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Despite a horrible season, Chicago extend
Guillén’s contract through 2012 season…
Ozzie Guillén took the Chicago White Sox to a World
Series championship two years ago. Now he's trying
to keep them from having the worst record in the
major leagues.
Sounds like a strange time to give him a new
contract, but that's what the team did Tuesday when
it announced Guillén had agreed to an extension
through the 2012 season. Guillén's previous deal ran
through next year, with a club option for 2009.
"The problems that we are having right now, I simply
do not believe that they are problems that are with
our coaching staff or with our manager," general
manager Ken Williams said, calling the contract
extension an easy decision.
"I already said previously that I put all that
weight on my shoulders. I'm the one that has to put
them in a better position to win baseball games and
that means going out and making the necessary
adjustments to get this team where we are better and
get guys back up to their normal level of production."
Williams said he wanted the players, Guillén and the
fans to know that the White Sox -- who had 99- and
90-win seasons before this year's debacle -- would
engage in an offseason plan to ensure there would
not be a repeat of this year's record.
Guillén's made a name for himself not only for his
managing style and success but for controversial
comments and opinions that often have caused
controversy.
Guillén said he's tried to say out of the headlines
this year and that may have been part of the problem
-- Ozzie wasn't being Ozzie.
"This is the worst summer I've had in my entire
career because I was too soft. I was kind of worried
about what people were going to say about me,"
Guillén said. "I could care less what people say
about me as long as I win."
Guillén was voted AL Manager of the Year in 2005 but
the White Sox slid from contention early this season
and are 61-84 after an 8-3 loss to the Cleveland
Indians on Tuesday, tied with Tampa Bay for the
poorest record in the major leagues.
After a 16-year playing career, the first 13 with
the White Sox, Guillén coached with Montreal and
Florida before he was hired as manager in 2003. Two
years later he managed the team to its first World
Series title in 88 years. The White Sox went 11-1 in
the postseason and appeared poised to be a contender
for years.
"When you are winning, you are king. When you're
losing, you are nobody," Guillén said.
"I appreciate they still believe in me, they still
believe in what I can bring to this club and believe
I can have a lot of success running this club," he
added. "It feels good that somebody believes in not
what I did in the past, but what I can do in the
future."
Guillén said one of his sons joked with him about
his new deal, telling him that not only was he the
first native Venezuelan to manage in the major
leagues and win a World Series, but he's probably
the first manager to sign a new deal when he was in
last place.
"Obviously you've seen the high end of what he's
capable of doing and pretty much, as players, we
didn't get the job done this year," said Darin
Erstad, in his first season with the White Sox. "You
got to take the good with the bad."
Guillén, who in 2005 talked about quitting if the
White Sox won the championship, went into a rant
over his team's poor play during a recent trip to
Texas. The collapse came despite a season-opening
$110 million payroll.
Now Guillén will be a major part of the
restructuring and there certainly will be some
criticism of his new deal after such a horrible
season.
"I respect that because everybody has their own
opinion," Guillén said. "I think I should be
criticized for the way we played this year. ...
Believe me, after this year and last year what I
went through, I'm bulletproof. I've been taking a
lot of heat. I don't blame people for putting me on
the spot because of the way played."
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