The White Sox on Thursday announced a preliminary list of players and prospects who will attend SoxFest 2020.
The event is scheduled for Jan. 24-25 at McCormick Place West.
The list of current players includes pretty much everyone fans would want to see: Jose Abreu, Yoan Moncada, Eloy Jimenez, Lucas Giolito, Yasmani Grandal, James McCann, Tim Anderson, Michael Kopech, Dylan Cease, Aaron Bummer, Zack Collins, Leury Garcia, Evan Marshall and Danny Mendick.
The list of prospects includes the two big draws, Luis Robert and Nick Madrigal, both of whom will probably be in the big leagues before the All-Star break, if not before May 1.
Other prospects scheduled to attend include Andrew Vaughn, Steele Walker, Dane Dunning, Blake Rutherford, Luis Gonzalez, Tyler Johnson and Micker Adolfo.
You have to give Adolfo some credit. He's played only 379 games in the six years he's been in the organization, yet he still seems to be considered a good enough prospect to earn an invite to SoxFest every year.
Robert, Madrigal and Rutherford have been at SoxFest in years past, but it will be a first-time experience for Vaughn, Walker, Dunning, Gonzalez and Johnson.
There will be more "special guests" coming to this event, and more information will be announced in early January, according to a news release from the Sox.
Showing posts with label Micker Adolfo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Micker Adolfo. Show all posts
Friday, December 6, 2019
White Sox announce players and prospects scheduled to attend SoxFest 2020
Monday, May 13, 2019
Carlos Rodon, Nate Jones, Micker Adolfo out for the season
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Carlos Rodon |
Here's the rundown from today's pregame before the Sox opened a two-game set with the Cleveland Indians.
- Pitcher Carlos Rodon will undergo Tommy John surgery later this week, as expected. Hahn hopes that Rodon will return sometime during the second half of the 2020 season.
- Pitcher Nate Jones had surgery Monday to fix a flexor mass tear in his right arm. He will miss the remainder of the 2019 season.
- Outfielder Micker Adolfo, a prospect who was playing for the Double-A Birmingham Barons, will have arthroscopic surgery on his elbow and miss the remainder of the 2019 season.
- Outfielder Eloy Jimenez is heading to Triple-A Charlotte to begin a rehab assignment on Tuesday. Jimenez has been out since April 26 with a sprained ankle.
- Rodon cannot be counted upon to be anything more than a No. 5 starter moving forward. He's 26 years old, so youth is on his side in recovery, but the guy just keeps getting hurt. Despite his high-end talent, you have to assume anything you get from him is a bonus.
- It's time to move on from Jones. He has a team option for $3.75 million for 2020. It was a $5.15 million option, but language in the contract reduces it to $3.75 million because elbow surgery was required before the end of the 2019 season. The buyout is $1.25 million. Buy him out.
- This is the second straight season Adolfo will miss significant development time because of an elbow injury. He's 22 years old, so again, youth is on his side in terms of recovery. However, these are at-bats than can never be recouped, and I am no longer hopeful about his future with the Sox.
- I'd like to renew my call for Jimenez to DH when he returns to the majors, at least in the short run. Let him get the offensive part of the game down, and then once he's comfortable at the plate, work him back into left field. Right now, his awkward movements in the outfield are a danger to himself and his teammates. Work with him in the outfield before the game, but when the game starts, DH him. And, no, I don't care about Yonder Alonso's feelings. He's batting .178, and so what if he loses playing time?
Thursday, March 14, 2019
Eloy Jimenez among the latest White Sox players to be optioned to minor leagues
Before Wednesday's 10-7 Cactus League victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers, the White Sox made nine roster moves. Most notably, top prospects Eloy Jimenez and Dylan Cease were optioned to Triple-A Charlotte.
Also bound for the Knights are pitcher Jordan Stephens and catcher Seby Zavala. Outfielder Micker Adolfo was optioned to Double-A Birmingham. Catcher Zack Collins, pitchers Donn Roach and Jimmy Lambert, and outfielder Luis Robert were reassigned to minor-league camp.
