Showing posts with label Nick Madrigal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick Madrigal. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2023

White Sox rebuilding fail: A look back at the 2018 draft

Tanking has become a popular strategy across professional sports over the past decade. It probably doesn't work as well in baseball as it does in football, basketball or hockey, but that hasn't stopped teams from trying it.

In 2017 and 2018, the White Sox were rebuilding, but it's fair to say they were tanking -- setting their roster up to lose, in order to get a high pick in the next year's draft.

The Sox went 67-95 in 2017, the fourth-worst record in Major League Baseball. That meant they had the No. 4 overall pick in the 2018 draft, and drafted near the top of all the subsequent rounds.

For tanking to work, a team must make good draft picks and develop that talent. Here's a list of the 40 players the Sox took in that 2018 draft. Players currently on the 40-man roster are in all caps and bolded:

We always say you can't judge a draft until you get a few years down the road. Well, we're five years down the road from this draft, and I would say it was poor. The Sox didn't get a single impact talent for their tanking efforts during the 2017 season.

Fourteenth-rounder Martin made 14 appearances and started nine games for the 2022 Sox, but he missed the entire 2023 season with Tommy John surgery. That's the closest thing we've had to a success story here.

Gonzalez, the 18th-rounder, has appeared in 86 games across parts of the past three seasons and slashed .222/.239/.361. He missed most of the 2023 season with a shoulder injury. He profiles as a career utility player, if he's lucky.

Ramsey, the 23rd-rounder, made it to the majors last year after the Sox sold off half their pitching staff at the trade deadline. His ERA was 5.85 over 21 games, but honestly, anything you get out of a guy drafted that late is a bonus.

The real issue here is the top of this draft. Madrigal made it to the big leagues in 2020 and started for the Sox in 2021 before tearing his hamstring in June. He and sixth-round pick Heuer, who also made it to the bigs in 2020, were shipped to the Cubs at the trade deadline for reliever Craig Kimbrel

Kimbrel was a disaster for the Sox and departed in free agency after the 2021 season. Madrigal is an injury-prone utility guy for the Cubs, and Heuer has not pitched in the majors in either of the past two seasons because of injury.

Second-round pick Walker was traded to the Texas Rangers in December 2019 for outfielder Nomar Mazara. The deal did not work out for either side. Mazara slumped throughout the pandemic-shortened 2020 season with the Sox, and Walker appeared in just five games with the Rangers in 2022 -- going 1 for 16. He is no longer with the Texas organization. In fact, he spent most of 2023 at High-A West Michigan, an affiliate of the Detroit Tigers.

Third-rounder Pilkington was traded to Cleveland at the deadline in 2021 for second baseman Cesar Hernandez. Pilkington appeared in 16 games (11 starts) with the Guardians, but eventually was designated for assignment. Hernandez did not play well down the stretch for the 2021 Sox and left in free agency after that season.

Fifth-rounder Stiever made two starts for the 2020 Sox, and one relief appearance in 2021. His career ERA is 14.21. Injuries ruined any shot he might have had, and he was outrighted off the roster.

The sad truth for the Sox is this draft was part of their rebuilding failure. None of these players helped the team, either on the field or in trades to acquire talent. It's pretty much a disaster, as a matter of fact.

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Matt Foster unlikely hero for White Sox

The White Sox completed a sweep of the crosstown Cubs on Wednesday with a 4-3 victory at Wrigley Field. And just like we all expected, the hero of the game was ... Matt Foster

Yep, that's right, Matt Foster, the 27-year-old reliever who spent most of the 2021 season bouncing back and forth between Chicago and Triple-A Charlotte. And when Foster was in Chicago last season, he posted a 6.00 ERA and a 1.436 WHIP in 37 appearances.

Coming into spring training, he wasn't really in the plans. However, extended rosters and injuries created opportunity, and Foster made the team out of camp. 

And he's pitched really well in his opportunities in 2022. Coming into Wednesday night, he had allowed only one earned run in 11 innings across 10 appearances.

The assignment Foster received Wednesday night was his toughest yet. He was asked to clean up Aaron Bummer's mess in the bottom of the eighth inning. The Cubs had runners at first and third with one out, and the Sox were clinging to a 4-3 lead. Seiya Suzuki and Ian Happ, the No. 2 and No. 3 batters in the Cubs' lineup, were due up.

Foster got Suzuki to foul out to first baseman Gavin Sheets on a fastball up and out of the zone. The Cubs' runner on first, Nick Madrigal, was going with the pitch, so perhaps that enticed Suzuki to swing at a pitch that was not a strike. No matter. Either way, it was the second out.

Happ followed, and on a 2-2 pitch, Foster aced him with fastball at the bottom of the zone and struck him out looking. Jam escaped. Lead perserved. Foster's ERA is down to 0.77.

Liam Hendriks worked a 1-2-3 ninth inning for his seventh save in eight opportunities. That allowed Lucas Giolito (1-1) to pick up his first victory of the season. The right-hander allowed three runs across 5.2 innings, but he struck out 10 Cubs batters.

Jose Abreu (3rd of the season) and Leury Garcia (2nd of the season) homered for the Sox, who overcame an early 3-1 deficit. Sheets had a two-out RBI single in the fourth to tie the game. AJ Pollock had a two-out RBI single in the sixth that put the South Siders ahead for good.

