Konerko gets 2 hits, Guillen wins 600th as White Sox beat Indians 6-5
By Andrew Seligman, APSunday, October 3, 2010
Konerko, White Sox beat Indians 6-5
CHICAGO — Paul Konerko had two hits in what could be his final game with the White Sox, manager Ozzie Guillen got his 600th win and Chicago closed out a winning yet disappointing season with a 6-5 victory over the Cleveland Indians on Sunday.
Alexei Ramirez homered in the first inning and capped a three-run second with an RBI double. Juan Pierre had three hits and drove in three runs, and Edwin Jackson (4-2) got his first win in more than a month.
Chris Sale worked two innings for his fourth save in as many chances, despite giving up a two-run homer to Drew Sutton with two outs in the ninth.
The White Sox ended the season on a 9-2 run and wound up with 88 wins while finishing second in the AL Central after so many twists and turns. Between the slow start, the 25-5 run into the All-Star break and a late fade that knocked them out of the playoff race, this would have been a wild year even without all the drama surrounding Guillen and general manager Ken Williams.
They have apparently worked out their differences at least for now, and Guillen will be back next season, something that was not a given a week ago.
Whether Konerko and A.J. Pierzynski will return is another issue. Both have expiring contracts, and could be nearing the end of a run that included a championship in 2005.
They were showered with cheers during pregame introductions, when they stepped to the plate and when they were lifted.
Pierzynski, who was 0 for 2, came out just before the start of the fourth inning. Fans roared as he walked off the field, and there were hugs and high-fives from teammates and coaches in the dugout.
Konerko got similar treatment when he got lifted with one out in the seventh, the crowd chanting “Paulie! Paulie!” as he walked off the field.
By then, he had singled twice, leaving him with a .312 average. He finished one of his best seasons with 39 homers and 111 RBIs.
For the Indians, it was a fitting end after they won just 69 games in their first season under manager Manny Acta.
The White Sox wasted no time jumping on Justin Germano (0-3), with Pierre singling on the second pitch in the first inning and Ramirez making it 2-0 when he drove the next one halfway up the left-field foul pole for his 18th homer.
The Indians got an unearned run in the second, but the White Sox responded with three in the bottom half.
Pierre hit a two-run, two-out single and came around on a double by Ramirez that made it 5-1.
That was enough for Jackson, who had gone 0-2 in five starts since beating Cleveland on Aug. 31. He gave up five hits, including a leadoff homer to Luke Carlin in the fifth and a run-scoring single by Trevor Crowe that chased him with two out in the sixth.
Jackson finished 10-12 overall in Arizona and Chicago.
With no starters available because of a doubleheader on Wednesday, the Indians went with a committee of relievers.
Germano lasted two innings, allowing five runs and seven hits in his first start since May 2008 with San Diego.
Notes: The Indians held Shin-Soo Choo out of the lineup. He finished with a .300 average and .401 on-base percentage. … Besides Konerko and Pierzynski, closer Bobby Jenks has an uncertain future with the club after a shaky season. He’s eligible for arbitration, but Williams gave him a less-than-ringing endorsement. “As I sit here right now, that is something that we really have to evaluate strongly because I’ve been disappointed on a number of levels,” Williams said. “There are certain things that I’m not going to talk about right now, but I will say is Bobby Jenks has been good for a long time.” … The White Sox honored longtime organist Nancy Faust with a video tribute after the top of the first. She is retiring after 41 years.