Dad Daughter Sports
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Waiting on a Friend
Clare and I made it to the ballpark 20 minutes before starting time yesterday afternoon, only we needn’t have bothered. We had a two-hour, 40-minute rain delay ahead of us.
So, we walked around the Rate and did what all people do at the mall—we shopped. But we couldn’t find a Munetaka Murakami tee-shirt to fit Leo. After we ran out of souvenir stands and team stores to visit, we did the other thing you do at the mall—we ate. Then, we walked some more before settling into not-too-wet seats to wait for the game to start.
Another White Sox game with an opener, another loss. Chris Murphy opened by retiring the first four batters he faced, at which point manager Vibes Venable thought it was time to bring in Erick Fedde, who proceeded to do what he does best, which is to put runners on base and try to get out of it.
It was a game of If’s: If Colson Montgomery hadn’t committed an error setting up two Guardians’ runs in the seventh; if Steven Kwan hadn’t gotten a great jump on Randal Grichuk’s line drive with the tying run sure to score; if Joe Rock didn’t give back the run the Sox scored in the seventh (and if he hadn’t walked three batters to go with a single); if Chase Meidroth had played within himself. Meidroth stranded two runners in scoring position in both the seventh and tenth innings. Guardians 4 Sox 3.
I hate watching the Sox lose, but at least it was tolerable this time because of the company. My daughter knows her baseball, and she’s got some strong beliefs about parenting, as in not bringing babies to the ballpark. It was just the two of us.
The Sox were down to their final out in the bottom of the ninth, when Braden Montgomery homered; Grichuk followed on the next pitch for back-to-back jacks. And Clare screamed like a kid. She also screamed at Rock, but we won’t get into that. My daughter had such a good time she decided we all had to come back in a couple of weeks, only this time we bring Leo along for his first-ever Sox game.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Winning Retro
Last night, the White Sox managed a mere three hits over the 7.2 innings they faced Guardians’ starter Parker Messick—a fourth-inning double by Randal Grichuk followed by an RBI single from Colson Montgomery one out later and a solo shot off the bat of Miguel Vargas in the sixth inning. But it was enough for a 2-1 win at a rocking Rate Field.
For a second straight game, Sean Burke pitched like he had a clue, going 6.1 innings, the only run surrendered a gopher ball to Kahlil Watson in the fifth inning. Then, whether by choice or circumstance, manager Vibes Venable called on reliever Sean Newcomb. Guess what? Newcomb pitched the final 2.1 innings for the save.
The 33-year old lefty faced nine batters, retiring eight while giving up a walk. Wow, this means Newcomb had to face a whole bunch of righties, just like in the old days. No situational matchups here. Holy Hoyt Wilhelm! Venerable Bob Locker!
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Winning Very, Very Ugly
And the rookies shall lead them. Down a run in the bottom of the ninth against the Guardians last night and facing one of the best if not the best closer in the person of Cade Smith, Braden Montgomery drew a one-out walk. Tristan Peters followed with an opposite-field double. After Jacob Gonzalez struck out, Sam Antonacci delivered the game-winning single. Sox 6 Guardians 5. Only it never should have come to this.
The Sox were ahead 3-0 going into the seventh, but manager Vibes Venable thinks Grant Taylor should be a setup man; three runs later, Taylor proved how wrong that assumption is. The Sox then went ahead 4-3 in the eighth (Antonacci driving in the go-ahead run, of course), which led Venable to call on Seranthony Dominguez, who everyone outside of Venable at the Rate knows is not a closer; two runs later, Dominguez proved that point. So, a shoutout to the rookies for coming through. But when will Venable realize he has to flip-flop Taylor’s and Dominguez’s roles?
And what’s up with Colson Montgomery, who went 0-for-4 with four strikeouts? Stop me if you’ve heard this one before, but if Montgomery doesn’t hit, the Sox won’t make the postseason.
