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Sick of hearing about Rivalry Week and just waiting for kickoff in Week 13? Too bad.

Here’s another take on a week that for many will decide whether they make their conference championship game, which in turn has a huge say in whether they eventually make the four-team College Football Playoff.

Next year, when the playoff expands to 12 teams and conference championship games won’t be recognizable to those who aren’t aware the Big Ten stretches coast to coast and the SEC includes Texas and Oklahoma, many rivalry games just won’t have the same meaning (but we’ll still watch ’em).

Our writers break down what’s at stake and key positions to watch in this year’s Rivalry Week games, as well as notable quotes from the week and conference championship game scenarios in Week 13.

Week 13: What’s at stake in rivalry games

No. 2 Ohio State (11-0) at No. 3 Michigan (11-0)
(noon ET, Fox)

The stakes: No game during Rivalry Week carries more significance, both regionally and nationally. The winner will claim the Big Ten East Division title and advance to next week’s league championship game in Indianapolis, where it will be heavily favored against Iowa. A win there would secure a College Football Playoff spot. A loss likely would knock Michigan out of the CFP picture, due to strength of schedule, and also could keep Ohio State outside the top four.

Ohio State wins if: The defense applies the hard lessons from last season and TreVeyon Henderson takes pressure off of Kyle McCord. Veteran defensive coordinator Jim Knowles has done an outstanding job in Year 2, as Ohio State leads the FBS in opponent points per possession and yards per play allowed. “You’ve got to take accountability,” Knowles told me, referring to last year’s loss. “If change is warranted, then you change, because it’s really all about the players, it’s not about me.” Henderson has been excellent since returning from injury, rushing for 499 yards and five touchdowns in his past four games.

Michigan wins if: The defense limits Henderson and Marvin Harrison Jr., and quarterback J.J. McCarthy makes key downfield throws. Michigan hadn’t seen a receiver group as talented as Maryland’s and had some struggles last week. Ohio State’s wideouts, led by Harrison, are even better. McCarthy hurt the Buckeyes with big pass plays last season. While he isn’t asked to throw deep balls often, he must come through in key moments after recording only two completions longer than 19 yards over the past two games. “They definitely keep a lot more in front of them,” McCarthy said of Ohio State. “They try to make you earn it, each and every drive.” — Adam Rittenberg


No. 1 Georgia (11-0) at Georgia Tech (6-5)
(7:30 p.m. ET, ABC)

The stakes: Two-time defending national champion Georgia might make the CFP as long as it defeats Alabama in the SEC title game even with a loss against the Yellow Jackets on the road. But why take any chances? Georgia is attempting to become the first FBS team to win three straight national titles since Minnesota from 1934 to 1936. The Bulldogs are also trying to become the first FBS team to go unbeaten in consecutive seasons since Nebraska in 1994-95. With an upset of the Bulldogs, Georgia Tech will finish the regular season with a winning record, move up the ACC’s postseason pecking order and continue to build momentum under first-year coach Brent Key.

Georgia wins if: The Bulldogs should continue their recent dominance of the Yellow Jackets — they’ve won 18 of the past 21 games in the series — if they can run the ball and force turnovers. The Yellow Jackets are last in the ACC in run defense, allowing 222.4 yards per game. In Georgia Tech’s five losses this season, opponents have run for an average of 254 yards. Ole Miss ran for 299 yards in a 48-23 victory. Boston College piled up 308 yards on the ground in a 38-23 win. Clemson had 260 yards in a 42-28 triumph. Look for the Bulldogs to feed tailbacks Daijun Edwards and Kendall Milton early and often. Georgia ran for more than 200 yards in each of its past five victories against Tech, winning by an average of 33.6 points. Georgia’s defense has been better at forcing turnovers lately, and Tech is prone to turning the ball over. The Yellow Jackets had 12 miscues in their five losses, while forcing only three. — Mark Schlabach


Washington State (5-6) at No. 4 Washington (11-0)
(4:30 p.m. ET, Fox)

The stakes: For Washington, it’s quite simple. A College Football Playoff berth is still on the line and a loss to a team with a losing record would likely end of that pursuit. The game also comes at a unique time in the rivalry’s history with the Huskies set to depart for the Big Ten next season, while the Cougars remain without a clear future. It was announced this week that the Apple Cup will remain — for at least the next five seasons — and while that’s all fine and good, this game won’t have the same significance once the schools go their separate ways. There has always been a resources imbalance here that has shaped the competitive balance and it’s only going to teeter more in UW’s direction. So it stands to reason the Huskies, who already own a 75-33-8 advantage all time, should expect to win at an ever higher clip in the future.

Washington wins if: The Huskies need to limit the equalizers: turnovers, penalties and mental mistakes. If that happens, Washington will win. The Cougars have been wildly inconsistent this year and their 4-0 start seems like a different season. Still, this was a team that outplayed Oregon State and is coming off a dominant, lopsided win (albeit against Colorado, the worst team in the conference). — Kyle Bonagura


No. 5 Florida State (11-0) at Florida (5-6)
(7 p.m. ET, ESPN)

The stakes: For Florida State to keep its College Football Playoff hopes alive, it has to find a way to win in Gainesville for the first time since 2017 without star quarterback Jordan Travis — out for the season with a lower-leg injury. It is hard to have higher stakes than that headed into a rivalry game. As for Florida, there are bowl stakes on the line. A win gets the Gators to six and automatic bowl eligibility.

