dad to Grace, who just graduated college, and high schooler Giada.

“I always tell my girls, ‘Keep your head on a swivel,’ ” he said.

Otherwise, Eberflus said, he’s not the same man at home as he is on the sideline.

“I know how to have fun, relax,” he said. “The whole principle and foundation isn’t an uptight thing. It’s just how we live. It’s the standard.”

His new boss is all in.

“I love that dude,” Poles said last week. “He is consistent. His message is clear. There is no gray area. When he approaches the team meeting and gets in front of the guys, he’s got juice. But it’s not fluff. It’s not fake. It’s real. And you can feel that energy that he has. The guys love it. I love it. I’m so pumped about his leadership and how he’s going to lead this team.”

Safety Eddie Jackson has noticed Eberflus’ big ideas and little gestures. The coach has yet to be late for a meeting.

“Just holding everyone to that accountability and just letting his action match his words,” Jackson said. “I feel like that’s the big thing.”

Rowe, the secondary coach, can feel Eberflus’ personality on game day. It’s the same “stern intensity” that the Bears want out of their players.

“All the greats have a switch that they turn on and off, and it’s probably more important to turn it off,” he said. “He’s intense. He’s intentional. His passion to win is unmatched. And you feel that from him when he talks about football.”

That intensity, of course, can be measured.

“If you turn on the film, the film reflects the coach,” said Borgonzi, the linebackers coach. “If you have an intense team, then that’s a reflection of the coach, the position coach and the coordinator. The film’s your r?sum?. The film does the talking.”

It will speak for the first time Sunday.

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White Sox win for eighth time in 11 games under acting manager Miguel Cairo

OAKLAND, Calif. — Miguel Cairo is enjoying the ride.

And what a ride Friday’s improbable 5-3 win over the Athletics was for the White Sox, who won for the eighth time in 11 games since Cairo, the Sox’ bench coach, took over as acting manager.

Down 3-0 and being no-hit for six innings, the Sox (71-68) scored five runs in the ninth, four of them after two outs, to stay within 1 1/2 games of the Cleveland Guardians in the AL Central.

Eloy Jimenez homered for the third time in three games against A’s lefty A.J. Puk to start it before the Sox scored four runs after two outs. Andrew Vaughn singled home pinch runner Leury Garcia, Romy Gonzalez (after striking out three times) singled home pinch runner Adam Engel with the tying run (Engel sneaking his hand over the plate with a fading slide) and former Athletic Elvis Andrus delivered the tiebreaking shot, a two-run double into the left field corner scoring two runs.

“We were like sleeping for a bit and we just got a wakeup call,” said Cairo, who pushed all the right buttons in the ninth inning pinch-hitting Yasmani Grandal (walk) and using two pinch runners. Cairo took over when Tony La Russa left the team for medical reasons.

“They don’t give up. That’s the phrase Tony uses, never give up. And [play for] 27 outs],” Cairo said.

“That was a good win. We have to come back tomorrow with the same intensity, same fire.”

The Sox have won eight of their last 10 games. Cairo said the streak has been a team effort on the field and with the coaching staff with former manager Jerry Narron and coaches Shelley Duncan, Joe McEwing and Ethan Katz all putting their heads together.

“They all help with the moves, with everything,” Cairo said. “Everyone is contributing.”

The Sox were a disappointment the first five months of the season but are now playing as planned.

“Amazing win,” said Lucas Giolito, who pitched six innings of three-run ball. “To put five runs up in the ninth inning like that. It was a lot of fun to watch. Maybe there was a little hangover from last night [scoring 14 runs on 21 hits] early in the game.

“Keep the good vibes rolling. There is a lot of fight in this team. Just amazing clutch at-bats by all the guys. This is stuff we can do when we’re playing loose and free.”

The Sox beat the Mariners for a series win Wednesday after their first seven batters struck out. They were down 4-0 in that one.

“It shows how resilient this team is,” Andrus said. “Eloy’s homer woke us up. This win shows how much heart and passion this team has.”

“These are the games early in the year we wouldn’t win,” Hendriks said. “The attitude in here is a little more yelling at each other which is one of the things we’re thriving on.”

Liam Hendriks, who pitched the ninth for his 32nd save against his former team, said Cairo “has done things differently here but it’s been fantastic.”

