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Chisox73
01-29-2006, 01:55 AM
Williams, Guillen bask in joy of SoxFest
Leaders of championship club recall first memories together
By Scott Merkin / MLB.com
http://chicago.whitesox.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060128&content_id=1302854&vkey=news_cws&fext=.jsp&c_id=cws

http://chicago.whitesox.mlb.com/images/2006/01/28/aIIn4igc.jpg
[/SIZE=1A.J. Pierzynski went over the fundamentals of catching at SoxFest on Saturday. (Damon Young/MLB.com) [/SIZE]

CHICAGO -- The great comedy teams of 20th Century all showed the ability to play off each other with impeccable timing, all the while entertaining the American public in a quest for fame and fortune.

Remember Martin and Lewis? Abbot and Costello? The Three Stooges?

During a sold-out SoxFest this weekend, it has been the tandem of Williams and Guillen that has left a throng of South Side supporters in stitches during a trio of Town Hall Meetings at the Hyatt Regency. But don't dismiss this comedy as simply two close friends having fun after reaching the pinnacle of their collective baseball lives.

It is, in part, because of this amazing conversational but direct relationsihp between the White Sox general manager and manager that the team was able to find such a high level of success. During the first meeting with the fans on Friday, an early session that gradually built up steam as more people entered the hotel, White Sox television personality Ken 'Hawk' Harrelson talked about a franchise running at its smoothest when the owner, general manager and manager can all work together and are allowed to fulfill their individual responsibilities.

Harrelson, who has been involved in baseball for more than 40 years, pointed to the White Sox with chairman Jerry Reinsdorf, Williams and Guillen as the best example of this principle. While Reinsdorf has kept a low profile during most of this celebratory weekend, it has been business as usual for the faces of the franchise.

Before more than 1,000 fans in one of the seminar rooms on Saturday afternoon, a SoxFest record for one session, Williams and Guillen fielded questions from the public with one eye to the past and one eye to the future. While organizations win championships, Williams and Guillen's shared focus serves as the driving force.

Williams and Guillen are close friends. They played together, they played against each other and now they are working together. But in a story that Williams has recounted a few times previously, the White Sox general manager told Saturday's crowd that it wasn't his friend who had to win him over in the first meeting between the two.

"I wanted to test Ozzie when we sat down for the interview," Williams said of their initial meeting, when Guillen went from a fringe candidate to the only candidate in less than one hour. "I wanted to see where we were on the maturity level, because there were a few doubts.

"The first thing I said to him was, 'You have a lot of convincing to do with me to put my [butt] on the line to give you this job,' " Williams added.

At that point, Williams paused, looked at the young man at the end of the stage to his left who was signing what he was saying for the hearing impaired and asked if he was ready for some of the more colorful words that followed from Guillen during the interview.

"He let me have it," said Williams, after the laughter died down. "And I said, 'OK. You want to fight? Let's go. We are going to fight.' I didn't hire my friend. I hired a man who was a good baseball man first and a man who wasn't afraid of me or the job."

It wasn't much of a fight -- it was more Guillen's passion for the White Sox on display. Guillen spoke of his knowledge concerning what White Sox fans were all about and his great desire to win the championship with the team on which he was an All-Star shortstop.

A managerial star was born. Two years later, the White Sox are the team with the shortest run since their last championship, as opposed to the second-longest streak without a title entering 2005.

On Friday night, a question was not even asked of Williams and Guillen until the fifth fan stepped in front of the microphone. The first four simply thanked Williams and Guillen for making a lifelong dream come true. One fan even presented Williams with her own trophy construction for Executive of the Year, an award that inexplicably was not awarded to the White Sox general manager. But on Saturday, Guillen pointed out that Williams didn't need the award to validate his success. He had something transcending personal honors.

"He got something better," said Guillen of Williams. "I got a nice trophy, but it's still only a trophy. Kenny has something they don't have, and that's the ring. It's most important."

But enough of the nuts and bolts of how Guillen became manager and how Williams made Chicago a title town. This weekend in downtown Chicago has been all about a tremendous celebration, sort of the last look back at what happened in 2005 before moving on to the repeat effort in 2006.

Guillen and Williams did not disappoint. There was a poignant moment, when one young girl spoke of how her 97-year-old grandmother had recent heart surgery, but knew that she had to be well by Jan. 27 for SoxFest. The girl credited the White Sox for helping with her grandmother's recovery.

This same girl also reminded Guillen that he had known her since she was a young child, when her grandmother sewed a button on Guillen's jacket after they met on a road trip.

"It was in the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Seattle," Guillen quickly responded, amazing everyone in attendance, including the girl. "I have a very good memory."

The young lady and her grandmother met with Guillen and Williams after the Town Hall meeting, and Guillen presented her with a White Sox jersey. There were also more than a few lighter moments.

Guillen was asked who he would support if the United States and Venezuela played in the World Baseball Classic final. Guillen picked his homeland of Venezuela, drawing a somewhat sad 'Aww' from the crowd.

"I get an 'Aww' in the United States," Guillen said. "In Venezuela, they might shoot me ."