Florida State wins if: With a new starting quarterback in Tate Rodemaker, coach Mike Norvell has to call a game that will allow Rodemaker to feel comfortable from the start. Relying on Trey Benson and the run game will be a good start, but it is also important for Rodemaker not to force the issue. Florida State is 11-0 in part because it has protected the football. The Seminoles have lost only five turnovers, fewest in the nation. With the skill players he has around him, all Rodemaker needs is a little time to get the ball where Keon Coleman and Johnny Wilson can get it. Tight end Jaheim Bell could also be instrumental in the passing game. Defensively, Florida State must stop the run — the strength of the Florida offense. This is an area where the Seminoles have lacked consistency, allowing 4 yards per carry. The Gators have a new starting quarterback, too, in Max Brown, so putting pressure on him will be a must. — Andrea Adelson


play

1:20

Bo Nix ties Oregon single-game record with 6 TD passes in first half

Check out all six of Bo Nix’s record-tying touchdown passes in the first half against Arizona State.

No. 16 Oregon State (8-3) at No. 6 Oregon (10-1)
(Friday, 8:30 ET, Fox)

The stakes: A trip to the Pac-12 championship is on the line for the Ducks, who secure a rematch with Washington if they win and an opportunity to make it to the College Football Playoff should they prevail in that contest. For the Beavers, it’s a chance at beating their in-state rivals for the second year in a row, this time as a send-off to the Big Ten.

Oregon wins if: The Ducks don’t fall into playing Oregon State’s game. Unlike most of the teams in the Pac-12, the Beavers don’t rely on a high-powered offense to win. Their passing game is ranked in the bottom half of the conference and their success comes from the ground game instead, led by Damien Martinez (1,147 rushing yards and nine touchdowns this season). Jonathan Smith’s team will surely try to slow the pace and make it a low-scoring affair where running the ball and defense will determine the outcome. In other words, the less time Bo Nix has the ball, the better. The Ducks can play that game too, being that they have the second-best running attack in the conference behind Bucky Irving and rank in the top 3 of rushing and passing defense in the Pac-12. But the margin of error in that kind of game is slimmer, so if Nix can get into a fast rhythm early and put up points like they’ve done all season, Oregon will be in good shape. — Paolo Uggetti


Texas Tech (6-5) at No. 7 Texas (10-1)
(Friday, 7:30 p.m. ET, ABC)

The stakes: The Longhorns clinch a spot in the Big 12 championship game and continue to pound away on the path to the College Football Playoff with a win over the Red Raiders. According to ESPN Analytics, there’s just a 1.3% chance that Texas ends up in a three-way tie with Oklahoma and Oklahoma State and misses the Big 12 championship game. That would happen only with a UT loss to Tech, an Oklahoma win over TCU, an Oklahoma State win over BYU and a Kansas State loss to Iowa State. And after last year’s loss at Texas Tech, followed by a video where Red Raiders coach Joey McGuire was recorded telling his team, “I told you they were going to break and they did. … The country’s gonna find out, everything runs through Lubbock,” the Red Raiders have Texas’ attention. Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark added fuel to the fire before the season when he addressed a fan group in Lubbock and said, “I’m gonna be in Austin for Thanksgiving, OK? And you’d better take care of business like you did right here in Lubbock last year.”

Texas wins if: The Longhorns are a tough matchup for Tech. Red Raiders RB Tahj Brooks is second in rushing in the Big 12 at 122.5 yards per game, while Texas’ run-stuffers up front lead the league’s best rushing defense, allowing just 82.7 yards per game and six touchdowns all season. If Texas gets a lead and forces Tech to become one-dimensional, the matchup gets even tougher. The Red Raiders have won three straight games, but by one score each. They’ll have to come out swinging to hold off Texas’ potent offense. — Dave Wilson


No. 8 Alabama (10-1) at Auburn (6-5)
(3:30 p.m. ET. CBS)

The stakes: Alabama has won nine in a row since losing at home to Texas in Week 2. The Crimson Tide (7-0 in the SEC) have already clinched a spot in the SEC championship game against Georgia on Dec. 2 in Atlanta. So while this game doesn’t impact Alabama’s chances to win an SEC title, a loss would almost certainly knock the Tide out of College Football Playoff contention even if they were to knock off the Bulldogs in two weeks. Winning convincingly wouldn’t hurt. Alabama is a two-touchdown favorite, and with several teams trying to make lasting impressions on the playoff committee, the Tide could rack up a few more “eye test” points as they prepare for their showdown with the Bulldogs. Even winning its next two games over Auburn and Georgia doesn’t ensure Alabama a playoff spot, especially given the earlier loss to Texas, but ruining all chances with a loss to an Auburn team that was blown out at home last week by New Mexico State would fester for a long time in T-Town.