“As far as winning percentages he’s the winningest manager in White Sox history, right?” Hendriks said. “We’ve had Miguel for a couple years. It’s been fantastic watching him. We want Tony to get better and healthy and make sure we’re firing on all cylinders but Miggy stepped up admirably into that role.”

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Cubs’ Drew Smyly wins lefty duel vs. Giants’ Carlos Rodon

After missing two major-league seasons because of Tommy John surgery and six weeks with a strained oblique, left-hander Drew Smyly is enjoying one of the best stretches of his 10-year career.

Smyly threw seven-plus innings of one-hit ball Friday in outdueling former White Sox lefty Carlos Rodon and earning a 4-2 victory against the Giants.

“You never know somebody’s true character until you’re with them every day and [see] how bad they want to be out there,” Cubs manager David Ross said. “To manage him and watch him go about his business and continue to want to go out there and stay out there, it’s just really rewarding when you watch him pitch, and it finally pays off. [He has] been such a big piece for us.”

Smyly, 33, has allowed one run or fewer in five of his last seven starts, posting a 2.29 ERA. He matched his season high in innings and might have pitched longer had it not been for a throwing error by shortstop Nico Hoerner to start the eighth inning.

“It’s definitely nice to feel confident and in sync with your mechanics and trust your stuff,” said Smyly, who rebounded from his last start Sept. 3 in St. Louis in which he allowed seven runs in 2,, innings.

David Villar’s double with two outs in the second was the only hit allowed by Smyly.

Nostalgic Nico

Hoerner celebrated the third anniversary of his first major-league promotion by singling and stealing second base, which set up Yan Gomes’ home run in the second, and he smacked a two-run homer off Yunior Marte in the sixth that loomed large when Evan Longoria hit a two-run double in the eighth off Manny Rodriguez.

“I actually was aware of that [anniversary],” Hoerner said. “I remember the date. It’s fun.”

Hoerner got his first major-league hit off former Stanford teammate Cal Quantrill in San Diego and has since overcome a COVID-shortened 2020 season and a ridiculous demotion to Triple-A Iowa to start 2021 before emerging as a dependable shortstop.

Madrigal reinjured

Second baseman Nick Madrigal left after three innings because of tightness in his right groin and will undergo tests Saturday. Madrigal missed 46 games because of a left groin injury earlier this season.

Right-hander Keegan Thompson (tight lower back) threw a bullpen session, and catcher Willson Contreras (sprained left ankle) did some light running.

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Cubs’ Drew Smyly wins lefty duel vs. Giants’ Carlos Rodon

After missing two major-league seasons because of Tommy John surgery and six weeks with a strained oblique, left-hander Drew Smyly is enjoying one of the best stretches of his 10-year career.

Smyly threw seven-plus innings of one-hit ball Friday in outdueling former White Sox lefty Carlos Rodon and earning a 4-2 victory against the Giants.

“You never know somebody’s true character until you’re with them every day and [see] how bad they want to be out there,” Cubs manager David Ross said. “To manage him and watch him go about his business and continue to want to go out there and stay out there, it’s just really rewarding when you watch him pitch, and it finally pays off. [He has] been such a big piece for us.”

Smyly, 33, has allowed one run or fewer in five of his last seven starts, posting a 2.29 ERA. He matched his season high in innings and might have pitched longer had it not been for a throwing error by shortstop Nico Hoerner to start the eighth inning.

“It’s definitely nice to feel confident and in sync with your mechanics and trust your stuff,” said Smyly, who rebounded from his last start Sept. 3 in St. Louis in which he allowed seven runs in 2,, innings.

David Villar’s double with two outs in the second was the only hit allowed by Smyly.

Nostalgic Nico

Hoerner celebrated the third anniversary of his first major-league promotion by singling and stealing second base, which set up Yan Gomes’ home run in the second, and he smacked a two-run homer off Yunior Marte in the sixth that loomed large when Evan Longoria hit a two-run double in the eighth off Manny Rodriguez.

“I actually was aware of that [anniversary],” Hoerner said. “I remember the date. It’s fun.”

Hoerner got his first major-league hit off former Stanford teammate Cal Quantrill in San Diego and has since overcome a COVID-shortened 2020 season and a ridiculous demotion to Triple-A Iowa to start 2021 before emerging as a dependable shortstop.

Madrigal reinjured

Second baseman Nick Madrigal left after three innings because of tightness in his right groin and will undergo tests Saturday. Madrigal missed 46 games because of a left groin injury earlier this season.

