Sunday, April 19, 2026

Not Good

A good baseball team builds on a second-inning, 5-0 lead. And it sure as all whatever doesn’t strand fourteen runners or go 3-for-17 with runners in scoring position or fail to score with the bases loaded and nobody out in the 11th inning or roll over and play dead the way the White Sox did yesterday against the A’s in an eleven-inning 7-6 loss. Then again, the White Sox aren’t a good team. And they don’t have a good manager, if managing means more than telling reporters after the game, “Some chase above the zone in big spots [Colson Montgomery and Everson Pereira both whiffing on high pitches out of the strike zone]. Whether guys were trying to do too much, I don’t think that was the case. [Then, what was the case?] That’s not really what I saw. [Then, what did you see?] Just weren’t able to make it happen.” [today’s online Trib] Just? You’re the manager, Vibes. It’s your job to make things happen, and your coaches’. If players aren’t producing, you diagnose the problem and fix it. If it can’t be fixed, you give other players a shot. Instead, Vibes and company, well, I haven’t a clue what they’re doing with Miguel Vargas and Sam Antonacci. After going 0-for4 yesterday, Vargas is batting an anemic .153, with two hits over his last 29 at-bats. He’s hitting off his front foot; lunging; taking a hand off his bat on his follow through. But he keeps playing. Either he’s not getting advice or not following the advice he’s getting. He needs to sit. Alas, so does Antonacci. After recording a hit in his first major-league at-bat, the 23-year old has gone 0-for-14. The good news is one strikeout in nineteen plate appearances. The bad news is contact softer than a Dreamsicle left out in the August sun. The kid is obviously pressing. What I want to know is, who’s helping him calm down? Vibes? I doubt he knows how.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

If Just for One Game

If I didn’t know better, I’d think the White Sox took my complaints to heart yesterday and responded accordingly. Why not? Whatever the reason, Sox hitters woke up and pounded out fifteen hits in a 9-2 road win over the A’s...in Sacramento, of course. Now, let’s see if there’s any carryover. I hope so. Andrew Benintendi and Munetaka Murakami had three hits apiece while Colson Montgomery had two, along with Edgar Quero, Chase Meidroth and—wait for it—Luisangel Acuna. Murakami’s third hit was a monster grand slam in the seventh inning to dead center field, over a 50-foot high batter’s backdrop. It sure looked to go further than the announced 431 feet. But the real hero was starter Davis Martin, who picked up his third win with seven innings of one-run ball. How good was Martin? The 29-year old needed twelve pitches to get through the first two innings and 20 over the first three. For the game, the Sox best starter right now threw just 89 pitches. Compare that to A’s starter Aaron Civale, who got the hook after 4.2 innings and 103 pitches. By losing, the Mets and Royals have tied the Sox for worst record in baseball. Which of this lot will climb to the top of the pile? We’ll know soon enough.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Garbage, and not the Band

Three times yesterday, the White Sox had the lead over the Rays, and three times Tampa tied the game. Naturally, the third time proved a charm, with the Rays scoring three runs in the ninth, two with two out, to win 5-3 and sweep the series. What a load of…garbage. Where to start? Let’s start with the hitting, or lack thereof. What Casey Stengel once said about catchers and passed balls applies—in spirit—here. You don’t hit, you don’t win, and the Sox don’t hit. It was another day, another bunch of whiffs for Munetaka Murakami, as in three. Murakami has now struck out 26 times in 60 at-bats. Somewhere, Dave Nicholson shakes his head in disbelief. Signing Murakami was one of GM Chris Getz’s big offseason moves. The other was taking the money he saved from dumping Luis Robert Jr. and using it to sign Seranthony Dominguez to close. Now, not only does Getz’s team lack a centerfielder (how long until Luisangel Acuna gets sent down?), they don’t seem to have much of a closer, either. Dominguez fell behind 3-1 to Junior Caminero to start the ninth before delivering a sinker right in Caminero’s wheelhouse, thank you very much. Wait, there’s more. After getting an out, Dominguez gave up a single and a walk. Wait, there’s more. Then, he hit a batter. Wait, there’s more. Manager Vibes Venable brought in Lucas Sims, who apparently was so excited over striking out Jake Fraley he faced, he walked the next two. Game over. But, yes, you have to wait, because there’s more. After the game, Venable offered to reporters, “I think it was one of those [days] where he didn’t have his best stuff. He wasn’t able to command the ball.” [today’s Trib] Ya think? Now, tell me this, Vibes. Isn’t it the job of the manager and his coaches to get his closer ready, and, if he isn’t, to move quickly to minimize the damage? Only Vibes decided to go with an opener again, this time Jordan Leasure. Maybe one day Commissioner Rob Manfred will change the rules and allow a pitcher to return after being lifted, like in spring training. But, until then, you use a reliever to open, and you can’t bring him back in the ninth. Anthony Kay followed Leasure and went just 2.2 innings. Why didn’t Kay start? Maybe because this organization is clueless and content with garbage results. Right now, they have the worst record in baseball at 6-13 and are on a pace to lose 111 games, which would be the fourth straight season of 100-plus losses. Maybe they think a new stadium in the South Loop will fix everything. Yeah, that’s it. Only 10,128 showed up on a beautiful Thursday afternoon on account of location, not performance. What a load…