Alabama wins if: The Tide have won seven of the past nine meetings in the series, but had to escape in four overtimes the last time they visited the Plains. The two trips prior to that, Alabama lost. So Jordan-Hare Stadium hasn’t been a fun recently for the Tide, who need to get off to a quick start and take the crowd out of the game. Auburn had been pretty solid on defense until last week. The Tigers’ passing game has been a wreck all season. They rank 121st nationally in passing offense. Alabama has 32 sacks in 11 games, and if Auburn finds itself in obvious passing situations, this one could be over early. — Chris Low

Positions to watch in rivalry games

Ohio State-Michigan: Quarterbacks J.J. McCarthy (Michigan) and Kyle McCord (Ohio State) enter the spotlight, both carrying some questions. McCarthy hasn’t looked as sharp during coach Jim Harbaugh’s suspension, comes off of his shakiest performance (52.2% completions at Maryland) and hasn’t thrown a touchdown pass since Oct. 21 (four at Michigan State). McCord is playing his best ball of the season, recording eight passing touchdowns and only one interception in his past three games, and four straight games of at least 65% completions. But Mike Sainristil (four interceptions) and the Michigan defense poses a different type of challenge. — Rittenberg


Georgia at Georgia Tech: Both defensive lines will get a test in Atlanta on Saturday. For as good as Georgia’s defense has been this season — the Bulldogs rank fifth in the FBS in scoring defense (15.1 points per game) and ninth in total defense (288.1 yards) — it hasn’t gotten a ton of pressure on opposing quarterbacks. Some of that is because of scheme and design, but the Bulldogs haven’t generated a lot of pressure off the edge. Georgia Tech has allowed only 13 sacks, fewest in the ACC. — Schlabach


Washington State at Washington: There was a time, early in the season, when quarterbacks Cam Ward and Michael Penix Jr. looked like Heisman candidates, and while Ward is no longer in the picture, his talent certainly remains. These are players with NFL opportunities in their future and, when that’s the case, it’s hard to look anywhere else on the field. Penix’s recent form hasn’t been anywhere near his incredible start, so this represents an opportunity to make his case to Heisman voters. — Bonagura


Florida State-Florida: This is an easy one: Quarterback. Both backups will start in this game — Tate Rodemaker for Florida State and Max Brown for Florida after injuries to starters Jordan Travis and Graham Mertz last weekend. As a fourth-year junior, Rodemaker possess more experience, and last year came into the game at Louisville to lead a comeback victory. Last week in relief of Travis, he went 13-of-23 for 217 yards with two touchdowns. But that was against FCS North Alabama. The challenge Saturday will be far greater. Coach Mike Norvell said the biggest key is for Rodemaker to just be himself. As for Brown, the true freshman nearly led a comeback win last week on the road against Missouri after Mertz got hurt — going 4-of-5 for 56 yards with 42 yards rushing. He’s only played in three games in his career. — Adelson


Oregon State at Oregon: Running backs. Damien Martinez and Bucky Irving have had standout seasons, and while plenty of the focus will be on Heisman favorite Bo Nix and Clemson transfer DJ Uiagalelei, the ground game could determine the outcome of a crucial rivalry game. Not only are Martinez (1,147, nine TDs) and Irving (1,002, 10 TDs) primed for big performances, Oregon and Oregon State have top-5 rushing defenses in the Pac-12. — Uggetti


Texas Tech at Texas: Texas Tech running back Tahj Brooks is closing out a breakthrough season in which he has eight 100-yard games in his past nine, with him running for 98 yards on 17 carries in the other against Kansas State. He’s racked up 1,352 yards and nine touchdowns and averages 5.4 yards a carry. Texas lost starter Jonathon Brooks, who had 1,139 yards, for the season with an injury two weeks ago, but got 20 carries for 117 yards from CJ Baxter last week against Iowa State. — Wilson


Alabama at Auburn: With so much talk, and rightfully so, about the way Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe has blossomed, so has Alabama’s offensive line. The Tide are playing their best football up front, giving Milroe time to do his thing and also running the ball better. They’ve averaged 190.5 rushing yards in their past four SEC games. And in their past five contests, the Tide have allowed 12 sacks after giving up 26 in their first six games. True freshman left tackle Kadyn Proctor is settling in at just the right time after some growing pains early. It’s obvious he’s playing with more confidence. Alabama’s offensive line could use another strong showing in this matchup, especially with its toughest test of the season upcoming against Georgia. — Low

Quotes of the week

play

1:21

Wake coach can’t believe Notre Dame’s ‘love’ for Sam Hartman

Wake Forest coach Dave Clawson was perplexed by how Notre Dame celebrated Sam Hartman for his one season in South Bend.

“Here’s a guy that we recruited and we developed. You know, they’re putting a video on him saying, ‘We will always love you.’ Like, you only dated him for a couple of months. It can’t be love. We’re the ones that love him. We had five years with him. You rented him for a season.” — Wake Forest coach Dave Clawson on Notre Dame playing “I Will Always Love You” at the end of the game for Sam Hartman, who transferred to Notre Dame after five years at Wake Forest.


“Our players didn’t choose to leave the Big 12. They came to play for the University of Texas. What conference we’re in — they’re just here to suit up in the orange and white and run out of the tunnel. So, whether the commissioner is rooting against our players to win or not, or whether we’re in the SEC or the Big 12, at the end of the day, our players just want to play good football and they just want to win.” — Texas coach Steve Sarkisian on Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark attending Friday’s game against Texas Tech. Yormark said in the preseason he hopes the Red Raiders “take care of business” against the departing Longhorns.


