The deadline to add Rule 5 Draft-eligible players to the 40-man roster was 5 p.m. Friday, so the White Sox added three of their prospects to the roster: third baseman Jake Burger, first baseman Gavin Sheets and right-handed relief pitcher Tyler Johnson.
The Sox also claimed right-handed pitcher Emilio Vargas off waivers from the Arizona Diamondbacks. These four additions bring the 40-man roster to its maximum number.
Burger (first round), Sheets (second round) and Johnson (fifth round) all are members of the 2017 Sox draft class.
Of the three, the only surprising addition is Burger, who hasn't played a game in three seasons after twice rupturing his Achilles' tendon. Burger, 24, had a shot to return healthy to affiliated baseball in 2020, but you know, that pesky pandemic got in the way.
The team's No. 14-ranked prospect ended up playing in something called the CarShield Collegiate League in Missouri this summer, before eventually reporting to the Sox's alternate training site in Schaumburg.
Anyone who gets chosen in the Rule 5 Draft has to stay on his new team's major league roster for the entire season, or else get offered back to his former team, so it seemed unlikely to me that Burger would be chosen -- if he were left exposed. Turns out, the Sox aren't going to risk that possibility with a player they liked enough to select in the first round of the draft.
Johnson, the Sox's No. 24-ranked prospect, doesn't seem all that far from the majors. He's 6-foot-3, 210 pounds, possesses a high-90s fastball and was successful during a stint in Double-A Birmingham in 2019. The Sox gave him a look in summer camp this year, and he was at the alternate training site in Schaumburg for the rest of the season.
At age 25, it's not too hard to envision Johnson being selected if he were available in the Rule 5 Draft, so it was pretty much a no-brainer to add him to the 40-man roster.
Sheets is an interesting case. He's a left-handed-hitting first baseman, so he's blocked in the organization by American League MVP Jose Abreu and top hitting prospect Andrew Vaughn. But he is the No. 10-ranked prospect in the organization, and he had 83 RBIs in 2019 at Double-A Birmingham.
Even though Sheets, 24, lacks a clear path to the majors with the Sox, he's a decent enough prospect that you'd prefer not to lose him for nothing. Like many players, 2020 was basically a lost season for him, but if he opens 2021 strong, maybe he's a piece that can be included in a trade midseason.
If the Sox would have left him exposed in Rule 5, maybe a rebuilding team snaps him up and gives him a shot -- especially if the designated hitter rule becomes permanent in the National League.
Vargas, the fourth player added to the roster, is a 24-year-old who has topped out at Double-A. He has made 23 starts at that level over the course of 2018 and 2019, pitching 121 innings with 100 strikeouts and a 3.86 ERA. Sounds like an organizational depth piece, and anything more will be a bonus.
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