Showing posts with label Josh Rojas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Josh Rojas. Show all posts

Monday, June 2, 2025

Bad pitching will always beat bad hitting (apparently)

The Baltimore Orioles have a 5.29 team ERA, which ranks 14th in the American League and 28th overall in Major League Baseball.

Only the Athletics and the Colorado Rockies are worse. 

In other words, on average, the Orioles give up more than five earned runs every time they take the field. But that didn't stop the White Sox from posting a grand total of five runs (only four of which were earned) in a three-game series at Baltimore over the weekend.

The Orioles (22-36) swept the series, beating the Sox 2-1 on Friday, 4-2 on Saturday and 3-2 on Sunday.

It was a truly spectacular failure by the South Siders, who piled up 29 strikeouts in the three defeats. 

There are two players we will excuse from blame. Mike Tauchman went 6 for 12 with two doubles, a triple, a home run, two runs scored and two RBIs in the series. Andrew Benintendi went 4 for 11 with a double, two RBIs and a run scored.

No other Sox player had an RBI. There was one run scored Sunday on an error, hence no RBI credit was given.

Let's take a look at some of the horrible stat lines we saw from other Sox batters this weekend, in order of terribleness:

OK, maybe we can forgive Sosa. There was no production associated with his 3 for 10, but that's a .300 batting average, and Sosa looks like Babe Ruth in comparison to Robert Jr.

Baltimore has a pitching staff that opposing teams have been padding their numbers against, but the only thing the Sox padded this weekend is their strikeout totals.

The Sox are 18-41, and it's getting a little frustrating to still hear people claim that the team is "making progress," or "turning a corner," or "showing signs of improvement."

Let's be real here: The Sox are on pace to go 49-113. Yes, that's better than the 2024 Sox, who went 41-121. Yes, they are better than the aforementioned Rockies, who are 9-50 and on pace to obliterate previous records of futility. That's nice, but so what?

The fact is the 2025 season will ultimately result in the second-worst Sox team in my lifetime, ahead of only last year. I turn 49 years old next month. I'm not new here. 

We are once again witnessing historical ineptitude, no matter what way you try to spin it. 

Monday, May 12, 2025

Tim Elko's home run lifts White Sox to series win over Marlins

First baseman Tim Elko got his long-awaited call-up to the White Sox on Saturday. He went 1 for 6 in the last two games of the weekend series against the Miami Marlins, but it was a big one -- a 3-run homer in the bottom of the sixth inning Sunday that put the Sox ahead to stay in a series-clinching win.

Elko's presence also seemed to wake up incumbent first baseman Andrew Vaughn. For the three-game series, Vaughn went an ordinary 3 for 12, but it was a big three -- two solo home runs and an RBI single.

One thing the Sox need to do better is create roster competition. There are a handful of guys -- and Vaughn is one -- who haven't had their spot on the team challenged in years.

Everyone should have a little bit of fear that they might lose their job. It's what prevents you from coasting, from going through the motions. Watching the Sox the past several years, you always had the feeling that certain guys thought they were above reproach.

Let's hope that feeling starts to dissipate. Here's a look at the games from the weekend:

Friday, May 9

White Sox 6, Marlins 2: The Sox scored three runs in the seventh to snap a 2-2 tie. Josh Rojas singled, advanced to third on a double by Lenyn Sosa and scored on a sacrifice fly by Brooks Baldwin.

Sosa also advanced on the sac fly, and he scored on a bunt single by Jacob Amaya. Later in the inning, Matt Thaiss worked a bases-loaded walk to cap the decisive rally that put the Sox ahead 5-2. They tacked on a run in the eighth when Rojas scored on a wild pitch.

Bryse Wilson had a good five-inning start for the Sox, allowing only one run on three hits. He did not figure in the decision, however.

Saturday, May 10

Marlins 3, White Sox 1: Vaughn's home run in the first inning turned out to be the only Sox run of the game, as the South Siders wasted six shutout innings from starting pitcher Shane Smith.  

Smith fanned seven, did not walk a batter and allowed only four hits, but he once again suffered from lack of run support, and the Sox bullpen could not hold the slim 1-0 lead it inherited. 

The Marlins tied the game in the seventh and added two runs in the eighth.

Back to Smith, he has started eight games for the Sox and allowed only 10 earned runs. That's excellent starting pitching, but the Sox are only 1-7 in his starts. The South Siders have scored only 15 runs in those eight games. 

Sunday, May 11

White Sox 4, Marlins 2: Vaughn's RBI single in the first inning gave the Sox an early lead, but the Marlins tied it at 1 in the fourth.

That set the stage for Elko in the sixth. After singles by Thaiss and Joshua Palacios, the rookie hit a pitch from Sandy Alcantara 381 feet into the left-field seats to put the Sox ahead, 4-1.

That made a winner out of Mike Vasil (2-1), who tossed three innings of one-run relief in place of starter Sean Burke, who struggled through four innings with five walks.

Tyler Gilbert worked a scoreless eighth, and Cam Booser got three outs in the ninth for his first save of the season. That's only the second save the Sox have as a team.

The Sox are 12-29. They are a normal bad team at home, with a 10-11 record at Rate Field. However, they are 3-17 on the road. They'll seek to improve that this week, as they open a three-game series against the Cincinnati Reds on Tuesday night.

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Has Kansas City replaced Oakland as the White Sox house of horrors?

For years and years, the White Sox seemingly couldn't win a game in Oakland to save their lives. Now that the Athletics have moved to Sacramento, the Oakland Coliseum is no longer a place for teams to visit.

But it seems to me that Kansas City has replaced Oakland as the house of horrors for the Sox. During the Pedro Grifol era (2023-24), the Sox went 2-11 at Kauffman Stadium -- including 0-7 in 2024.

During those seven games, the White Sox scored eight runs. Total. Averaging just over one run per game generally gets you beat. Then on Monday night, the Sox got shut out, 3-0, in their first game of 2025 in Kansas City.

The continuation of a trend.

Believe it or not, the Sox scored three runs on Tuesday night. Their cup runneth over! And they took a 3-1 lead into the bottom of the ninth inning. But then this sequence of events happened:

  1. Relief pitcher Cam Booser walked pinch-hitter Mark Canha on five pitches.
  2. Drew Waters hit a routine infield fly. Sox second baseman Chase Meidroth missed the ball, and it clanged off his face into right field. Canha held at first, understandably believing the ball would be caught. Sox right fielder Michael A. Taylor had a chance to force Canha at second, but his throw airmailed Sox shortstop Jacob Amaya, and everyone was safe. You read that right: The ball hit Meidroth right in the face.
  3. Freddy Fermin attempted to give the Sox an out with a sacrifice bunt. But Booser was slow to cover the bunt up the third-base line. By the time he retrieved the ball, the Sox had no play anywhere. Bases loaded, no outs.
  4. Kyle Isbel popped up to third baseman Josh Rojas. The ball did not hit him in the face. He caught it. Even if he hadn't, the infield fly rule was called. One out.
  5. With the infield at double-play depth, Jonathan India grounded one back up the middle. Amaya ranged to his left and dove to glove the ball. From the seat of his pants, he made a toss to second to try to get the force, but it was errant. Everyone was safe. Tying run scores. Bases still loaded.
  6. Kansas City's all-world shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. hit a deep fly ball to center field. Luis Robert Jr. let it drop for a walk-off single. Even if he had made the catch, it would have been a game-winning sacrifice fly.
4-3 Royals. The Sox are 10-26. There are 126 games left to play.