Monday, July 15, 2019

Let us never speak of this Oakland series again, OK?

Ivan Nova
The White Sox opened the second half of the season by playing their worst series in quite some time. They were swept in three games in Oakland. They were outscored, 21-5, and were limited to only two extra-base hits the entire series -- both of which came Sunday.

Dating back to 2017, the Sox have lost their past eight games in Oakland. That stadium has been a house of horrors for the South Siders seemingly for the past 25 years.

I was noticing that Kansas City traded starting pitcher Homer Bailey to Oakland over the weekend. And I thought, hey, if the Royals can trade a mediocre, washed-up pitcher such as Bailey, does that mean the Sox can trade Ivan Nova?

Nova was up to his old tricks Friday night, giving up three home runs in a 5-1 loss. The right-hander is now 4-8 with a 5.60 ERA this season, and his failure to pitch like a reasonable stopgap veteran continues to be one of the disappointments on this team.

I'd say trade Nova for a bag of balls, but if he does depart, that may prolong Dylan Covey's stay in the starting rotation. Covey did not make it out of the first inning in Saturday's 13-2 loss. He is 1-5 with a 5.92 ERA this season, and he is 6-26 with 6.07 ERA for his career.

How much longer are the Sox going to insult us with the idea that Covey is a viable solution in the rotation? There's been a lot of talk about the rebuild "turning a corner" this season, as the Sox still qualify as overachieving with their 42-47 record.

However, this team will not truly "turn a corner" until they are putting a credible starting pitcher on the mound more days than not. Right now, charitably speaking, there are 2.5 holes in the rotation. Some may say there are four holes.

Hey, at least Reynaldo Lopez pitched well Sunday. He allowed only one unearned run over six innings, but the Sox still lost, 3-2. Lopez's ERA is finally below six at 5.97.

It's going to be a long second half with the Sox pitching staff continuing to be in a state of disrepair. They've done a decent job of covering up the holes over half a season, but the warts always show over a 162-game schedule.

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