The Sox are now 11-13. The Cubs drop to 9-15.

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Carlos Rodon does not receive qualifying offer from White Sox

Carlos Rodon
Left-handed pitcher Carlos Rodon did not receive an $18.4 million qualifying offer from the White Sox on Sunday, meaning he will become a free agent.

Rodon, 28, had the best season of his career in 2021, going 13-5 with a 2.37 ERA in 24 starts. He was selected to the All-Star Game for the first time in his seven-year career and pitched a no-hitter against the Cleveland Indians on April 14.

Sox general manager Rick Hahn said during his end-of-season press conference Friday that the team would like to find a way to bring Rodon back, but clearly, that $18.4 million price tag is too high for a pitcher with Rodon's injury history.

Even in this, his best season, shoulder problems limited Rodon to 132.2 innings -- and that was the most innings he's pitched since 2016. If he had been 100% healthy at the end of the season, he probably would have been the Sox's Game 1 starter in the ALDS. Alas, the balky shoulder kept him off the mound until Game 4, and he went only 2.2 innings in a season-ending 10-1 loss to the Houston Astros.

Educated guess here: Rodon will be elsewhere in 2022.

That's because Hahn also stated Friday that Michael Kopech will be moving into the starting rotation next season. Kopech would join Lucas Giolito, Lance Lynn, Dylan Cease and Dallas Keuchel. Unless there's a trade in the works, there's no room for Rodon.

A few other notes and thoughts from Hahn's press conference:

What to do with Vaughn and Sheets?

According to an article from James Fegan in The Athletic, Hahn said, "We feel very bullish on the futures of Andrew Vaughn and Gavin Sheets. We envision them playing significant roles on multiple White Sox clubs going forward. We will spend some time over the next few months figuring out what is the best fit for them in 2022. Could be DH possibilities, right-field possibilities. They’re both natural first basemen and we’ve seen how quickly Andrew acclimated to left field. They provided us with good options and flexibility.”

Let me say this: I don't mind Vaughn and Sheets rotating with Jose Abreu and Eloy Jimenez in some sort of time share at first base, designated hitter and in left field.  

Abreu is entering his age-35 season, and if we're being honest, he ran out of gas in 2021. He homered only twice after Sept. 1, and dealt with numerous nagging injuries. It would be beneficial for him to DH more. He should still play every day, but fewer games at first base are in order. Vaughn and Sheets can fill in.

Vaughn has shown me that he's better in left field than Jimenez. I have no problem whatsoever giving Vaughn some starts in left and using Jimenez as a DH.

BUT, I don't want to see a right field time share involving Vaughn and Sheets. I don't think either of them are good defenders at that position, and Sheets is downright poor. The Sox have ignored defense far too often over the course of my lifetime.

Sign an actual outfielder to play right field, please.

Coaches back, but Allen Thomas is not

Manager Tony La Russa will return in 2022, along with his entire coaching staff. However, the Sox have parted ways with director of conditioning Allen Thomas, who had been in that role for 18 years. Thomas worked for the Sox for a total of 27 years.

The Sox seemingly lead the world in hamstring injuries -- Tim Anderson and Adam Engel had multiple issues in 2021. And Luis Robert and Nick Madrigal suffered catastrophic leg injuries performing the simple act of running out a ground ball.

Hahn said the Sox would be "reimagining" the strength and conditioning department this offseason. I don't know what the hell that means, but in the abstract, I endorse taking a hard look at training techniques after long-term injuries to key players threw a wrench in the season for the Sox.

Catching situation

I wasn't happy with the backup catchers on the Sox roster this year. Seby Zavala can't hit, and while his pitch calling and framing are decent-to-good, his pitch blocking is terrible. Zack Collins is supposed to be a hitter, but he's yet to prove that to me. And I don't have anything nice to say about his defense, frankly.

The Sox really had some problems when Yasmani Grandal had to sit in July and August with a knee injury.

Here's what Hahn said, again in an article from Fegan on The Athletic:

“(Collins and Zavala) both grew from the experience and they both are viable options next year. Obviously with Yasmani as valuable as he is offensively, as well as when healthy, what we get out of him from a defensive standpoint behind the plate, you want to do what you can to protect him and to have him viable over the course of the entire six months, much less into October. So having a backup that we have confidence in and can be a suitable sub for Yasmani when the needed breaks arise, would be of good benefit to us. Certainly have the internal options, we think they’re going to continue to get better and we’ll see how the offseason unfolds.”

Not to be a jerk, but these "internal options" stink. Sign a backup catcher this offseason.

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

White Sox beat Rays despite using makeshift lineup

Yasmani Grandal
The White Sox starting lineup in Wednesday's series finale with the Tampa Bay Rays looked like something you would see in a split squad game during spring training -- a mix of regulars and reserves. It wasn't the sort of lineup one typically sees in a June game:

  1. Tim Anderson, SS
  2. Brian Goodwin, CF
  3. Andrew Vaughn, LF
  4. Jose Abreu, 1B
  5. Yasmani Grandal, DH
  6. Jake Lamb, RF
  7. Leury Garcia, 3B
  8. Zack Collins, C
  9. Danny Mendick 2B

It was especially weird to see Goodwin, Lamb and Collins all in there, because they are all left-handed batters, and the Sox were facing a left-handed pitcher in Tampa Bay's Ryan Yarbrough.