“What’s those little four heads that are in California? What do they call those? The people’s faces engraved?” — Colorado coach Deion Sanders on Mount Rushmore.


“It’s in where? I thought it was in L.A. all this time. Wow, my geography. That’s the Hollywood thing? That’s what I thought. Thank you for educating me.” — Sanders, when told Mount Rushmore is in the Black Hills of South Dakota.


“I know you’ve been part of a big one across state lines [the Egg Bowl], but this one here’s on another level.” — UAB and former Auburn head coach Gus Malzahn to his friend Hugh Freeze, coaching in his first Iron Bowl as Auburn’s coach.


“I heard some of my teammates say that Jordan-Hare … it gives their players superpowers.” — Alabama offensive guard Tyler Booker on Auburn’s ability to rise up and play well at home.


“Thank God the opinions of others don’t dictate what our actions are going to be. This team a year ago, nobody thought we were worth a crap. They proved them wrong. Big expectations coming into the season, and people waiting for us to slip and fall. They’re continuing to get better. Quarterback goes down, oh, that must be it. That’s why we get to play the game. That’s why we get to go to work. That’s why we get to continue to push and build and go be all that I know this team can be.” — Florida State coach Mike Norvell to those doubting the Seminoles without Jordan Travis.

Conference championship scenarios

ACC

Louisville and Florida State have clinched spots in the championship game.

Big Ten

• The Ohio State-Michigan winner will capture the Big Ten East title.
Iowa has clinched the Big Ten West and a spot in the championship game.

Big 12

Texas clinches a spot with:

1) Win OR
2) Oklahoma loss OR
3) Oklahoma State loss OR
4) Kansas State win

Oklahoma State clinches a spot with:

1) Win OR
2) Losses by Oklahoma, Kansas State, West Virginia and Texas Tech

Oklahoma clinches a spot with:

1) Win and Oklahoma State loss OR
2) Win and losses by Texas and Kansas State

Kansas State clinches a spot with:

1) Win and losses by Oklahoma and Oklahoma State

Pac-12

Washington has clinched the top seed in the conference championship game.

Oregon clinches spot with:

1) Win (vs Oregon State) OR
2) Arizona loss (at Arizona State)

Arizona clinches spot with:

1) Win and loss by Oregon

SEC

Georgia and Alabama have clinched spots in the championship game; the Crimson Tide will be the designated home team as the SEC West champion.

American

SMU clinches a spot in the championship game with a win.

• The UTSA-Tulane winner clinches a spot in the championship game.

• If SMU loses, the second spot in the championship game will be determined by the highest composite average of selected computer rankings between SMU and the UTSA-Tulane loser.

Conference USA

New Mexico State and Liberty have earned spots in the title game; the Flames will host as the regular-season champion.

MAC

Toledo and Miami have captured spots in the championship game.

Mountain West

UNLV clinches spot with a win (vs. San José State)

Air Force clinches spot with a win (vs. Boise State) and a San José State loss

Boise State clinches spot with a win *vs. Air Force) and a San José State loss

San José State clinches spot with a win vs UNLV

Sun Belt

Troy has clinched the Sun Belt West.

Coastal Carolina clinches the East with a win (vs. James Madison) OR an Appalachian State loss (vs. Georgia Southern)
Appalachian State clinches the East with a win (vs. Georgia Southern) AND a Coastal Carolina loss (vs. James Madison)

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What are the worst records in MLB history?

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What are the worst records in MLB history?

The Chicago White Sox are struggling in 2024. In September, the White Sox tied the 2003 Detroit Tigers for the third-most losses in a season in MLB history. Chicago is on track to break the modern major league record for most losses — by the expansion 1962 New York Mets.

Check out the historical rundown below:

Worst Records, MLB History
(Min. 150 Games Played; W-L, Win Pct)

1899 Cleveland Spiders: 20-134, .130
1916 Philadelphia A’s: 36-117, .235
1935 Boston Braves: 38-115, .248
1962 New York Mets: 40-120, .250
1904 Washington Senators: 38-113, .252

Most Losses in a Season, MLB History
(W-L, Win Pct)

1899 Cleveland Spiders: 20-134, .130
1962 New York Mets: 40-120, .250
2003 Detroit Tigers: 43-119, .265
1916 Philadelphia A’s: 36-117, .235
2018 Baltimore Orioles: 47-115, .290
1935 Boston Braves : 38-115, .248

For more MLB coverage, check out the ESPN hub page for breaking news, rankings, recaps, stats, standings, scores, schedules, and more.

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‘You have to have a sense of humor’: How baseball’s all-time worst squad is coping with defeat

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'You have to have a sense of humor': How baseball's all-time worst squad is coping with defeat

CHICAGO — Last week, hours after the Chicago White Sox‘s latest attempt to win a baseball game fell apart in typically absurd fashion, Davis Martin could only chuckle. Every White Sox player has found a coping mechanism to endure the 2024 season, and Martin’s is laughter. Unlike much of the sports world, he’s not snickering at the team, but rather at how every day seems to invite something more farcical than the previous.