Monday, June 22, 2026
Second-guessing
What’s baseball without a little second-guessing? As in yesterday’s White Sox-Tigers’ game. No, make that yesterday and Saturday, because one questionable decision the day before played a direct result in the 5-4 defeat yesterday.
Martin Davis pitched great, giving up just one run in six innings. The Sox were ahead 3-1 going into the bottom of the eighth. Grant Taylor came in for an inning, gave up a run. He hadn’t pitched in a week, so there may have been rust involved. You could also argue Taylor was rested and ready to pitch a second inning.
Instead, manager Vibes Venable went with Seranthony Dominguez, who managed two quick outs before surrendering three straight singles. Game tied. Then came the deluge, courtesy of a move Venable made on Saturday.
The Sox scored the go-ahead run in the tenth, and Venable thought he had a chance with Brandon Eisert and his 5.50 ERA. Nope. Eisert immediately gave up two hits to tie the score. Enter Jordan Hicks with his 5.60 ERA. One hit later, and the Tigers swept the Sox.
So, why didn’t Venable bring in Sean Newcomb in the tenth, with that 2.58 ERA of his? The first batter for Newcomb, a lefty, would’ve been lefthanded-hitting Riley Greene. Oh, that’s right. Newcomb “opened” Saturday’s game with three innings of work and wasn’t available Sunday.
That’s on Venable and, more so, GM Chirs Getz. You don’t win with openers, but with starters. Until the Sox get at least one more of those, they’re going to lose games like Saturday and, by extension, Sunday.
Sunday, June 21, 2026
Wake-up Call
Sam Antonacci and Sean Newcomb came to play in Detroit yesterday afternoon. Their teammates, not so much. Tiger 4 White Sox 1.
Antonacci provided the offense with a leadoff homerun while Newcomb nursed a 1-0 lead through three innings of hitless “opening.” Then came the relievers. Tyler Davis went .2 innings while walking the bases loaded. So much for him going two innings.
Joe Rock bailed out Davis only to give up three runs in 2.1 innings of work. After Rock, Trevor Richards got nicked for a run in an inning. All of this while Sox hitters managed four hits, two by Antonacci. Calling Miguel Vargas, calling Colson Montgomery. You guys don’t hit .250, forget about the postseason, and a collective 0-for-8 won’t get you to .250.
And GM Chris Getz needs to stop deluding himself that pitching “openers” solves anything. You need starting pitching. The trick is to find it without trading away the store, aka prospects. It’s why they pay you the big bucks, my man.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
The Point
The point isn’t Tarik Skubal yelling at Mike “Magic Wand” Vasil in the fifth inning for possibly stealing signs. The point is Skubal struck out Colson Montgomery with the bases loaded in a 2-2 game. The White Sox needed runs, only to lose 4-3 after a misguided dive by centerfielder Tristan Peters in the sixth on a ball that scored two runs. Tigers 4 Sox 3.
The second point worth noting is that Montgomery struck out three times in three at-bats, with a walk. As to two straight games with an “opener,” and a third planned for today, make of that as you will.
Friday, June 19, 2026
Small Ball, Sort Of
With the game tied at one last night, 5’11” Sam Antonacci led off the eighth inning at Yankee Stadium with a pinch-hit double. Four batters later, 5’9” Andrew Benintendi hit a pinch-hit grand slam. White Sox 5 Yankees 1.
Not that the taller guys didn’t contribute, too. Colson Montgomery, who stands 6’3”, clubbed his 20th homer in the second inning while 6’6” Sean Burke showed what he can do when in control of his talent. Burke went 7.1 innings, the second time in his career he’s gone that deep in a game, giving up one run on five hits and a walk; the 26-year old from Sutton, Massachusetts, also struck out eight. And to think this is the same guy who gave up four runs in four innings against the Dodgers five days earlier. Go figure.
There’s an old saying, that if you can’t take a series on the road from the Yankees, you better do it against the Tigers. Starting tonight.
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