But this is triage kind of situation. Nick Madrigal is out for the season with a torn hamstring. Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert are weeks, if not months, away from being healthy, functional big leaguers. Yoan Moncada is out with a sinus infection. Adam Engel, working his way back from a hamstring injury, still isn't ready to play a day game after a night game. Adam Eaton has some sort of leg soreness that is keeping him out of the lineup, and Yermin Mercedes is in a terrible slump.

So, you end up with a piecemeal lineup like this. And, of course, the Sox won because of their offense. They scored four runs in the fourth inning and three in the fifth to take a 7-2 lead. After the bullpen let the lead slip, the Sox scored one in the 10th on a walkoff single by Grandal and won, 8-7.

And, oh yeah, Ryan Burr pitched the top of the 10th inning to earn the win, because closer Liam Hendriks was only available in the event of a save situation, which never materialized.

Just the way they drew it up, right?

Monday, June 14, 2021

White Sox complete three-game sweep of Detroit Tigers

Carlos Rodon
There are still questions about the White Sox's ability to beat good teams, but the Sox have proven they can reliably slay the bums in the American League.

The South Siders are now 8-2 against the Detroit Tigers this season, after completing a three-game sweep in Detroit over the weekend.

The Sox (41-24) have won four in a row overall and now possess a 5.5-game lead in the American League Central over the second-place Cleveland Indians.

Here's a look back at the weekend that was:

Friday, June 11

White Sox 5, Tigers 4 (10 innings): Liam Hendriks had converted 12 straight saves and not allowed an earned run since April 24, so he was due for a bad game. After sitting through a rain delay at the onset of the bottom of the ninth, Hendriks let a 4-2 lead slip when he gave up a two-run homer to Detroit's Daz Cameron.

Fortunately for Hendriks (3-1), he got the win anyway. The Sox scored a run in the top of the 10th inning on a sacrifice fly by Yoan Moncada. Aaron Bummer recorded his second save of the season by pitching out of a first-and-second, no-outs jam in the bottom of the inning. Bummer struck out two, then benefited from a nice defensive play by second baseman Danny Mendick to end the game.

At the plate, Mendick was 2 for 4 with a run scored and an RBI. Adam Engel hit his second home run of the season to highlight the Sox offense.

Saturday, June 12

White Sox 15, Tigers 2: Brian Goodwin had a successful debut with the Sox. The veteran outfielder was added to the roster last week when Nick Madrigal went on the injured list with a torn hamstring. Goodwin delivered an RBI double as part of a three-run first inning, then added a three-run homer as part of a five-run second inning.

Goodwin finished the game with five RBIs. The Sox pounded out 13 hits and took advantage of 11 walks by the Detroit pitching staff. The Tigers used seven people to pitch, including two position players, after starter Jose Urena gave up eight runs and got knocked out in the second inning.

Dylan Cease (5-2) is now 8-0 lifetime against the Tigers. He pitched five innings of two-run ball with seven strikeouts. He exited the game after five because the Sox were ahead 13-2. Lightly used relievers Ryan Burr and Matt Foster finished the game.

Yermin Mercedes and Leury Garcia had two hits and three RBIs each in the rout.

Sunday, June 13

White Sox 4, Tigers 1: Carlos Rodon took a no-hitter into the seventh inning. Unfortunately for him, he lost the bid after a missed strike call by the home plate umpire. With one out in the seventh, Rodon aced Detroit's Eric Haase with a 2-2 slider that had the whole plate. Alas, the pitch was called a ball. Haase doubled to break up the no-hitter, and later scored on a sacrifice fly to spoil the shutout.

Rodon (6-2) was at 103 pitches after seven innings, so he was removed from the game at that point. He allowed only the one hit and two walks. He struck out nine. 

It wasn't an explosive day for the Sox offense, but it was good enough. Jose Abreu had three hits, including an RBI single in the fourth. Garcia had two RBIs, one on a double in the fifth and the other on a bases-loaded walk in the sixth. Mendick was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded in the sixth, as the Tigers continued to show why they are tied for last place.

Evan Marshall worked a 1-2-3 eighth, and Hendriks bounced back from Friday with a clean ninth for his 17th save in 20 attempts.

Friday, June 11, 2021

Baseball America cover jinx?

Just days after I received this magazine in my mailbox, White Sox second baseman Nick Madrigal tore his hamstring and will be lost to the Sox for at least 60 days -- if not the rest of the 2021 season.

Doesn't that just figure?

Monday, May 24, 2021

White Sox lineup construction idea: Try Andrew Vaughn in the No. 2 spot

Andrew Vaughn
Arguing about lineup construction gets old fast, so I try not to jump down that hole too often. But an idea occurred to me while watching the White Sox snap a three-game losing streak with a 5-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday night.

Try rookie Andrew Vaughn in the No. 2 spot -- at least against left-handed pitchers.

Vaughn hit the longest home run Aroldis Chapman has ever given up Sunday, and that boosted his season slash line against left-handed pitchers to .290/.436/.645.