There was talk of A.J. Pierzynski's dropped third strike that was or wasn't in Game 2 of the American League Championship Series. Moderator Darrin Jackson took a show of hands to see how many fans attended the victory parade, and Guillen did the same to see how many were coming to Spring Training in Tucson. The parade drew a slightly larger response.

Williams also spoke of how great teams stay strong by adding top young players into the mix, such as center fielder Brian Anderson for 2006. He pointed out that if you don't develop from within, then all of a sudden, you are looking at an 88- or 90-loss season. Williams and Guillen are miserable to be around when they are losing, the general manager admitted, so they need to avoid the rebuilding process.

Judging by this weekend, a championship makes for a much more joyous atmosphere and better material from the duo.

[I]Scott Merkin is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

Chisox73
01-29-2006, 02:04 AM
SoxFest gets off to festive start
World Series champions enjoy heroes' welcome
By Scott Merkin / MLB.com
http://chicago.whitesox.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060127&content_id=1302364&vkey=news_cws&fext=.jsp&c_id=cws


CHICAGO -- Kenny Williams sat on the stage in a seminar room at the Hyatt in Chicago on Friday night, and surveyed the SoxFest crowd attending the first question and answer session with Williams and manager Ozzie Guillen.

The eloquent White Sox general manager then made a very astute and comical observation about the size of this particular group in attendance.

"It's interesting that this room is only half-full this year," said Williams with a wry smile, although the attendance picked up as the session progressed. "If we didn't win, this place would be full with people yelling at me."

Williams' judgment certainly is based in fact. Last year, the first White Sox town hall meeting at SoxFest was filled with criticism heaped upon Williams because Magglio Ordonez had departed via free agency and rising star Carlos Lee had been traded to the Brewers for Scott Podsednik, a leadoff man whose on-base percentage in 2004 was lower than his batting average in 2003.

And then there was the initial 45-minute get together with the fans in 2004, where White Sox supporters complained about everything from Bartolo Colon's departure as a free agent to the seemingly inexplicable trade that sent Aaron Miles to Colorado for an erratic shortstop named Juan Uribe.

The only complaint coming from the White Sox faithful during the current SoxFest is that there aren't enough tickets to go around. Ticket sales for the weekend reached 25,000 in total, with 9,000 fans expected Saturday, and the event was declared a sellout even before the end of the regular season.

That announcement did nothing to dissuade anxious fans from lining up around the hotel in an attempt to at least get a quick glimpse of Paul Konerko, A.J. Pierzynski and Joe Crede, or newcomers such as Rob Mackowiak and Jim Thome. It's amazing how long a party lasts when celebrating the franchise's first World Series championship since 1917.

"It has just been incredible," said Podsednik of the intense passion shown by the White Sox fans during the team's run to history and once again this weekend at SoxFest. "It definitely will be an enjoyable weekend. It's fun to get out here and interact with the fans.

"They supported us last year and they are expecting big things from us again. You come in here and spend this time, and it gives us an extra kick and boost coming into Spring Training."

Actually, Williams didn't need the extra boost. He already has been approaching the 2006 season as if his team didn't even make the playoffs in 2005, a concept he shared with the fans Friday evening. But he had to be buoyed by the excitement on the faces of fans from seven to 70.

Introductions of the players, coaches and management in attendance, officially starting SoxFest, was preceded by a highlight video of the 2005 season. It ran the gamut from great plays during the regular season to the victory Mosh Pit in Houston after the White Sox completed the World Series sweep.

From all of those memorable highlights, though, it was one word at the end that drew the greatest ovation from the crowd. No, it wasn't 'celebrate,' and it wasn't even 'euphoria.'

The not-so-secret word on this occasion simply was 'repeat.'

"Once you get on top, all the opposing teams are gunning for you," said White Sox right-hander Jon Garland, who won a career-high 18 games last season. "And all the fans want to see you do it again."

"Going into last year, I never thought I would have a chance to play in a World Series, let alone win it," added Crede, probably the most consistent overall player during the 12 postseason contests. "It's something that's hard to sink in, and it will be a challenge to do it again. But I'm enjoying it while it's here."

Fans gave Crede a monstrous ovation upon the mention of his name by public address announcer Gene Honda. The same was true for Pierzynski, Podsednik, and Neal Cotts, not to mention the chants of 'Moose' for Moose Skowron and the cries of 'Har-old' for bench coach and favorite son Harold Baines.

The biggest cheers clearly came for Konerko, whose name was chanted for close to one minute in appreciation for his great play and his return to the White Sox after going through free agency. The humble first baseman smiled, waved to the crowd and eventually motioned for them to move on.

Guillen, holding the World Series trophy with a security guard close behind, received applause befitting of the face of the franchise. Williams, meanwhile, was greeted as the conquering hero, with only a statue in his honor missing from the reception.

It took a couple of years, but fans realize the Uribe trade wasn't too bad of a move after all and the same could be said for the Podsednik acquisition. It was a far cry from the political debate-like atmosphere from 2004, when one sardonic fan stepped to the microphone and stated, 'Now, that 2004 is over (before it had started), what are your plans for 2005?'

The comment drew a few laughs, at the time, although none from Williams or Guillen. On Friday, the fans recognized Williams' 2005 plan worked out to near perfection.

Scott Merkin is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.