Martin was the starting pitcher in that game, looking to secure Chicago’s first win at Guaranteed Rate Field in a month. Going winless at home for so long is almost impossible for a Major League Baseball team. The White Sox seem to specialize in acts of futility: Sometime in the next 10 days, they could lose their 121st game and pass the 1962 New York Mets for the most losses in an MLB season since the dawn of the 20th century. Never in baseball’s modern history has the game witnessed a team like the 2024 White Sox, whose commitment to the bit of playing a positively wretched brand of baseball has not waned even as the season has.

In only the past month, they offered third baseman Miguel Vargas running into outfielder Andrew Benintendi, and infielder Lenyn Sosa not knowing a between-innings throw from a catcher was coming to second base and wearing the ball off his face, and Andrew Vaughn hitting what looked like a walk-off home run only for Texas outfielder Travis Jankowski to reach over the fence and yank it back for what may be the catch of the year. In Martin’s start, a 6-4 loss, the Cleveland Guardians twice scored a pair of runs on infield singles, a laughable way for Chicago to drop its 15th straight game at home.

“You have to have a sense of humor,” Martin said. “You walk that fine line of being on the edge of losing your mind — always on that razor’s edge. We’re just watching it all, and we’re like, oh my gosh, this happens and this happens. Truly, it’s so many things.”

For 5½ months now, the White Sox have redefined losing in sports. Five NFL teams have ended a season winless, and in the NBA the 1972-73 Philadelphia 76ers went 9-73, and two years later the NHL’s Washington Capitals won eight of the 80 games they played, but nothing compares to the march of doom that is a cursed baseball season: 162 opportunities to plumb the reaches of ineptitude. These White Sox are not powerful, and they are not fast, and they field poorly, and they throw recklessly, and they pitch inconsistently, and they bungle fundamentals. They are a bad baseball team. They have earned their 36-115 record. They know this. They have tried to remedy it. They have failed.

So they do what they can to avoid the vortex of losing, the inertia of it all, poisoning their futures. What it’s doing to their present, on the other hand, is surprising. Over two games with the team last week, the clubhouse of perhaps the losingest team ever was not dour or depressed — not like one might expect from a group transcending baseball notoriety and permeating the grander sporting consciousness. White Sox players were shockingly well adjusted. Angry at the results but not brooding. Embarrassed by the losses but refusing to roll over. Handling their misfortune in a reasonable, healthy, mature fashion and not like losers who would cast blame and fight one another, as have past White Sox teams.

“We’ve talked about like, ‘Oh, we’re having a good time.’ We are,” said Martin, a 27-year-old right-hander who’s thankful to be back after he missed last season rehabilitating from Tommy John surgery. “Really, these are a great group of guys. And I think if there was any other group of guys in here, it would be the most miserable existence ever. People are like, ‘Oh, how are you not losing your mind?’ We’re a bunch of young idiots just trying to make sure we have a job next year.”

Plenty of them will return, the consequence of a thin farm system and a team planning to devote its financial resources not to free agents who could heal some of the on-field wounds but toward fixing internal systems long ignored by ownership. Even with a surfeit of talent, the chances of the White Sox being this bad again are minimal. It is a generational sort of bad, the kind that has forced players to ask themselves: Where, in this cascade of awfulness, can they find some good?


LOSING AT ANYTHING takes a toll. It irradiates self-worth. It evaporates motivation. Athletes in particular spend their entire lives building up psyches strong enough to spare them from the vagaries of failure. Every major league player has been felled and gotten back up. Anyone who reaches the big leagues has inherently won. Which makes this all so particularly diabolical. The night before Martin’s start, Sean Burke, a big, talented right-hander, made his major league debut in relief. He allowed one unearned run over three innings, but the loss still gnawed at him.

“I’ve been all around winning teams my whole life,” Burke said. “I won when I was 9 years old in Little League. I won when I was in high school. I won when I was in college. This is kind of the first time I’ve been on a team that hasn’t been winning a ton.”

The White Sox have lost a ton. They started their season 3-22, then won 11 of their next 19 games and offered a sliver of hope. It soon vanished. They lost 14 consecutive games between the end of May and beginning of June. They one-upped themselves with a 21-game skid that started before the All-Star break and ended after the trade deadline. Another 12-game losing streak bridged August and September. At one point, the White Sox lost 45 of 50 games, the second-worst stretch ever behind the 1916 Philadelphia A’s, who went 36-117-1.

Before the game Martin pitched, left-hander Garrett Crochet — the leader of the staff and the lone White Sox All-Star, making him a likely trade candidate amid this rebuild — was talking with nearby locker neighbor Jonathan Cannon, a 24-year-old rookie who had started the night before and pitched well, only for Chicago’s offense to get shut out for the 17th time this season.

Cannon and Crochet started going back and forth about the season, and what came of it wasn’t just an examination of the White Sox but a treatise on the slow-burning devastation of losing.

Cannon: “When you’re having a season like this, it feels like nothing’s going your way. When we played the game the other day against the Orioles [an 8-1 win Sept. 4], it just felt like balls are falling, line drives are going to people when we’re on the mound. It’s like, ‘Wow, this is great.'”