On Monday night, St. Louis started left-hander Kwang Hyun Kim. Vaughn, batting seventh in the order, got two hits in three plate appearances against Kim -- a double in the second inning and a two-run homer in the bottom of the sixth that turned the game in the Sox's favor.

The Sox were trailing 1-0 at that point, but Vaughn put them up 2-1 by pulling a Kim changeup over the left-field wall. Tim Anderson added a two-run double later than inning to make it 4-1, and the Sox cruised from there. 

Lance Lynn (5-1) took a no-hitter into the sixth inning and pitched seven innings of one-run ball to earn the win. Michael Kopech struck out three over two innings of scoreless relief.

But back to the No. 2 spot in the batting order. On Monday, it was occupied by Adam Eaton, who has been in a slump for the past month. He's batting .198/.305/.351 for the season. Not good, and the picture is even worse against lefties. Eaton is 2 for 22 against left-handed pitchers. He hasn't been playing much against them, nor should he be.

Other players who have been tried in the No. 2 spot include Nick Madrigal and Leury Garcia. Let's just say those two extremely aggressive hitters are more suited to the bottom of the lineup.

After Monday's game, Vaughn overall season slash line is .230/.326/.416, so that means he does struggle against right-handers. But, he's mashing lefties, and he sees pitches and takes walks. Why not move him up in the lineup when a favorable matchup for him presents itself?

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

White Sox 2B Nick Madrigal is outslugging some people he shouldn't be outslugging

Nick Madrigal
Let's play a game of name that White Sox player:

Player A: .313/.364/.413

Player B: .264/.370/.396

Player C: .202/.302/.374

Player D: .127/.333/.273

You may have noticed that Player A has the highest slugging percentage, while Player D has the lowest slugging percentage. I intentionally arranged the players in that order.

Would you believe noted singles hitter and king of the two-strike base hit Nick Madrigal is Player A? Good for Madrigal that he's off to a good start with the bat this season, and he is to be commended for that. 

But it's not good news for the Sox that Madrigal is outslugging Yoan Moncada (Player B), defending league MVP Jose Abreu (Player C), and the team's highest-paid player, Yasmani Grandal (Player D).

With Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert both out of the lineup with injuries until at least August,mMoncada, Abreu and Grandal better start producing more runs. It's time for them to hit some balls off the wall and over the wall, or this season in which the Sox have very high expectations is going to end in disappointment. 

It's great and all that Yermin Mercedes won AL Rookie of the Month, but it's preposterous to think a 28-year-old rookie is going to carry the middle of the lineup all season.

Sunday, April 25, 2021

My first trip to Guaranteed Rate Field in 575 days

For the first time since Sept. 27, 2019, I was at Guaranteed Rate Field on Saturday night. It was nice to unite with friends. It was great to see live baseball, and much to my pleasant surprise, the White Sox aren't making a big stink out of the COVID-19 protocols.

I had visions of ushers crapping on fans all night about masking and social distancing and whatnot, but fortunately, ballpark security is leaving people alone to enjoy a ballgame. And enjoy it we did, as the Sox beat the Texas Rangers, 2-1, as part of a three-game weekend sweep.

The Sox are finally over .500 now at 12-9, and they'll take a four-game winning streak into Monday's off day. The Detroit Tigers come to town Tuesday to start a three-game series.

A few thoughts on each game this weekend:

Friday, April 23

White Sox 9, Rangers 7: Yermin Mercedes went 4 for 4 with three RBIs to lead a 16-hit attack. The Sox led 5-0 after three innings, and 6-2 after four, only to see the Rangers rally to tie. Mercedes delivered a go-ahead RBI double in the seventh that put the South Siders ahead to stay.

That said, my biggest takeaway from this game is that the Sox need more from starting pitcher Dylan Cease, who lasted only 3.1 innings. He was fortunate to escape a bases-loaded jam in the first inning, and he needed 80 pitches to get the 10 outs he recorded.

The Sox ended up using five relief pitchers, and Liam Hendriks was needed to record a five-out save. This game was a little more dicey than you might like after having a big lead in the early innings.

Saturday, April 24

White Sox 2, Rangers 1: This was a tight pitching battle between Sox left-hander Dallas Keuchel and Texas right-hander Kyle Gibson. The Sox got on the board first when Yoan Moncada scored on a wild pitch in the bottom of the sixth inning.

That 1-0 lead held up until the top of the ninth when Hendriks gave up a solo home run to Willie Calhoun. Again, Hendriks was leaned on heavily Friday night, but there is a legitimate concern that the highly paid closer has given up four homers in 8.2 innings this season. 

But let's give some credit to Calhoun on this one. He got on top of a fastball that was up and out of the zone and hit it deep to right-center field. You don't see left-handed batters hit pitches that high too often. Calhoun must have been looking there, and it was good hitting on his part.

As for Hendriks, he doesn't have the feel for his slider than I remember him having when he was dominating in Oakland. His fastball is still good, and he can get by with just that some of the time, but not all of the time. If major-league hitters can just sit on the fastball, eventually they'll catch up to it. I look for Hendriks to be more effective once he can start throwing his breaking ball for strikes.

