We didn't really think the White Sox could sweep a three-game series from the Cincinnati Reds, did we? Of course not!
The Reds clobbered the Sox, 7-1, on Thursday in the final game of the series at Great American Ball Park. The South Siders saw their modest three-game winning streak come to an end.
It was not a good day for Sox starter Bryse Wilson. Three batters into the bottom of the first inning, Cincinnati had the bases loaded with nobody out. The Reds ended up scoring three runs, highlighted by a two-out, two-run single by Will Benson, and the outcome was never much in doubt after that.
Wilson (0-2) lasted 5.1 innings and allowed seven runs on 10 hits. He struck out three and allowed three home runs.
The Sox didn't get their first hit until the top of the fifth inning off Cincinnati starter Nick Martinez (2-4), who allowed only two singles over seven shutout innings.
Miguel Vargas had two of the Sox four hits and drove in the lone Chicago run with a two-out single in the eighth.
Say this for Wilson: He covered 16 outs on a day where he did not have good stuff. The Sox only had to use two relievers to get through this game. Jared Shuster used 17 pitches to get five outs. Yoendrys Gomez used 14 pitches to get three outs.
Honestly, the Sox bullpen came away relatively unscathed given that it was a blowout loss, and they shouldn't be in bad shape for their next game.
I saw some complaints on Twitter/X today about Wilson, a veteran placeholder who doesn't have a future with the Sox beyond this season. Some fans want him to lose his spot in the rotation to a younger pitcher from Triple-A. I saw both Nick Nastrini and Jairo Iriarte mentioned.
It would be a mistake to recall either of those two pitchers. Nastrini has a 6.61 ERA in Triple-A Charlotte, and he was recently moved to the bullpen. He doesn't have a reliable out pitch against left-handed batters. His future in the majors, if there is one, will be as a right-on-right relief specialist.
Iriarte is averaging fewer than three innings per start at Charlotte. He's made five starts, thrown 14 innings, walked 14 batters and posted a 7.71 ERA.
If you call either of these two pitchers up, they will not be able to handle the task. They'd routinely get knocked out in the second or third inning. The Sox bullpen is not a strength. You don't want to get in the habit of asking relief pitchers to cover 17, 18, 19 or 20 outs per game.
Wilson is going to get into the fifth or sixth inning, even on his worst day -- like Thursday. There is value in that.
It's important to remember what we saw in 2024. There were a lot of short starts and long days for the bullpen. That's how you get those soul-sucking losing streaks that last 10 or more games. That's how you lose 121 games in a season.
The Sox are 14-30 as it is. Let's not make it any worse by calling for the team to bring up pitchers who are unqualified for the job.