Crochet: “It seems like once an inning, we will give up the flare single and then every time that we hit the flare on offense and it’s like, ‘Oh, that one’s falling,’ someone dives and catches it.”

Cannon: “Even yesterday, the first inning, you get the first guy and then a little flare over the shortstop and it’s like, ‘Oh, not the cheap hit again.'”

Crochet: “Then we had a guy in scoring position and [Bryan] Ramos hits a ball 106 and [Guardians third baseman Jose] Ramirez falls down catching it. It’s like, ‘F—, man.'”

Cannon: “The peak of that was when Jankowski robbed Vaughn’s walk-off homer.”

Crochet: “Yeah!”

Cannon: “Just the feeling in the dugout — I can’t even describe what it was. I think we stared at each other for 30 minutes after and then we come back and it’s all over Instagram and everything, and it was arguably, because of the situation, maybe the best catch I’ve ever seen. And of course he just got put in the game for that inning.”

Crochet: “It was just an overwhelming feeling of ‘What the f—?'”


WHEN THAT FEELING is at its most overwhelming, Grady Sizemore tries to minimize it. Sizemore is the White Sox’s manager, appointed to the job in early August after the team fired Pedro Grifol, who over his 1½ seasons on the job won 89 games and lost 190. Before this season, Sizemore had never coached, but he made a strong enough impression as one of Chicago’s five major league coaches over the first four months that White Sox general manager Chris Getz, himself in his first full season, did not hesitate hiring him in an interim role. Over the last 45 games of the season, Getz wanted a different sort of approach than the intensity with which Grifol led — something more relaxed and nurturing.

Sizemore is 42 but could pass for 30. He is the only manager in MLB who wears a mullet — and he pulls it off with aplomb, framing a face that 20 years ago made him the most eligible bachelor in Cleveland. No manager in baseball can match Sizemore’s talent when he played for Cleveland in the mid-2000s. He made three All-Star Games by the time he turned 25 and looked destined for greatness before injuries waylaid his career. He retired at 32.

“I’ve kind of been in every scenario,” Sizemore said. “I’ve come up as a rookie, I’ve had some success. I’ve been a veteran who’s been more of a leader, and I’ve kind of been a guy who’s struggled with injuries and seen his play decline. I’ve gone through the whole gauntlet of what a player could go through. So I feel like I can understand where all the guys are at mentally and what they’re thinking.

“And then I took time away, too, had a family. I had to go through all of that, what it’s like to be a parent. It teaches you a lot of patience, and it teaches you how sometimes you have to say things over and over again. As a parent, it’s very hard. Even after you’ve figured it out, you haven’t figured it out. So I think the best part about where I’m at is I know that I haven’t figured anything out and that every day is a new day to learn something new and to get better.”

Sizemore’s approach reflects the revamp taking place at the top of the organization.

When owner Jerry Reinsdorf promoted Getz to GM after firing longtime executive vice president Kenny Williams and GM Rick Hahn last August, Getz hired an array of outsiders, an unfamiliar approach for an organization that was as insular as any at the behest of Reinsdorf, whose loyalty to employees has been a hallmark as well as a detriment. Brian Bannister, Getz’s former teammate in Kansas City and a longtime pitching guru, took control of the system’s arms. Josh Barfield and Paul Janish, both former big leaguers, are central in player-acquisition and player-development roles. And Brian Mahler — a former Harvard lacrosse player who went on to become a Marine and Navy SEAL before earning a law degree from Georgetown — joined the White Sox as director of leadership, culture and continuing education.

Mahler, who came into the organization having never worked in baseball, is at the heart of the overhaul in Chicago’s front office, and a committee headed by Mahler is expected to recommend a suite of changes for the organization to institute in the coming years. It’s a multiyear project with a focus, sources said, on optimizing resources, scaling processes and connecting departments. And Reinsdorf, who is 88, is backing it after years of wanting to win now.

He understands that doing so with the sort of roster that Chicago currently has is simply untenable unless he wants to spend heavily in free agency — something he has railed against for decades and never himself done as an owner. In a rare public statement last week, Reinsdorf said: “Everyone in this organization is extremely unhappy with the results of this season, that goes without saying. This year has been very painful for all, especially our fans. We did not arrive here overnight, and solutions won’t happen overnight either. Going back to last year, we have made difficult decisions and changes to begin building a foundation for future success. What has impressed me is how our players and staff have continued to work and bring a professional attitude to the ballpark each day despite a historically difficult season. No one is happy with the results, but I commend the continued effort.”

Fans appalled by the degradation of the White Sox in the two decades since their 2005 World Series title focus their discontent on Reinsdorf. The White Sox hold a unique place in Chicago’s sporting landscape. Being a Chicago sports fan imputes a particular sort of pain; being a Chicago sports fan who roots for the White Sox is a special subset of masochism. Their fan base is fiercely loyal and protective — of a history with ugliness (the 1919 Black Sox) and oddity (Disco Demolition Night and the myriad ideas of Bill Veeck) and richness (Hall of Famers Eddie Collins and Ed Walsh and Luke Appling and Nellie Fox and Minnie Miñoso and Frank Thomas). The White Sox’s drought before 2005 dated back 88 years, and yet their wait and championship were overshadowed by the Cubs’.