There are some big names among those nine, and obviously, Jimenez is most notable because he's the best corner outfielder in the organization. Alas, this is not an era of Major League Baseball where the best players are necessarily on the field.
Top prospects are held in the minors for service time reasons, and veteran free agents go unsigned for reasons unknown.
I knew Jimenez would start the season in Charlotte, but I really expected him to hang around big-league camp for another week or so. Why wouldn't he? We know he's going to be in the majors sooner rather than later, and who is he taking at-bats from?
You have to believe the Sox wanted to option Jimenez now, while he's 4 for 26 on the spring. Nobody can question the move at the moment. If Jimenez stayed in camp for another week and went, say, 9 for 17 with three home runs, all of a sudden Sox brass would have to give some baloney about the need for Jimenez to work on his defense as the reason for demotion.
I'm somewhat amused that Houston Astros pitcher Collin McHugh called the Sox out on Twitter as a result of these moves.
McHugh tweeted, "Wishing Eloy the best of luck as he goes to AAA to work on...defense? baserunning? creating excess value for a $1.5 billion franchise that hasn’t made the playoffs in a decade? bunting?"
There's a lot of truth in that criticism.
Also bound for the Knights are pitcher Jordan Stephens and catcher Seby Zavala. Outfielder Micker Adolfo was optioned to Double-A Birmingham. Catcher Zack Collins, pitchers Donn Roach and Jimmy Lambert, and outfielder Luis Robert were reassigned to minor-league camp.
There are some big names among those nine, and obviously, Jimenez is most notable because he's the best corner outfielder in the organization. Alas, this is not an era of Major League Baseball where the best players are necessarily on the field.
Top prospects are held in the minors for service time reasons, and veteran free agents go unsigned for reasons unknown.
I knew Jimenez would start the season in Charlotte, but I really expected him to hang around big-league camp for another week or so. Why wouldn't he? We know he's going to be in the majors sooner rather than later, and who is he taking at-bats from?
You have to believe the Sox wanted to option Jimenez now, while he's 4 for 26 on the spring. Nobody can question the move at the moment. If Jimenez stayed in camp for another week and went, say, 9 for 17 with three home runs, all of a sudden Sox brass would have to give some baloney about the need for Jimenez to work on his defense as the reason for demotion.
I'm somewhat amused that Houston Astros pitcher Collin McHugh called the Sox out on Twitter as a result of these moves.
McHugh tweeted, "Wishing Eloy the best of luck as he goes to AAA to work on...defense? baserunning? creating excess value for a $1.5 billion franchise that hasn’t made the playoffs in a decade? bunting?"
There's a lot of truth in that criticism.
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Jake Burger done for the season; injuries to prospects a buzzkill for White Sox
First the good news: White Sox pitching prospect Michael Kopech's fastball-changeup combination looked good in his spring debut Monday, when he tossed two scoreless innings against the Oakland Athletics. The Sox are 3-1 this spring after their 7-6 win over the A's.
Too bad that wasn't the story of the day.
Jake Burger, the Sox's first-round draft pick in 2017, was lost for the season Monday with a ruptured Achilles in his left leg. Burger was running out a routine grounder when he collapsed in pain about 15 feet before reaching first base.
Injuries to prospects have become an alarming trend for the Sox, and we're not even to March yet. Micker Adolfo, who has one of the best outfield arms in the farm system, is going to be relegated to DH duty this season because of a sprained UCL and a strain in his flexor tendon.
The Sox don't want Adolfo to lose at-bats, so he's going to try to play through it, but midseason surgery still is an option.
We already know Zack Burdi, a 2016 first-round draft pick, is out after having Tommy John surgery last summer. And top hitting prospect Eloy Jimenez is not playing right now because of a sore knee.
The injury to Jimenez is not severe, but it's hard to maintain optimism for the coming season when bad news is being piled on top of bad news on the injury front.
