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BOB NIGHTENGALE
Chris Sale

White Sox’s Chris Sale not crazy, just competitive

Bob Nightengale
USA TODAY Sports
Chris Sale has 14 wins for the White Sox this season.

The world outside the walls of the Chicago White Sox clubhouse thinks of Chris Sale as a cross-pollination of Albert Belle, Bill “Spaceman” Lee and Manny Ramirez.

You know, a talented ballplayer who happens to be a lunatic.

One day he’s ripping up everyone’s uniforms hours before the start of a game. The next he’s screaming at his boss, threatening to boycott a spring training game. He even tried to take on the entire Kansas City Royals team in a fight, before being stopped by stadium security from entering the clubhouse.

It’s Chris Sale simply being Chris Sale.

Everyone admires that golden arm, passion and intensity but recoils in fear when that fiery temper goes full throttle.

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Now, in front of a crowd Thursday night at Wrigley Field, Sale will be put on full display against the Chicago Cubs, with a plethora of scouts on hand to determine whether he’s the right man for their team.

It will be his first start since the White Sox suspended him for five games, costing him a cool $250,000, for violating team rules, insubordination and destroying team equipment. He was fined an extra $12,700 for the cost of those 1976 throwback uniforms.

It also could be his last start in a White Sox uniform.

The White Sox, for the first time in Sale’s spectacular career, have let teams know he’s available and will move him if overwhelmed by the return.

Sale insists he wants to stay with the White Sox, but only if they plan to win.

If the White Sox are going to give up on this season and trade everyone around him, Sale does not want to stick around.

Sale, 14-3 with 3.18 ERA, understands these are his glory years. He is a five-time All-Star who has finished among the top six in American League Cy Young balloting in each of his first four full seasons.

Really, he’s the Clayton Kershaw of the AL.

If the White Sox wave the white flag on this season and embark on a rebuilding process, they should go ahead and move him, Sale tells his friends.

This, you see, is the heart of Sale’s frustration, the one that boiled into temporary insanity, causing him to go all Edward Scissorhands on us.

“That’s the beauty of Chris; that’s what makes him so great,” White Sox center fielder Adam Eaton said. “When he’s adamant about something, it doesn’t matter what it is, he’s going to his grave with it.”

This had little to do with the 1976 throwback uniform, which was going to make Sale, 6-6, 180 pounds, look silly with his skinny body and flap against him on every pitch.

It was all about winning.

When the White Sox let it be known that they were ready to conduct a garage sale and listen to offers on everyone, Sale became incensed.

“I don’t want to speak for Chris, but there was definitely some built-in frustration there,” Eaton said. “I think if we were 25 games over .500 he wouldn’t have done that. So I think in the sense the frustration with the season, talking about the trade deadline and everything else, there was a whole new school of reasons why that happened.”

The accolades and All-Star appearances are nice, but for Sale it’s all meaningless unless it translates into the postseason.

A White Sox fan holds up a sign in reference to Sale.

Sure, he knows he went too far when he slashed away at every uniform in sight. He shouldn’t have screamed and swore at White Sox President Kenny Williams in the spring training clubhouse after Adam LaRoche’s abrupt retirement. And, yeah, maybe it wasn’t the smartest thing to try storming into the Royals clubhouse.

It’s also why he’s the most admired and respected player in the White Sox clubhouse.

“What a lot of people don’t realize is how much he wants to win,” says White Sox second baseman Tyler Saladino, who was in the 2010 draft class with Sale. “His competitive side is through the roof. His fire, his desire, is respected tenfold in here. I can’t say enough about Chris Sale.”

It’s no coincidence the White Sox won their first four games after Sale’s suspension, including three walk-off victories for the first time in 54 years, entering Wednesday. It’s as if the White Sox don’t want to let the man down.

Sale, who has come to the clubhouse the last few days to work out, intends to address the news media Thursday after he pitches. He will apologize for his behavior, won’t apologize for his passion and at some point will have to sit down for a heart-to-heart talk with manager Robin Ventura.

“Robin is the one who has to fight for us in that department,” Sale told MLB.com. “If the players don’t feel comfortable 100% about what we are doing to win the game ... for them to put business first over winning, that’s when I lost it.”

Ventura insists he and Sale can coexist. They have had run-ins before and will have them again. Sure, he could have expressed his concerns to the front office about the players not wanting to wear the throwback uniforms. He could have adamantly disagreed with Williams’ decision to limit LaRoche’s son’s access to the clubhouse. Yet he’s an employee, too, one who just so happens to be on the hot seat in the final year of his contract.

It will be another two months before the White Sox decide Ventura’s fate and perhaps a few months more before they determine Sale’s. It makes no sense to trade him now.

Creative White Sox fan shows up to game wearing a taped-up Chris Sale jersey

No one is going to give them their top prospects, including major league players, too, when they’re still in a playoff race. Why not wait until this winter, when everyone can be in on the bidding, and then decide whether they want their remodeling project to include Sale?

There would be no more valuable player on the market, considering Sale is owed $12 million next year, with options for $12.5 million and $15 million in 2018 and 2019. He’s the greatest bargain in all of baseball. If he hit the open market, he’d be a $250 million pitcher.

“You’re talking about a once-in-lifetime pitcher,” Eaton said. “He wants to be the best, and nothing is going to stop him from being the best. And he’s the face of this franchise.

“It’s not my decision, but how could you trade him?”

The White Sox have yet to decide exactly what to do, caught in no-man’s land with a 50-50 record, eight games behind the Cleveland Indians.

“You just can’t anticipate what’s going to happen,” Williams said. “You just have to let it play out.”

It starts Thursday, with Sale taking the mound.

“You can’t turn back the clock,” White Sox third baseman Todd Frazier said. “What happened, happened. I think he knows he made a mistake. But he’s going to be more fired up than ever to pitch for us.”

This time, wearing the regular White Sox road uniform.

Follow Nightengale on Twitter @BNightengale and Facebook

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