Despite the blown save, the Sox won on a two-out, RBI double by Nick Madrigal in the bottom of the ninth. The hit scored Luis Robert, who had singled and advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Yasmani Grandal. After an intentional walk to Mercedes and a strikeout of Billy Hamilton, Madrigal delivered.

Sunday, April 25

White Sox 8, Rangers 4: So, are we excited about Michael Kopech yet? Yeah, I think it's fair to be happy about what we're seeing from the rookie right-hander.

Lucas Giolito has a cut on the middle finger of his throwing hand, so Kopech made a spot start Sunday in his place. He was dazzling, striking out 10 with no walks over five innings of one-run ball. Those 10 strikeouts occurred over his first four innings, too. Kopech might have tired a bit in the fifth, but he got through the inning to earn a well-deserved win.

Crazy thing is, Kopech really didn't need his secondary pitches. His fastball command was impeccable, and even when he did miss with the fastball, it was a "good" miss, in a place where the Texas batters couldn't hurt him. The only run he allowed was on a hanging slider, which David Dahl hit out of the park in the second inning.

Kopech threw 87 pitches, 60 of them for strikes. Fifty-five of the 87 pitches were fastballs, 11 swings and misses, 14 called strikes and 13 foul balls. The Texas batters could not square him up at all.

The Sox scored eight runs in the first three innings, highlighted by Jose Abreu's fifth home run of the season, a two-run triple by Madrigal and an RBI triple by Adam Eaton.

Jonathan Stiever made his season debut for the Sox in the sixth, and it was a bad one. He gave up four straight hits and did not retire a batter. He ended up being charged with three runs. Garrett Crochet had two inherited runners score on his watch, but he settled down to provide three scoreless innings of relief. Jose Ruiz worked a scoreless ninth, giving the back of the Sox bullpen a needed rest.

 

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Carlos Rodon (!) pitches a no-hitter for the White Sox

Carlos Rodon
The White Sox non-tendered Carlos Rodon last offseason -- and rightfully so. He hadn't been healthy since 2016. And he hadn't really pitched well in those five years.

Many Sox fans, including me, assumed he would not be brought back for the 2021 season. And many Sox fans, including me, were skeptical when he returned on a one-year, $3 million prove-it deal.

But Rodon won a job as the No. 5 starter in spring training, beating Reynaldo Lopez out fair and square in an open competition. And now Rodon has put his name in Sox history books, as he pitched the 20th no-hitter in team history Wednesday night, beating the Cleveland Indians, 8-0.

Rodon retired the first 25 men he faced. He had a perfect game through 8.1 innings, and he lost the perfecto in a frustrating way -- he hit Cleveland catcher Roberto Perez on the foot with an 0-2 slider.

However, Rodon rallied to strike out Yu Chang, and then Jordan Luplow grounded out on a hot shot to third baseman Yoan Moncada to end the game.

When all was said and done, Rodon threw 114 pitches -- 75 for strikes -- and he struck out seven. He's 2-0 on the season, and he hasn't given up a run in 14 innings pitched. His fastball velocity is back. Rodon was throwing 99 mph in the ninth inning. Sure, the adrenaline had to be flowing, but we've seen that type of velocity from him in each of his first two games this season.

Could he finally be healthy? Let's hope.

And, oh yeah, the Sox roughed up Cleveland starter Zach Plesac, who has been a nemesis for them in the past. Plesac made three starts against the Sox in 2020, and had a 1.74 ERA over 20.2 innings pitched.

On this night, the Sox scored six runs against him, and knocked him out with two outs in the bottom of the first inning. Moncada had an RBI single. Yermin Mercedes hit a three-run homer to start a three-hit night. Leury Garcia added an RBI double, and Nick Madrigal finished the six-run rally with an RBI single.

Rodon was given the luxury of a big lead from the very start, and he took advantage. Even though I've been a Rodon skeptic, it's impossible not to be happy for that guy. He's been through surgeries on his shoulder and elbow, and to get back to a point where he's able to pitch at a high level, that has to be very satisfying for him.

He proved a lot of people wrong, including me.


Monday, November 23, 2020

Latest White Sox list of top 30 prospects

Andrew Vaughn
With no games to watch, it's always fun to entertain ourselves by talking about lists, right? I visited whitesox.com Monday night and noticed that Jim Callis has his latest list of top 30 White Sox prospects available

You can peruse the whole thing by following the link, but the top 10 are usually the most notable, and here they are:

  1. Andrew Vaughn, 1B
  2. Michael Kopech, RHP
  3. Nick Madrigal, 2B
  4. Garrett Crochet, LHP
  5. Dane Dunning, RHP
  6. Jared Kelley, RHP
  7. Jonathan Stiever, RHP
  8. Matthew Thompson, RHP
  9. Micker Adolfo, OF
  10. Gavin Sheets, 1B

We've already seen four of those first five players in the majors. Madrigal, Crochet and Dunning were all useful-to-good during 2020, and we saw Kopech make his debut in 2018. He missed 2019 because of Tommy John surgery, and opted out of the 2020 season because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

All four of those guys figure to be on the roster when 2021 opens, and we'll almost certainly see Vaughn -- who is easily the top hitting prospect in the organization -- sometime next summer.