Now they can’t even tank like the Cubs did. New rules instituted in the last collective bargaining agreement penalize large-market teams like the White Sox by keeping them from receiving a draft lottery pick in consecutive seasons. Consequently, following what could be the worst season in baseball history, the highest Chicago can select in the draft next year is 10th. Embracing awfulness doesn’t even pay anymore.

Which is why Sizemore’s desire to build up these players and prepare them to win appeals to the White Sox front office. They’ve got some minor league talent — 19-year-old Noah Schultz is the best left-handed pitching prospect in baseball, and Hagen Smith, taken with the fifth pick in this year’s draft, isn’t far behind — but with money that otherwise would have gone to payroll helping fund the recommendations of the Mahler-led committee, the players here now will comprise a majority of the roster next season.

“We were very intentional on wanting to create an atmosphere that remained healthy for players to show up every day even though we’re faced with challenges,” Getz said. “These guys have shown up every day looking to compete knowing each game may be an uphill battle. There aren’t a lot of wins in our record. We’re looking to find wins in development, and the best way to do that is to have the best attitude possible about where we’re growing and what we’re learning.”

That falls on Sizemore. He enjoys managing, really enjoys it, even amid all the losses. When he walks through the clubhouse after games and pats players on the back, they appreciate his demeanor. He is positive without sounding fake, simultaneously thoughtful and supportive. In the offseason, as Getz chooses a new full-time manager, Sizemore’s efforts over the season’s final two months are almost certain to earn him serious consideration.

“You can focus on the negative all day,” Sizemore said. “And I know we’ve done our share of that too, but at the end of the day, I think this team lost a lot of confidence. We’ve been told for so long that they’re not doing this right. They’re not doing that right. And I just think that this game is too hard to play if you don’t have confidence. So all I’ve tried to do is try to restore some of that with the guys by being positive.

“We’ve had some tough losses and I’m like, ‘Don’t put your head down. Turn the music up. That was a good effort. I don’t care that we lost, we still played hard and we fought. I know mistakes are going to happen. Let’s try to limit the mental ones and the physical ones are going to happen, but let’s get better at playing together, communicating and trying to just be the best version of ourselves that day.'”


THE BEST VERSION of the 2024 Chicago White Sox showed up over the weekend. They finally won a home game after 16 straight losses, and then, for the first time in 2½ months, they won consecutive games, beating the Oakland Athletics, who themselves have known the feeling of ineptitude in recent years. On Monday, they extended their winning streak to three — one shy of their season’s best — with an 8-4 shellacking of the Los Angeles Angels. After wins, Nicky Lopez, the veteran infielder and a leader of the position players, assumes his clubhouse DJ role, cranks the music and relishes what victories mean when they’re in such short supply.

“We obviously cherish ’em a little bit more,” Lopez said. “The general public doesn’t know how hard it is to win a big league baseball game. The NFL, the NBA — it is hard to win a game, let alone consistently win games. But these ones are a little bit better. They’re hard to come by right now. And it always seems like there’s that one inning or that one play or that one moment just kind of gets away from us. When we put it together and get a win, we celebrate a little bit more.”

In the cascade of awfulness, this is where they find the good. In the positivity of Sizemore. In Benintendi, the veteran outfielder, winning Saturday’s game with a walk-off home run. In Fraser Ellard, the 26-year-old rookie reliever, recording his first major league save to close out Sunday’s victory and secure the win for Burke, who looked like an honest-to-goodness major league starter.

Five days earlier, Burke, 24, called his debut “the best day of my life” — a reminder that failure as a team and success for an individual are not mutually exclusive. Another awful day for the White Sox can be the best day of Burke’s life, and another loss for the White Sox can be another day that Lopez, a native of Naperville, a Chicago suburb, gets to play for his hometown team. There have been those moments for all 62 players who have worn a White Sox uniform this season, and as much as the world will remember 120 or 121 or 125 or however many losses Chicago ultimately books, the players themselves are not wired that way.

“I know what our record is, but we still expect to win,” Crochet said. “It’s not an overwhelming thing like, ‘Oh my god, we finally won a game.’ It’s not like that. We go into every game expecting to win. It’s just a matter of actually executing that.”

For at least a small stretch in September, that’s exactly what they’re doing. Suddenly their winning percentage has crept up to .238, better than the 1916 A’s. It’s the manifestation of Sizemore’s words. It can’t be this bad every year, won’t be this bad next year, even if the White Sox trade Crochet and center fielder Luis Robert Jr. and don’t spend any money this winter and waltz into 2025 with a roster even worse on paper than this season’s.

“Everything we’re learning this season is going to pay huge dividends for the young core,” Martin said. “It has to. Because otherwise, what’s the point?”

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Behind the scenes of Arch Manning’s first start at Texas

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Behind the scenes of Arch Manning's first start at Texas

AUSTIN, Texas — Arch Manning arrived in rather modest style.

