The White Sox on Tuesday clinched their first road series win since the first weekend in May, beating the Baltimore Orioles, 9-3, at Camden Yards.
The victory comes on the heels of an 8-2 win on Monday, and it moves the Sox to 17-25 on the road. This team has been strong at home, as evidenced by a 28-14 record at Rate Field, but they really do need to find more wins on the road.
Consider this a good first step. The last road series win was May 1-3 at San Diego, so the Sox were due.
On Tuesday, they scored seven runs in the third inning. The key hits were a two-run homer by Colson Montgomery, a two-run single by Jacob Gonzalez and a three-run homer by Junior Perez.
Gonzalez has been on a rampage of late. In this game, he was 3 for 5 with three RBIs. Over his past six games, he's 11 for 24 with a homer and 10 RBIs.
He's not Munetaka Murakami, but Gonzalez has done a respectable job of filling in at first base for the Japanese slugger, who has been out since May 29 with a hamstring strain.
Once Murakami comes back from the injured list, I've heard some Sox fans suggest that Gonzalez will be a "trade chip" to acquire help for the pitching staff.
While I agree that pitching help is needed, I think it would be prudent to keep Gonzalez. Did we learn nothing from the Rick Hahn-era White Sox? Gonzalez can play literally every spot on the infield, and he's a great insurance policy should the Sox have another injury sometime in 2026 -- and we all know injuries happen over 162 games.
Right now, the Sox have more decent hitters than spots in the lineup. That's the first time we can say that in years. Let's keep it that way.
Erick Fedde (3-6) picked up the win Tuesday night, allowing three runs over five innings. Tyler Schweitzer worked four scoreless innings for his first career save.
This marks the first time the Sox have had a reliever pitch four innings for a save since Matt Ginter on May 7, 2002.
Unfortunately for Schweitzer, I think he's likely headed back to Triple-A to make room for Noah Schultz's return to the roster Wednesday. Schultz is expected to make the start as the Sox go for the sweep.
The Sox finish June with a 13-12 record, on the heels of their 18-10 record in May. This is notable because the Sox haven't had back-to-back winning months since the 2021 season, when they last won the American League Central.
The Sox are 45-39 overall, and they'll take a two-game lead in the AL Central into July.