After Dunning, the depth thins out, but I do find the No. 6 player on the list of interest. Kelley, the 19-year-old pitcher the Sox drafted in the second round of the 2020 draft, stands 6-foot-3 and weighs 215 pounds. Like a lot of kids from Texas, he's got the big fastball, and he was good enough to get invited to the team's alternate training site in Schaumburg this summer. 

Kelley was featured in the organizational reports section of Baseball America's October edition. Here are some of the quotes from farm director Chris Getz, as told to beat reporter Scot Gregor:

"[Kelley's] looked very good. Jared's work ethic has jumped out to everyone observing. His attention to detail and willingness to learn are other factors that have quickly shown, the attributes we had seen and heard about prior to selecting him."

"We will be focusing on his four-seam fastball, breaking ball and changeup. All his pitches flash major league potential, so we're aiming for consistency within his delivery and arm action to fully allow him to be efficient with all his pitches."

"He is a strong, powerful kid who knows how to generate power. He knows how to use his size and strength as a weapon."

It's something new for the Sox to have three pitchers who were drafted out of high school in the top 11 on their prospects list.

Thompson, a 6-foot-3, 20-year-old right-hander, is No. 8 on the list and was drafted in the second round in 2019. Andrew Dalquist, a 6-foot-1, 20-year-old right-hander is just outside the top 10 at No. 11. He was drafted in the third round in 2019.

It will be a good test for the Sox's player development staff to see if they can get at least one of these three guys to become useful members of a big-league rotation in the years ahead.

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Oakland A's hold off White Sox rally, force Game 3

Liam Hendriks
Well, White Sox fans, here's the question: Should we be optimistic about the team's chances in a winner-take-all Game 3 after what we saw in the last two innings Wednesday, or should we be skeptical after what we saw through the first seven innings?

The Oakland Athletics evened the best-of-three series with a 5-3 victory over the White Sox in Game 2, but I think it was a little closer than the A's would have liked.

Oakland had a 5-0 lead through seven innings, as right-hander Chris Bassitt basically took the Sox's bats and shoved them straight where the sun doesn't shine.

However, the Sox rallied against Liam Hendriks, the Oakland closer who has been one of the best relievers in the American League this season.

Yasmani Grandal hit a two-run homer off Hendriks in the eighth to make it 5-2. And after two were out in the ninth, back-to-back singles by Nick Madrigal and Tim Anderson and a walk to Yoan Moncada loaded the bases.

Hendriks had recorded five outs, all on strikeouts, but he needed 49 pitches (!) to do it. He was clearly out of gas, so the A's summoned left-hander Jake Diekman, who walked Grandal to force in a run. 

5-3.

The stage was set for MVP candidate Jose Abreu, who hit a 96.4 mph two-hopper on the first pitch, right at Oakland second baseman Nate Orf. Game over. A's survive.

Abreu's ball had an xBA of .460, but it hard to curse the Sox's bad luck when they played poorly over the first seven innings.

They generated no offense against Bassitt, and Dallas Keuchel was just plain bad, allowing five runs (three earned) on six hits in 3.1 innings pitched. Keuchel allowed homers to Marcus Semien and Khris Davis, and his average exit velocity allowed was 97.4 mph. He got hit hard, plain and simple.

It's disappointing because games such as this are the ones Keuchel was signed to win. Alas, he couldn't close out this series, and the Sox face a do-or-die game at 2 o'clock Thursday. Who will pitch? As of 10 o'clock Wednesday night, we do not know.

We know the middle of the rotation is the Sox's weakness. After Lucas Giolito and Keuchel, they basically have three No. 5 starters. Do you trust Dane Dunning with the season on the line? Or do you just have a bullpen game?

Garrett Crochet, Matt Foster, Codi Heuer, Aaron Bummer, Evan Marshall and Alex Colome should all be available to pitch in Game 3. Heuer is the only man from that group to appear in Game 2, and he needed only eight pitches to work a tidy 1-2-3 bottom of the eighth.

I think trying to get through nine innings with those six relievers is the best way forward.

Meanwhile, Oakland also has not announced its starter, and it is insisting that Hendriks is available for Game 3. I'm not so sure. If he does appear, will he be effective? That could change the strategy for Oakland in this game.

In terms of the Sox lineup, Edwin Encarnacion played Wednesday. Eloy Jimenez did not. I'm not sure why Jimenez is on the roster if his sprained foot is preventing him from so much as DH'ing. 

Encarnacion was 0 for 2 before being lifted for a pinch hitter, none other than Nomar Mazara, who was 1 for 2 with a single and a strikeout in the late innings. Worth noting, Mazara was called out on a terrible pitch that should have been ball four. The quality of his ABs far exceeded those of Encarnacion, who grounded out to third and struck out swinging.

Even if Jimenez cannot play Thursday, I'd say it's time to give up on Encarnacion. If Oakland starts a right-handed pitcher, hell, just DH Mazara. Or put James McCann behind the plate and DH Grandal, as the Sox did in Game 1.

The margin for error is gone now, so there's no time left to mess around with struggling players, regardless of previous track record.

Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Yolmer Sanchez returns to White Sox on minor-league deal

Yolmer Sanchez
Infielder Yolmer Sanchez is returning to the White Sox on a minor-league-deal, reports say.