Texas‘ team buses pulled up right on schedule outside Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium at 4:40 p.m. Saturday. Manning stepped onto San Jacinto Boulevard in a navy suit paired with a white shirt and a brown striped tie. On his shoulders, he carried a black backpack as well as the modest weight of Texas fans’ hopes and dreams.

Unlike most of his Longhorns teammates, though, Manning did not wear headphones. On the team’s traditional Stadium Stampede walk into the stadium, lined with fans cheering while holding phones and horns up, the young quarterback took it all in.

“You need some time to just appreciate the opportunity,” Manning said later. “I’m blessed to be in this situation. I don’t take it for granted.”

The fifth-largest crowd in school history packed into DKR to catch a glimpse of the future of Texas football, an extended preview of how a five-star talent with a legendary pedigree will lead this program a year from now.

What those 102,850 folks witnessed during No. 1 Texas’ 51-3 blowout of UL Monroe on Saturday night was a bit more reasonable than their wildest expectations. Manning’s performance in his first college start reminded everyone he’s right on schedule, right where he’s supposed to be in his developmental process.

The redshirt freshman played a lot like a redshirt freshman: Great and not great, with a healthy mix of highlights plays and helpful lessons. He gave himself a C-plus for the night after completing 15 of 29 passes for 258 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions.

Manning might have the potential for greatness in Steve Sarkisian’s offense, but he has still played in only five college games. Six and a half hours after he first arrived at the stadium, he was feeling the difference.

“The games feel long when you’re in there for the majority of it,” Manning joked. “They’re a lot longer than high school. That was most surprising.”

The Longhorns losing starting QB Quinn Ewers to an oblique injury last week against UTSA opened the door for Manning to wow the college football world. He came in cold off the bench, delivered five touchdowns and made everything look a little too easy. It was a stunning display from a kid with 11 career pass attempts at the college level, a backup with a ton of fame but not much film.

For a week, Manning got to be QB1 while Ewers focused on getting healthy. The sharp uptick in Longhorns fans donning Manning’s No. 16 jersey was easy to spot around campus on Saturday afternoon. Inside the stadium team shop, authentic Ewers and Manning jerseys were going for $149.99. There were plenty of Ewers jerseys on the rack three hours before kickoff, but the Manning threads were long gone. The shop produced another run of his jerseys this week in anticipation of demand, but they went fast.

Brian and Jessica McCreary both donned No. 16 jerseys as they awaited the team’s arrival on Bevo Boulevard. They bought theirs last year. They have Ewers jerseys at home, too. The husband and wife were eager to see more from Manning, but Brian sees the big picture as clearly as Texas’ head coach.

“If you know football,” he said, “you know Quinn is our quarterback.”

Ewers didn’t enjoy missing a game but stayed upbeat on Texas’ sideline. The 25-game starter, wearing his No. 3 jersey over a jacket, had an earpiece in his left ear to hear playcalls and chatted with Manning throughout. But the assignment for the night wasn’t to coach him up. Ewers needed to get Manning to relax.

“We talked about him doing his best to keep it light with Arch,” Sarkisian said. “Because when Arch keeps it light, he’s really, really good. We try to not let him get too, too focused.”

Manning needed that encouragement early. His opening drive ended abruptly when he forced a throw under pressure on second-and-4 that was picked off. He knew he should’ve thrown it away. Rookie mistake. On the bench, left tackle Kelvin Banks Jr. and center Jake Majors talked him down.

“It’s gonna happen, bro,” Banks said he told him. “Keep pushing.”

“Just keep being you,” Majors said.

“He holds himself to a high standard, which is good,” Banks said afterward, “so he definitely can have his moments where he gets real hard on himself.”

Sarkisian demands that next-play mentality to operate his system. The message in the week leading up to Manning’s first start: Don’t overanalyze, just execute. The game plan called for deep shots on ULM’s secondary. Manning hit quite a few, picking up 210 of his passing yards on eight completions.

The tradeoff? “When you get in that mode, sometimes you can start to get a little bit greedy,” Sarkisian said. Ask Manning what throws he’d like back and he can think of a few overthrows and underthrows in the second half that could’ve been checkdowns to easier completions.

“He was going to have some lessons learned,” Sarkisian said, “and I think that’s what tonight was about.”

It was never going to be about a quarterback controversy. Sarkisian made sure to set the record straight Thursday. It’s not just that Ewers is his quarterback. He foresees Ewers leading a national title run, going to New York for the Heisman Trophy ceremony and proving he’s a top-five draft pick. All of those goals are still on the table.

You won’t hear many head coaches publicly put that out there, but it speaks to Sarkisian’s confidence. Colt McCoy, back in town to be inducted into the Texas Athletics Hall of Honor, has lived with those expectations.

The last quarterback to lead Texas to a national title game sees greatness in both. McCoy knows Manning getting these reps will ultimately be beneficial for the entire team over the long haul of a 12-team College Football Playoff and the deep run this team is trying to make. And the Longhorns legend knows better than anyone what it takes to carry that weight.

“There’s a lot of pressure playing quarterback at the University of Texas, there’s a lot of expectations, everything that goes along with sort of being the guy,” McCoy said. “For them, I would just say you have a wonderful team around you.

“I mean, this team is built to win a championship. Just go out there and execute and stay focused and lean on each other.”

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