Right-hander Keegan Thompson (tight lower back) threw a bullpen session, and catcher Willson Contreras (sprained left ankle) did some light running.

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White Sox score five in ninth to topple A’s

OAKLAND, Calif. — It’s hard to measure just how much Elvis Andrus has meant to the White Sox since he joined them on Aug. 19.

The 34-year-old veteran has stabilized the shortstop position with All-Star Tim Anderson on the injured list. Going into Friday night’s 3-0 loss against the Athletics, his former team, Andrus was batting .291/.325/.494 with an .819 OPS and four home runs while starting all 19 games at shortstop since he arrived.

And he’s added another layer of leadership to a roster filled with veterans. And on Friday night, he doubled in the go-ahead runs in an explosive five-run ninth inning that vaulted the Sox (71-68) past the A’s for a 5-3 victory. Liam Hendriks pitched the ninth for his 31st save, ending it on a double play started by Andrus.

The Sox have won eight of 10 and are 8-3 under acting manager Miguel Cairo.

“A true shortstop playing shortstop, and with the experience he has,” Cairo said of the two-time All-Star Andrus. “He’s a very smart player.”

After getting blanked for eight innings the night after a 14-run, 21 assault on A’s pitching the Sox did not score until the ninth against A’s lefty reliever A.J. Puk.

Eloy Jimenez homered for the third time in three nights to start it. Andrew Vaughn singled home pinch runner Leury Garcia for the second run, Romy Gonzalez singled home pinch runner Adam Engel with the tying run and Andrus delivered the tiebreaking shot, a liner into the left field corner scoring a pair.

Andrus is filling Anderson’s customary spot leading off as well, a move Cairo made eight games ago. In his previous 11 games, Andrus batted .360 with four homers, four doubles, seven multihit games and 10 RBI.

“Plays really good defense and he’s been getting really good clutch hits,” Cairo said. “He’s been a very important piece. I’m glad that we signed him.”

Looking to win for the eighth time in their last nine games and needing a win to stay close to the AL Central leading Guardians, and one night after amassing 21 hits in a 14-2 series-opening romp against the worst team in the American League, the Sox were held hitless through six innings.

Adding more freaky Friday flavor to the Sox’ futility was seeing right-hander Austin Pruitt, a last-minute replacement for scheduled starter James Kaprielian — scratched because of a cut on his right middle finger — having his way with the Sox.

Lucas Giolito allowed three runs in six innings, including two in the fifth on Tony Kemp’s bloop single with two outs and two strikes and Sean Murphy’s liner to the left-center field gap scoring Kemp from first to make it 3-0.

Giolito (5.18 ERA) struck out six, walked two and gave up five hits.

Andrus, who singled and reached base twice Friday, was thrilled to join the contending Sox after Oakland, which entered Thursday with a 50-88 record, released him in the final year of his eight-year, $120 million contract. The A’s made room for 23-year-old shortstop Nick Allen, and the Sox got a bargain for a pro-rated portion of the major league minimum for Andrus’ services. Allen threw out Andrus from the left-field grass in the sixth.

The Sox finally got a hit with one out in the seventh when Jimenez singled against Joel Payamps.

The Sox (71-68) stayed 1 1/2 games behind the first-place Guardians the American League Central lead. Anderson, their two-time All-Star and former batting champion out since Aug. 6 with a surgically repaired sagittal band tear on the middle finger of his left hand, could be ready in approximately two weeks.

Anderson is getting daily treatment and running and throwing but can’t catch yet and hasn’t swung a bat yet. Anderson hasn’t talked to media and in the clubhouse, his customary vocal manner has changed to quiet. So it sometimes goes when players wait through dreary IL time, unable to contribute.

Andrus, meanwhile, made himself at home in the clubhouse and his voice was easily heard the day he joined the team in Cleveland. He said he is open to playing second base if Anderson returns. He sees what he is bringing to the Sox.

“Yeah, for sure,” Andrus said. “I just have to keep playing hard, keep staying positive. I think this team needed it, and it feels like the right timing for me.”

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White Sox score five in ninth to topple A’s

OAKLAND, Calif. — It’s hard to measure just how much Elvis Andrus has meant to the White Sox since he joined them on Aug. 19.

The 34-year-old veteran has stabilized the shortstop position with All-Star Tim Anderson on the injured list. Going into Friday night’s 3-0 loss against the Athletics, his former team, Andrus was batting .291/.325/.494 with an .819 OPS and four home runs while starting all 19 games at shortstop since he arrived.