Sanchez, 28, recently requested his release from the San Francisco Giants in order to "pursue other opportunities." He won an American League Gold Glove Award as the Sox's primary second baseman in 2019, but he was nontendered during the offseason because his bat isn't nearly as good as his glove.

Sanchez slashed .252/.318/.321 with only two home runs, 20 doubles and 43 RBIs last season.

However, it didn't work out for him in San Francisco, and the Sox find themselves in need of infield depth. Second baseman Nick Madrigal remains on the injured list with a separated shoulder, and all-purpose player Leury Garcia is done for the year after tearing ligaments in his thumb on an ill-advised dive into first base.

Danny Mendick has filled in admirably at second base, but third baseman Yoan Moncada has been laboring around the field, grimacing every time he has to run out a ground ball and struggling to play his position. Clearly, Moncada is operating at less than 100%, but he needs to be on the field because with Madrigal and Garcia out, the next-best infield option is ... Ryan Goins. (Gulp.)

Enter Sanchez, who despite his weaknesses with the bat is a capable fielder no matter where you put him on the infield. He's a switch-hitter, and he is better offensively than the journeyman Goins.

I expect Sanchez to get some reps in at the Sox's alternate site in Schaumburg, and then eventually replace Goins on the 28-man roster.

So, let's welcome Sanchez back to the Sox organization with our traditional song:


Monday, August 3, 2020

White Sox get much-needed three-game sweep in Kansas City

Nick Madrigal
Games against the Kansas City Royals have been a painful experience for White Sox fans over the past decade. Sure, the Royals were good in 2014 and 2015, but in a lot of other seasons, you felt as though the Sox were the better team, but it did not play out that way in head-to-head matchups.

Take 2019, for example. The Royals were 59-103, but they still managed to go 10-9 against the Sox. That probably should not have happened, but it did.

Given that history, it was really nice to see the Sox win all three games in Kansas City this weekend, by a combined score of 23-9.

In roster moves of note, Nick Madrigal received his overdue call-up and started all three games at second base. He went hitless the first two games, before breaking out with a 4-for-5 performance that included two runs scored and an RBI in the series finale.

Relief pitcher Kelvin Herrera was thankfully designated for assignment. Since joining the Sox before the start of the 2019 season, he appeared in 59 games and posted a 6.54 ERA. In two appearances this season, he allowed four earned runs -- including two homers -- over 2.1 innings. His fastball velocity was sitting in the low 90s -- it was in the upper 90s in Herrera's prime -- and the right-hander would have automatically had his contract option picked up for 2021 if he made 21 appearances during this shortened season.

The Sox simply could not allow that to happen. It was time for Herrera to go, and he is gone.

In less happy news, shortstop Tim Anderson strained his groin in Friday's game against the Royals, and he's on the 10-day injured list. The Sox will need to survive with Leury Garcia and Danny Mendick playing that position for the time being.

Catcher Yermin Mercedes was recalled to take Anderson's spot on the 30-man roster.

Here are some other thoughts on each of the weekend games:

Friday, July 31
White Sox 3, Royals 2: The key sequence of this game came in the top of the second inning. Eloy Jimenez reached on an error, right before Luis Robert beat out what should have been a sure double-play ball. It should have been two outs with nobody on base. Instead, Robert was on first with one out. James McCann was hit by a pitch, and Adam Engel hit a three-run homer off Kansas City lefty Kris Bubic to put the Sox ahead, 3-0.

Dallas Keuchel (2-0) allowed two runs over 5.2 innings to pick up his second win with the Sox, and three relievers combined to make a one-run lead stick the rest of the way. Alex Colome pitched a 1-2-3 ninth for his first save of the season.

Saturday Aug. 1
White Sox 11, Royals 5: After Anderson got injured Friday night, Robert moved into the leadoff spot and turned in a dominant performance. The rookie center fielder went 4 for 6 with a homer, two doubles, two runs scored and two RBIs.

Jimenez also finished a triple short of the cycle. He went 4 for 6 with four RBIs, including a three-run homer that capped off a four-run top of the first.

The Sox finished with 21 hits as a team. Garcia also had a four-hit night in place of Anderson at shortstop. Yasmani Grandal's two-out, two-run double in the top of the ninth took the score from 7-4 to 9-4, and the Sox piled on from there.

Rookie reliever Matt Foster got the win in his first major league appearance, and rookie Codi Heuer got his first career save, because he entered in the eighth when the score was 7-4. The Sox needed seven pitchers to get through the game, but the offense was good enough to carry the day.

Sunday, Aug. 2
White Sox 9, Royals 2: This game was tied at 2 through six innings, but the Sox erupted for seven runs in the top of the seventh to put the game away. The rally was started and finished by Madrigal, who led off the inning with a single and capped it with an RBI single.

The inning also featured a two-out, two-run single by the erstwhile Nicky Delmonico, who has been struggling mightily to get anything done at the plate. Credit Delmonico for capitalizing on a hanging slider from Greg Holland, but you know, he's still only batting .150 for the season.

The rally made a winner of Dylan Cease (1-1), who bounced back from a crummy outing against the Indians with six innings of two-run ball. Cease struck out four and walked only one.

