Tired of White Sox critics, manager Ozzie Guillen sounded off prior to the team's latest loss on Sunday. It was the second consecutive day that Guillen went on a tirade after he laid into his team Saturday for their lack of clutch hitting in a 14-inning defeat to Toronto. After Sunday's defeat the White Sox are 24-31 and 9 1/2 games behind the first-place Indians. "Are (the critics) going to feel sorry because we're going to get fired? (Heck) no," Guillen said. "They only remember us from (the World Series title in) 2005. In 2020 we'll come here in a wheel chair all (messed) up. As soon as you leave the ballpark they don't care about you anymore. They don't. The monuments, the statue they got, they (urinate) on it when they're drunk. That's all they do. Thank you for coming, bye-bye." Guillen's rant initially started as a way to protect his coaches, especially hitting coach Greg Walker, who seemingly comes under fire every season. "We win three in a row and nobody says (Don) Cooper is a great pitching coach, Greg Walker is great," Guillen said. "All of a sudden we lose two games and they all want to fire us. Wow. That's nice. I'm not complaining about that because I play. That's part of the game. When the players are good you're good, when the players are bad they're still good. We're the bad guys. "Nobody gives us enough credit to say, 'Wow, at least those guys care about it.'"