Burger's injury has led to increased speculation that the Sox might sign veteran third baseman Mike Moustakas, who incredibly remains a free agent after hitting 38 home runs for the Kansas City Royals last season.
My position on Moustakas hasn't changed: If you can get him on a two- or three-year deal at reasonable money, you have to consider it. Before the injury, Burger's projected timeline for arriving in the big leagues was about 2020. Now, you have to back that up to 2021, and questions only will increase in terms of his ability to stick at third base.
So, the Sox need somebody to man that position for the next three years, at least, and there are no other obvious solutions within the system. Time to look outside the organization? Perhaps, but I wouldn't go handing out a five- or six-year contract to the 29-year-old Moustakas as a result of this.
If the Sox want to sign a shorter-term stopgap, I'm cool with that. I would argue they needed a stopgap at third base even before this Burger injury occurred, so nothing has really changed.
Too bad that wasn't the story of the day.
Jake Burger, the Sox's first-round draft pick in 2017, was lost for the season Monday with a ruptured Achilles in his left leg. Burger was running out a routine grounder when he collapsed in pain about 15 feet before reaching first base.
Injuries to prospects have become an alarming trend for the Sox, and we're not even to March yet. Micker Adolfo, who has one of the best outfield arms in the farm system, is going to be relegated to DH duty this season because of a sprained UCL and a strain in his flexor tendon.
The Sox don't want Adolfo to lose at-bats, so he's going to try to play through it, but midseason surgery still is an option.
We already know Zack Burdi, a 2016 first-round draft pick, is out after having Tommy John surgery last summer. And top hitting prospect Eloy Jimenez is not playing right now because of a sore knee.
The injury to Jimenez is not severe, but it's hard to maintain optimism for the coming season when bad news is being piled on top of bad news on the injury front.
Burger's injury has led to increased speculation that the Sox might sign veteran third baseman Mike Moustakas, who incredibly remains a free agent after hitting 38 home runs for the Kansas City Royals last season.
My position on Moustakas hasn't changed: If you can get him on a two- or three-year deal at reasonable money, you have to consider it. Before the injury, Burger's projected timeline for arriving in the big leagues was about 2020. Now, you have to back that up to 2021, and questions only will increase in terms of his ability to stick at third base.
So, the Sox need somebody to man that position for the next three years, at least, and there are no other obvious solutions within the system. Time to look outside the organization? Perhaps, but I wouldn't go handing out a five- or six-year contract to the 29-year-old Moustakas as a result of this.
If the Sox want to sign a shorter-term stopgap, I'm cool with that. I would argue they needed a stopgap at third base even before this Burger injury occurred, so nothing has really changed.
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
White Sox add Eloy Jimenez, four others to 40-man roster
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Eloy Jimenez |
Among them, of course, is Eloy Jimenez, the prized outfield prospect the Sox acquired in the Jose Quintana deal. The other four additions are first baseman Casey Gillaspie, pitcher Ian Clarkin and outfielders Micker Adolfo and Luis Alexander Basabe.
To make room on the roster, the Sox outrighted right-handed pitchers Chris Beck and Tyler Danish.
I say good riddance to Beck. I'm not a fan; he always reminded me of Mike MacDougal, and he had the 6.40 ERA over 65 innings with the Sox in 2017 to prove it. I won't rehash why I can't stand Beck, because I've made those points before, so I might as well just provide a link.
Danish struggled as a starter in Triple-A Charlotte this year, and he was in a car crash right at the end of the season that injured his non-throwing shoulder. He seems to be slipping down the organizational depth chart more and more with each passing day.
The Sox's roster is now at 39 players. It's a little bit surprising that neither left-handed pitcher Jordan Guerrero nor infield Jake Peter were added to the roster. Both are midtier prospects that are close to major-league ready, and both could be enticing to teams looking to raid some of the Sox's organizational depth in the Rule 5 draft.
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