DBAHO Posted March 22, 2004 Share Posted March 22, 2004 PEORIA, Ariz. -- White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said last week that position battles are more often lost by a bad performance than won by one of the competitors. Jason Grilli may have made a prophet out of Guillen on Sunday. The young right-hander, competing with Dan Wright for the job as No. 5 starter, was annihilated by the Seattle Mariners in a game expected to weigh heavily in Guillen's decision. "Right now Wright has thrown the ball the best," Guillen said. "It's between Grilli and him. [Grilli] had only one real bad outing and that was [sunday]. But you have to wait for Wright to throw the ball next week, and that's when we'll make the decision." Grilli appears to have virtually assured himself a spot on the roster, but chances of that spot being in the starting rotation are slipping. "He's on the team right now," Guillen said. "It might hurt [his chances] to be the fifth starter, but the way Wright has thrown the ball real well and continues to the throw the ball the way he has, he might be the man in the fifth spot." Grilli was not as sharp in his last outing but impressed Guillen with his grit and ability to find ways out of trouble. Sunday he felt he was sharper but couldn't prove it with the results. Five of the first six Mariners reached base in the first inning and the first nine batters got hits against Grilli and Jim Bullard in the fourth. "I threw good pitches, [but] I could have thrown the kitchen sink up there and they would have hit it," Grilli said. "This time doesn't count; next time it will, so hopefully you learn from it." Grilli talked with catcher Miguel Olivo during and after the game, looking for insight. All Olivo could offer was that Grilli was around the plate but that the Mariners were just hitting him. Coming back from nearly two years of lost time due to injury, Grilli has a sense of perspective on the situation. "I've come through the worst of times," Grilli said. "Two years on the shelf, that's the worst it gets. Do that and learn the hard way. I'm not using that as a crutch by any means, but I'm going out and giving them my best every time. "Sometimes your best isn't good enough. That happens to the best of guys. I'm focusing on the positives and staying positive. I'm not going to lose sleep over it, just come out the next time." Testing Veteran Mike Jackson pitched for the second straight day Sunday and Guillen intends to have him repeat the back-to-back outings again this spring as a test. "That's going to be his job and we want to see how he handles it," he said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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