And he’s added another layer of leadership to a roster filled with veterans. And on Friday night, he doubled in the go-ahead runs in an explosive five-run ninth inning that vaulted the Sox (71-68) past the A’s for a 5-3 victory. Liam Hendriks pitched the ninth for his 31st save, ending it on a double play started by Andrus.

The Sox have won eight of 10 and are 8-3 under acting manager Miguel Cairo.

“A true shortstop playing shortstop, and with the experience he has,” Cairo said of the two-time All-Star Andrus. “He’s a very smart player.”

After getting blanked for eight innings the night after a 14-run, 21 assault on A’s pitching the Sox did not score until the ninth against A’s lefty reliever A.J. Puk.

Eloy Jimenez homered for the third time in three nights to start it. Andrew Vaughn singled home pinch runner Leury Garcia for the second run, Romy Gonzalez singled home pinch runner Adam Engel with the tying run and Andrus delivered the tiebreaking shot, a liner into the left field corner scoring a pair.

Andrus is filling Anderson’s customary spot leading off as well, a move Cairo made eight games ago. In his previous 11 games, Andrus batted .360 with four homers, four doubles, seven multihit games and 10 RBI.

“Plays really good defense and he’s been getting really good clutch hits,” Cairo said. “He’s been a very important piece. I’m glad that we signed him.”

Looking to win for the eighth time in their last nine games and needing a win to stay close to the AL Central leading Guardians, and one night after amassing 21 hits in a 14-2 series-opening romp against the worst team in the American League, the Sox were held hitless through six innings.

Adding more freaky Friday flavor to the Sox’ futility was seeing right-hander Austin Pruitt, a last-minute replacement for scheduled starter James Kaprielian — scratched because of a cut on his right middle finger — having his way with the Sox.

Lucas Giolito allowed three runs in six innings, including two in the fifth on Tony Kemp’s bloop single with two outs and two strikes and Sean Murphy’s liner to the left-center field gap scoring Kemp from first to make it 3-0.

Giolito (5.18 ERA) struck out six, walked two and gave up five hits.

Andrus, who singled and reached base twice Friday, was thrilled to join the contending Sox after Oakland, which entered Thursday with a 50-88 record, released him in the final year of his eight-year, $120 million contract. The A’s made room for 23-year-old shortstop Nick Allen, and the Sox got a bargain for a pro-rated portion of the major league minimum for Andrus’ services. Allen threw out Andrus from the left-field grass in the sixth.

The Sox finally got a hit with one out in the seventh when Jimenez singled against Joel Payamps.

The Sox (71-68) stayed 1 1/2 games behind the first-place Guardians the American League Central lead. Anderson, their two-time All-Star and former batting champion out since Aug. 6 with a surgically repaired sagittal band tear on the middle finger of his left hand, could be ready in approximately two weeks.

Anderson is getting daily treatment and running and throwing but can’t catch yet and hasn’t swung a bat yet. Anderson hasn’t talked to media and in the clubhouse, his customary vocal manner has changed to quiet. So it sometimes goes when players wait through dreary IL time, unable to contribute.

Andrus, meanwhile, made himself at home in the clubhouse and his voice was easily heard the day he joined the team in Cleveland. He said he is open to playing second base if Anderson returns. He sees what he is bringing to the Sox.

“Yeah, for sure,” Andrus said. “I just have to keep playing hard, keep staying positive. I think this team needed it, and it feels like the right timing for me.”

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White Sox feelings mixed on new rules

OAKLAND, Calif. – Not everyone likes the new rules announced by Major League Baseball Friday, but White Sox right-hander Jimmy Lambert, who pitched under a pitch clock this season at Triple-A Charlotte, is a proponent.

“You’re going to come to the park every night knowing how long the games are going to be,” Lambert said. “I was in the minors for like six weeks this year and every game basically is like 2 hours and 40 or 50 minutes, in that range. You’re not going to have games that are four hours, which we had two or three days ago. Regardless of score, really, because the score doesn’t determine how long the game goes.”

Baseball’s competition committee voted to implement larger bases, a pitch clock and restrictions on defensive shifting.

Veteran left-hander Jake Diekman said the pitch clock is “stupid.”