Thursday, April 16, 2026

This is Progress?

Ask, and ye shall receive. Not really, but the White Sox did call up Sam Antonacci yesterday, and he responded by going 1-for-3 in his major-league debut, with a run scored in an otherwise dreadful 8-3 Sox loss to the Rays. Dreadful why? Because that one hit meant Antonacci ended up with a higher batting average in the lineup than Andrew Benintendi (.178); Munetaka Murakami (.179); Miguel Vargas (.155); and Colson Montgomery (.175). It’s hard to say which of this group looks worst, but Montgomery’s four strikeouts does stand out. Vargas at least makes contact. Did I mention Luisangel Acuna and his .170 BA? My bad, and Chris Getz’s for thinking Acuna is a major-league hitter. Nope. And neither is Tristan Peters, while we’re at it. But these guys continue to see playing time. Why? Speaking of head-scratching moves, Getz sent down Brandon Eisert and replaced him with fellow lefty Tyler Gilbert. Nothing says, “Thank you, Jesus, for this chance,” more than giving up four earned runs in 1.2 innings of work. Just kidding, about the Jesus part. But this team sure could use some divine intervention.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

So-so

It could’ve been worse, it could’ve been better. In his big-league debut last night, lefthanded giant Noah Schultz went 4.1 innings, giving up four runs (three earned) on just three hits to the Rays in a losing effort. All four of the walks, though, scored as Tampa Bay coasted to an 8-5 win. Down 1-0 with runners on second and third and one out, Schultz fielded a bunt from Ben Williamson on an attempted suicide squeeze. At 6’10”, Schultz got to the ball in plenty of time for the out at home, only to throw it away. Take away the two runs that scored, and who knows? The good news is that Schultz won’t be going anywhere, as in back to Charlotte. He’ll see if he can steady his nerves in his second start, against the A’s or D-backs. The bad news is GM Chris Getz insists on staffing his bullpen with retreads; last night, Lucas Sims and Brandon Eisert let in four runs over 2.2 innings. Meanwhile, any number of promising pitchers await in Triple-A. Go figure. In another bit of Getz-second-guessing, I see he didn’t see fit to promote Sam Antonacci, a move that paid off in the short term. Instead of bringing up Antonacci, Getz activated Everson Pereira from the IL, and Pereira repaid the move by hitting a three-run homerun that put the Sox to within a run at 4-3 (see bad bullpen, above). Antonacci got two hits in his game, by the way.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Stuff

There’s stuff going on with the White Sox right now, but it’s tough to get a good read on the extent. What I do know is #2 prospect Noah Schultz, all 6’10” of him, will be making his major-league debut tonight against the Rays. That in itself is news. No waiting to make sure the 22-year old lefty is absolutely, 100-percent ready. Instead, both a leap of faith and an expression of confidence by the front office; how unlike the Sox. Rumor also has it that Sam Antonacci, all 5’11” of him, will be joining Schultz from Charlotte. Only this is where the new Sox are being just like the old Sox. No official word until around two hours before game time. With nothing better to do, I might as well dream, that Schulz will dazzle and Antonacci come through in the clutch. Perchance…

Monday, April 13, 2026

Back to the Future

By rallying yesterday to beat the Royals 6-5 on a wild pitch, the White Sox “improved” to 6-10 on the (thankfully, still young) season. Hmm, 6-10, sounds familiar. Back in 2023, then rookie manager Mickey Mouse posted the very same record. A year later, with Mouse working his magic, the Sox fell to 2-14 before Mouse was shown the door in August. His successor, Vibes Venable (Note: I will be using this moniker until Venable gets the team to ten games over .500), had a 4-12 record after sixteen games last season. You could say that progress is in the eyes of the beholder here. I’ll leave it to my daughter Clare to assess that progress. “At least they’re doing things,” she said yesterday. “It’s not like before, when they’d lost 80 games by July, and then said, ‘Ooh, what happened?’ Now, they’re doing stuff.” More on that “stuff” tomorrow.