Tim Anderson pushes to lead, and to inspire: ‘His spirit is infectious,’ Tony La Russa saysDaryl Van Schouwenon June 12, 2021 at 10:44 pm

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If we want to call Tim Anderson the face of the White Sox franchise, we may, it’s cool with him. If we don’t, no worries.

DETROIT – If we want to call Tim Anderson the face of the White Sox franchise, we may, it’s cool with him. If we don’t, no worries.

The White Sox star shortstop is going to be who he is off the field, and if that, coupled with the vast talent he display on it makes him not just the man in the middle of the Sox infield but the man on the South Side, it’s all good.

“It’s nothing like, hey I need to be that, I need this to happen,” Anderson said in a conversation with the Sun-Times this weekend. “But if I just keep being me, standing on what I believe in, then I’m happy in my spot where I’m at, where my feet are. And that’s cool, too.”

Anderson is part great player, great attitude, great teammate, great leader. His feet are firmly planted on the floor of the Sox clubhouse, where manager Tony La Russa needs him as a leader.

With his voice, and by example.

“I’m going to keep pushing,” Anderson said, echoing perhaps his most common refrain.

Push, push, push. Bring it every day.

“I’m going to keep leading, and be an example, leading and inspiring people and making my teammates better,” he said.

The White Sox were rolling toward their 40th win (against 24 losses) at Detroit Saturday, jumping to a 13-2 lead after five innings, and it was Anderson who started the proceedings with a hustle double leading off the game against Jose Urena. He would collect three hits in his first five at-bats including a two-run single in a five-run fifth inning.

There were concerns that Anderson, part of baseball’s new breed, might not mesh with La Russa, a prized pupil in baseball’s old school. But La Russa has had nothing but praise for Anderson, from spring training on. After observing him through the first two months of the season, La Russa is still praising.

“What I’ve learned is he has a gift and burning desire to win,” La Russa said Saturday, “and he communicates to his teammates and does it in a real positive way.

“I’ve got to be careful saying this because I’ve had outstanding, winning players along the way on our teams but to play with his vocal and spirit, it’s the best I’ve ever been around. He brings it every single day, from the time he gets to the park, before the game, during the game, even after the game.

“He has great spirit, and it’s all about wanting his team to win. That’s the best motivation there is and it’s infectious with our team.”

Anderson, in turn, has wisecracked about La Russa being the dad that the kids don’t list to but it’s obvious the kid respects the dad in this case.

“Tony is good. He’s awesome, man,” Anderson said. “I can go in and talk to him about whatever. He has a game plan. He knows his stuff. You want to learn from him, a Hall of Fame manager like him. Why wouldn’t you talk about things he’s experienced and things he went through?

“It’s definitely been great. We’ve been getting along fine, we’re one big happy family. We’re trying to keep the clubhouse great, keeping all the noise out, because we know what the ultimate goal is. We’re all pushing for the same thing.”

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