Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
DETROIT — They could avoid it for only so long.
After a mini winning streak staved off history for a few days, the Chicago White Sox finally succumbed to their 121st loss of the season, the most by a team in modern MLB history.
The record came in a 4-1 defeat to the Detroit Tigers on Friday night.
“I think the frustration has been long before the number,” interim manager Grady Sizemore said afterward. “Again, I think it is one of those things where you are not happy, regardless, but I don’t know that I would feel any different if we were at 115 or 110. It’s still a frustrating year.”
In front of a sold-out Comerica crowd, the Tigers clinched a postseason berth for the first time since 2014. Detroit won for the 39th time since the All-Star break, the same total the White Sox have for the season.
“Obviously, it sucks,” said Garrett Crochet, who started for the White Sox and had a no-decision Friday. “We put ourselves in this position early on. We had a bad April. We just never dug ourselves out of that hole. We are where we are because of the way we played, which sucks.”
Chicago’s record losing season included a 21-game skid and two 14-game losing streaks. The White Sox began the year 1-9, and by May 1 they were 14½ games out of first place with a minus-84 run differential. By June 1, they were 13½ games out of fourth place in the AL Central.
“It’s been an extremely difficult year for everybody,” outfielder Gavin Sheets said. “It’s been hard mentally, hard physically. I feel bad for everybody in this room, to be a part of this. To see Detroit celebrating, that was us only four years ago. It’s frustrating. It doesn’t feel good.”
The White Sox’s fall has been precipitous. They won 93 games in 2021, as well as an AL Central division title — but then they began their slide.
In 2022, they finished with a .500 record, then followed with a 101-loss season last season. After getting off to a rough start this year, the team traded starter Erick Fedde, closer Michael Kopech and veteran hitter Tommy Pham in July.
Things only got worse. The White Sox lost their first 17 games after the All-Star break — part of that AL-record-tying 21-game skid.
“It doesn’t sit well with any of us,” Sheets said. “But unfortunately, it’s where we’re at right now. It’s everybody’s job in this room to make sure we move forward and never let this happen again.”
The White Sox tied the 1962 Mets for the most losses in a season last weekend when the Padres swept them, but they won their final three home games before their historic loss to the Tigers on Friday. Those wins were a ray of hope that perhaps the White Sox wouldn’t own the record outright, but they needed to sweep the Tigers to avoid that. It didn’t happen.
Sheets was asked how he felt when the final out was secured for Detroit.
“I didn’t know how I’d feel during it,” Sheets said. “This whole time, the difference in 120 and 121 isn’t a better season or more of a success. … Winning three in a row, we thought we could maybe do something special and ride it out and win six in a row, and you start to believe in that and think it’s maybe not going to happen.
“And all of a sudden, on the last out, you realize, you’re on the wrong side of history. It hurt a little more than I expected it to.”
Crochet struck out six in his final outing of the season, but relievers Jared Shuster and Fraser Ellard gave up runs in the fifth and seventh innings to allow for the 121st loss. Crochet was a bright spot for Chicago, finishing the season with the highest strikeout rate (12.9) per nine innings in baseball. But his usage was limited due to being a first-year starter and the team simply didn’t have enough behind him.
The team also struggled at the plate. The White Sox rank last in runs scored and have the third-highest ERA in baseball. They also played poor fundamental baseball, leading to former manager Pedro Grifol being fired last month.
A somber clubhouse tried to find the positives in what has been a miserable season.
“Everybody in this room knows we’ll be together for a while,” Sheets said. “We’re a young group. It’s not like guys are looking on to the next phase of their career. Everybody is trying to come together and support each other in this room.
“Outside of this room, there’s not much support. So we come together and rely on our staff and coaches and everyone around us and support each other.”
Sizemore echoed Sheets’ message. The former Cleveland outfielder is in the running for the permanent job, but that was far from his mind after Friday’s loss.
“We’re just focused on ourselves and getting better, and we know we have a lot to improve on,” he said. “But I think we have the right guys and the right staff in place to get this thing turned around.”
Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson is now the majority owner of Legacy Motor Club under a restructuring in which investment adviser Knighthead Capital Management bought into the Cup Series team.
Knighthead manages $9 billion of assets with a portfolio that includes investments in Hertz, World Endurance Championship sports car team JOTA Racing, Singer Vehicle Design, Revology Cars and a controlling stake of English soccer team Birmingham.
Johnson told The Associated Press that the deal announced Monday makes Knighthead “a significant minority partner” in that the private equity firm bought much of the ownership stake held by Legacy co-owner Maury Gallagher.
Gallagher retained some shares in the NASCAR team but will step down from day-to-day operations and join Hall of Famer Richard Petty as an ambassador for Legacy.
Johnson, who has been living in England for more than a year, will return to Charlotte to be hands-on in his larger role with Legacy. His wife and two daughters will follow at the end of the school year.
“I thought I was going to have three more years to understand ownership more,” Johnson told the AP of his original plan when he bought into the NASCAR team ahead of the 2023 season.
Legacy is essentially the rebuild of Petty Enterprises, one of NASCAR’s oldest and winningest race teams. Gallagher, the chairman of Allegiant Air, owned GMS Racing and, in 2021, acquired Richard Petty Motorsports, rebranding it as Petty GMS Racing.
Johnson signed on at the end of 2022, and the team was again rebranded into Legacy as it expanded to two full-time Cup cars ahead of the 2023 season. The plan was to allow Johnson to grow into his role as NASCAR team owner over five seasons, but the timeline changed when he developed a relationship with Knighthead and Gallagher decided to step back.