The Sox are now 5-4 heading into a four-game series with the Milwaukee Brewers. The first two will be played in Wisconsin. The second two will be played on the South Side. Here are your pitching probables:

Monday, 7:10 p.m.: Carlos Rodon (0-1, 12.27 ERA) vs. Brett Anderson
Tuesday, 7:10 p.m.: Lucas Giolito (0-1, 6.52 ERA) vs. Brandon Woodruff (1-1, 1.59 ERA)
Wednesday, 7:10 p.m.: Keuchel (2-0, 3.38 ERA) vs. Adrian Houser (0-0, 1.80 ERA)
Thursday, 7:10 p.m.: Gio Gonzalez (0-0, 7.36 ERA vs. TBA

Monday, July 27, 2020

White Sox lose two out of three to Minnesota Twins in opening series

Nelson Cruz
They say starting pitching sets the tone, right?

Well, Lucas Giolito was terrible in the season opener Friday night, and the White Sox lost to the Minnesota Twins, 10-5. And Reynaldo Lopez was a combination of bad and injured Sunday, and that led to a 14-2 loss to Minnesota.

Fortunately, Dallas Keuchel had a good outing in the second game of the three-game series, and the Sox won that one going away, 10-3.

We also learned in this opening series that Minnesota slugger Nelson Cruz still owns the Sox. He went a combined 7 for 13 with three home runs and 10 RBIs in these three games. Plenty of players don't produce that in a month.

And, we also learned that the baseball gods hate service time manipulation, as Leury Garcia's poor defense at second base played a key role in Giolito's demise Friday. Garcia botched two plays in the top of the first inning that helped the Twins score four runs.

Sure, Garcia redeemed himself in Game 2 with a home run from each side of the plate, but Garcia's presence in the lineup isn't the problem -- he's playing the wrong position. He should be in right field during Nomar Mazara's absence, and prospect Nick Madrigal should be playing second base. You have to believe Madrigal makes those plays Friday night, but the Sox sent him to Schaumburg to make sure they save a year of service time.

Typical, cheap, rebuilding sort of move from a team that claims to be a contender now.

The team that is "playing to win" has the shaky Garcia playing in the infield, and Nicky Delmonico is playing right field.

Delmonico, a career .223 hitter who cannot field, went 0 for 9 with a walk in the series and missed two cutoff men in the same inning. But hey! By Sunday, he had moved up to second in the lineup!

Go figure.

Here's some other thoughts on each game:

Friday, July 24
Twins 10, White Sox 5: First the good news. Yoan Moncada went 3 for 5 with a three-run homer in the second inning that tied the game at 5, after the Sox had fallen behind 5-1. And Luis Robert singled in his first MLB at-bat and finished 2 for 4 with a double. The prized rookie looked like he belonged from the very start.

Giolito, unfortunately, was terrible. He wasn't helped by Garcia's defense, but his fastball command was nowhere to be found. He gave up two home runs to Max Kepler, including one on the first pitch of the season. He lasted only 3.2 innings, allowing seven earned runs on six hits. He struck out three and walked three.

The short outing caused manager Rick Renteria to run through his bullpen trying to keep the game close. Eight Sox pitchers were used. Seven relievers combined to give up three runs, and the Sox did not score again after Moncada's homer in the second. It was an ugly season opener.

Saturday, July 25
White Sox 10, Twins 3: The South Siders beat the Twins at their own game in this one, homering five times. Sure, Cruz got his for Minnesota -- he hit a three-run shot off Steve Cishek in the sixth.

However, the rest of this game was all Sox. Garcia's two homers produced four runs. Edwin Encarnacion hit a two-run homer in the fifth, and Eloy Jimenez backed him up with a solo shot. James McCann also homered in the sixth.

That made a winner out of Keuchel, who was very good. He limited the Twins to only one hit through five. Minnesota got a couple of singles off him in the sixth, and he ended up being charged with two runs when Cishek allowed his inherited runners to score.

Nevertheless, it was an encouraging outing for the veteran lefty, who has looked good every time he's gone to the mound this month.

Sunday, July 26
Twins 14, White Sox 2: This game can be summed up on one play in the top of the first inning. Jake Cave hit a grand slam off Lopez with two outs, and Jimenez crashed into the wall and hurt himself trying to make a play on the ball, which cleared the fence quite easily, frankly.

Two batters later, Lopez still was not out of the inning and he left trailing 4-0 with right shoulder tightness. Jimenez continued for one more inning, before leaving with lightheadedness.

Gio Gonzalez provided little relief, as he was touched up for five runs in the top of the second inning. So, it was 9-0 Twins after an inning and a half.

Nobody would have blamed you if you turned off your TV, although you would have missed Robert's first career homer, a two-run shot in the fifth.

And, you know, Cruz went 4 for 5 with two doubles, two homers and seven RBIs. Get that guy out of our sight already.

Next up for the Sox is a three-game series in Cleveland against the Indians. Here are your pitching probables:

Monday, 6:10 p.m.: Dylan Cease vs. Aaron Civale
Tuesday, 6:10 p.m.: Carlos Rodon vs. Zach Plesac
Wednesday, 5:10 p.m: Giolito (0-1, 17.18 ERA) vs. Shane Bieber (1-0, 0.00 ERA(