“I don’t think it’s going to be a problem, guys will get used to it, but in the playoffs, you’re going to say pitchers can’t take their time making the most important pitch of the season?” Diekman said. “And if you want to speed up the game, why are you making all these rules to improve offense?”

Closer Liam Hendriks said pitchers shouldn’t be penalized over and again if baseball wants to create offense. He said the rule limiting pickoff attempts is his biggest disappointment.

“I understand the concept but … at some point you have to come the other way and be unbiased in that regard.”

Regardless, adjustments will be made, starting in spring training. And it should be good for the fans.

“I love it,” broadcaster Len Kasper said.

“People will adjust to it,” Sox acting manager Miguel Cairo said. “Players will adjust to it, front office and coaches will adjust to it. And you know, it’s still baseball.”

La Russa awaits clearance for Sunday

Tony La Russa underwent another medical test Friday and was hoping for clearance from his doctors to travel from Phoenix to Oakland for Dave Stewart’s uniform retirement ceremony Sunday.

La Russa could be cleared for Sunday but not yet to manage. A Sox spokesman said La Russa sounds good in conversations on the phone, but the team doesn’t have a clear sense of if or when he will be cleared to return. The team expects to know Saturday if La Russa will be in Oakland Sunday.

The Sox were 7-3 in the last 10 games with bench coach Miguel Cairo managing, and while La Russa hopes to return, he is also conscience about not wanting to disrupt a good thing.

Robert takes BP

Luis Robert missed his third straight start with a sore wrist but took live batting practice for the first time in a few days after getting “a good review” from trainer James Kruk after he hit in the cage.

“We’re just going to take one step at a time,” Cairo said. “It’s different in batting practice than when you’re facing someone with fastball, slider, changeup curveball and you have to check your swing. We just want to make sure he feels better and is ready to go.”

Grandal has back tightness

Cairo said Yasmani Grandal reported having back stiffness, so Seby Zavala was given his third straight start at catcher. Cairo said Grandal is day to day but was available as a backup.

Padilla claimed off waivers

Right-hander Nicholas Padilla was claimed off waivers from the Cubs and left-hander Anderson Severino was designated for assignment. Padilla was assigned to Triple-A Charlotte.

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High school football: Loyola cruises past St. Rita

High school running backs are generally darters or bulldozers. Loyola had Vaughn Pemberton a couple of years ago and he was a combination of both, running past and through defenders.

Junior Will Nimesheim, the Ramblers’ featured back this season, has an uncommonly patient running style.

“I’ve played running back my whole life,” Nimesheim said. “My favorite running back is Le’Veon Bell and his running style is kind of patient. Dance around, find the hole and don’t rush. We work a lot in practice on our timing: slow, medium and fast. It’s not just go all the time. I’d rather have one good slower cut than one really fast, bad cut.”

Nimesheim ran for 60 yards on 13 carries and caught two passes, including an eight-yard touchdown, in No. 2 Loyola’s 34-14 victory at No. 13 St. Rita on Friday.

The game was nowhere near as close as the score indicates. Both teams played their backups for the majority of the second half.

The Ramblers (3-0) 21-0 after the first quarter and 28-0 at halftime. St. Rita threw an interception on its first possession of the game and fumbled on its second. Both turnovers provided Loyola’s offense with excellent field position.

“We knew what to do and what our reads were,” said defensive back Joe Auer, who pulled down the interception. “We tried to jump on them early. We know Rita’s a good team.”

Loyola quarterback Jake Stearney was 14-for-20 passing for 172 yards. He threw five touchdown passes and had one interception.

“I’m happy about how we started,” Ramblers coach John Holecek said. “The first quarter was obviously excellent and Jake commanded the offense again pretty well. And we had some really good catches. But some drops. We have things to work on.”

Senior Quinn Foley had six catches for 82 yards. Spencer Leadbetter caught four passes for 49 yards including two touchdowns.

This was Loyola’s first road game. The Ramblers beat Cincinnati St. Xavier in Week 1 and United in Week 2. This is the third consecutive game where Loyola’s starters only played a half.

“We see on film all types of problems we can fix,” Holecek said. “We can always be better. We aren’t going to get complacent. We’re not going to let that happen.”

St. Rita quarterback Jett Hilding connected with Kenneth Davis on a 13-yard touchdown pass late in the third quarter. The Mustangs were able to finish strong and avoid a blowout loss.

St. Rita lost to top-ranked Mount Carmel on the road in Week 1 and defeated Brother Rice last week.

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