“I’ve had an open eye to the private equity world and trying to understand what’s out there,” Johnson said. “I know that there are some other teams with PE involvement, and I just started to get to know people. I had a head start and a few friendships out there, but ultimately the opportunity and access to Knighthead and the friendship I built was done socially, and when it was time to really engage in the PE world, we just clicked and got together to see where we could go.
“We wanted to move quick. And here we are, it’s only been a couple of months, it’s been very, very quick.”
The partnership begins immediately, and Knighthead will be part of Legacy when the NASCAR season begins this weekend with the preseason race at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem.
Tom Wagner, co-founder and co-managing member of Knighthead Capital, said the firm was drawn by “NASCAR’s rich history and Legacy MC’s ambition and innovation make it a unique opportunity.”
“We’re thrilled to collaborate … to drive the team forward, both on the track and within the wider racing community,” Wagner added.
Tom Brady has stakes in Knighthead but the deal with Legacy does not involve him at this time, Johnson said. But Johnson and Brady have discussed possibly partnering on an Indianapolis 500 entry for driver Sebastian Bourdais with Chip Ganassi Racing. Ganassi told the AP he had only one preliminary conversation with Johnson about it and there has been no further discussion.
Legacy this season will field two full-time cars: the No. 43 Toyota for Erik Jones and the No. 42 Toyota for John Hunter Nemechek. Johnson will attempt to qualify next month for the season-opening Daytona 500 and also the Coca-Cola 600 in May.
Johnson, who turns 50 in September, ran nine races last year but said he realized at the season-finale in Phoenix that Legacy needs him more in his executive role than as a driver.
He thanked Gallagher for the opportunity to become a NASCAR team owner and is eager to help Legacy improve its on-track performance while working with Knighthead to expand the brand.
“He has been an outstanding partner, mentor and friend, and I’m grateful we had the opportunity to work together,” Johnson said of Gallagher. “I’ve learned so much from him, and as his professional career takes a different path, he can worry less about being an owner and more about focusing on family and enjoying life.”
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR driver Corey LaJoie will run a limited Cup Series schedule with Rick Ware Racing this year and also be an analyst for Prime Video’s portion of the Cup Series schedule.
LaJoie will drive No. 01 Ford Mustang for Ware as he works to build his Stacking Pennies Performance Brand. RWR did not announce how many races LaJoie will enter in Monday’s announcement, but the 33-year-old will attempt to qualify for next month’s season-opening Daytona 500.
LaJoie’s No. 01 does not have a charter so he will need to claim one of the four open spots in the Daytona 500 field by either time trials or his qualifying race. His Ford will be sponsored by DuraMAX and Take 5 Oil Change.
“Rick Ware is someone who makes things happen. He’s a great guy who has been a generous friend in helping me get this vision of Stacking Pennies Performance off the ground,” LaJoie said. “He’s allowed me to put the No. 01 on his Ford Mustangs, building off the brand fans have related to, supported, and cheered for over the past several years.”
The No. 01 is meant to represent the “Stacking Pennies” concept LaJoie has developed around the idea that small victories lead to greater success. His Stacking Pennies podcast is one of NASCAR’s most popular.
He will also make a transition to the broadcast booth when Prime Video begins its five-race NASCAR run in May with the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
“In many ways, my driving career has been more successful than I ever could’ve dreamed, yet I lose sleep feeling I never reached my full potential behind the wheel,” LaJoie said. “The pursuit of bettering myself and others around me has never been more important than it is right now.
“My presence on the track will look different than it has in previous years, and it’s going to bring a new host of challenges, but my heart is set on making a lasting impact in the sport and the communities NASCAR reaches.”
LaJoie is the son of NASCAR veteran Randy LaJoie, a two-time Xfinity Series champion who won 15 races over 19 years and 350 starts. Randy LaJoie also made 44 Cup Series starts.
Corey LaJoie has never won in NASCAR’s three national series, where he debuted in 2013 with one Xfinity Series start. He has spent the last eight years in the Cup Series, the last four with Spire Motorsports. He logged four top-five finishes with Spire but has never finished higher than 25th in the Cup standings.
Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
CHICAGO — The Cubs are finalizing a trade to acquire closer Ryan Pressly from the Houston Astros, pending medical review, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan on Sunday.
Pressly will waive his no-trade clause to facilitate the move, and Houston will send money to help cover his $14 million salary, the sources said.
The Astros will receive a low-level Cubs prospect who is not on Chicago’s 40-man roster, according to a source.
Pressly, 36, is likely to become the Cubs’ closer, a role he held with Houston from 2021 to 2023 before it signed Josh Hader to a long-term contract. The veteran righty has 112 saves with a 3.27 ERA during his 12-year career, which includes six seasons in Minnesota.
Pressly will join a bullpen that blew 26 saves last season, as the Cubs are looking to make a playoff push in 2025. Chicago hasn’t been to the postseason since 2020, working without an established closer over the past few years.
Righty Adbert Alzolay was ineffective last season, then he suffered a forearm injury and eventually needed Tommy John surgery. Porter Hodge, 23, finished the season as the closer, but the team wanted more experience and depth in the back end of the bullpen.
The Cubs pursued lefty Tanner Scott before he signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers last weekend, according to league sources. Chicago was less interested in the other free agent closers, instead settling for Pressly, who has one year left on a three-year, $42 million contract signed before the 2023 season.