Dad Daughter Sports
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Same Old Same Old
Noah Schultz didn’t have it yesterday, giving up seven earned runs in 3.2 innings of work. Angels 8 White Sox 2.
But, hey, Ovaldo Bido threw 2.1 scoreless innings, thereby lowering his ERA to 6.27. Dare I say, “Wow!”? For his career, the 30-year old Bido has a 5.17 ERA to go with a 11-13 record. Want more? GM Chris Getz apparently did.
On Tuesday, Getz went out and acquired another Bido, though this one left-handed, that being 32-year old Trevor Richard, he of a 24-28 career record and 4.52 ERA. Not “Wow!” but “Yikes”! It’s one step forward, two likely steps back for the Sox bullpen.
Two weeks ago, Getz brought up rightie reliever Tyler Davis, who right now looks to be a real find at age 27. Davis played college ball through age 24, and even spent a year as the first baseman for Sam Houston State; the Sox signed him out of independent ball in 2024. So far in five games totaling 5.1 innings, Davis has posted a 1.69 ERA.
Shouldn’t Getz be on the lookout for another Tyler Davis, or two? Instead, it’s Bido and Richard, the same old same old. Go figure.
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Frenemies
Interesting what a little competition can do to motivate a player. Before the White Sox called up Sam Antonacci, Chase Meidroth was batting .196 with eleven hits and six runs scored. With Antonacci as a teammate (and possible replacement at second base), Meidroth is hitting .319 with 22 hits and fifteen runs scored. Last night in the first inning, leadoff batter Antonacci walked and Meidroth singled him in from the five-spot. More, please.
Is anyone on the Sox competing with Munetaka Murakami? I doubt it. You’d have to be crazy to think you could outhomer Murakami, who clubbed his fourteenth in the top of the fourth last night, a two-run, 429-foot shot to dead center in a 6-0 Sox win over the Angels. Then Miguel Vargas went back-to-back with a homerun to right center. I could get used to this.
Starter Davis Martin must feel the same. The righty threw seven shutout innings, recording a career-best ten strikeouts along the way, against no walks and five hits, four of them singles. On top of that, Martin needed just 85 pitches to do it all. I’m betting the coaching staff could get used to that.
Oh, did I mention Antonacci went 2-for-4 with a walk and two runs scored?
Monday, May 4, 2026
A Silver Lining or Two
The way Padres’ closer Mason Miller is throwing right now, the best possible combination of Ted Williams and Jesus Christ probably couldn’t hit him. Still, the White Sox had the tying run at second base in the top of the ninth with two out against Miller. If only.
If only what? If only somebody other than shortstop Luisangel Acuna had faced Miller, but, for whatever reason, Sox manager Vibes Venable stuck with Acuna rather than pinch hit Austin Hays. Three pitches, three strikes. Padres 4 Sox 3. Acuna is now batting .169, in case anybody is wondering.
Oh, well. Catcher Drew Romo homered again, so there’s that. And top prospect Braden Montgomery was promoted to Triple-A Charlotte. Montgomery was hitting .313 in Double-A with six homeruns and 22 RBIs. With luck, he’ll do the same with Charlotte, and, then, who knows?
Did I mention he plays center field? That’s where Acuna mostly plays.
Sunday, May 3, 2026
More Dues-giving
The White Sox won a game yesterday they would’ve lost any number of ways in seasons past. Reliever Grant Taylor took the mound in the bottom of the ninth for a second inning of work and a 4-0 lead. Taylor failed to cover first on an infield single by Jackson Merril and then proceeded to walk the next two batters. This brought up ex-Sox Gavin Sheets in a lefty-righty matchup in Sheets’ favor. Key the fireworks for grand slam. No, check that.
Sheets was called out on strikes after catcher Edgar Quero challenged a ball call by plate ump Sean Barber on a 2-2 pitch. Exit Taylor for Seranthony Dominguez. Keep those fireworks ready. No, check that. Dominguez recorded a flyout and strikeout to preserve the win while earning his eighth save. What’s going on here?
Obviously, the new regime is making headway. Winning starter Sean Burke threw six shutout innings. This is the same Sean Burke who pitched himself back to the minors last season. Pitching Coach Zach Bove must be doing something right, though I couldn’t say what; ditto hitting coach Derek Shomon. And, yes, manager Vibes Venable seems to be pulling the right levers more often than not lately. If, by some miracle—another two-hit game from Sam Antonacci wouldn’t hurt—the Sox pull off the sweep today, they’ll be at .500, cause for celebration, indeed.
I’ll keep the fireworks ready.
Saturday, May 2, 2026
Additions
The White Sox started a six-game road trip last night with an 8-2 win over the Padres. Four players contributing to the win weren’t on the team this time last year. Three are from the Sox farm system while the other may be from another planet, and, if not that, another hemisphere.
That would be Munetaka Murakami, who clubbed his major-league leading thirteenth homerun, good for three of seven runs scored in the second inning. That was all that Noah Schultz, one of those farmhands I mentioned, needed. The 22-year old recorded his second career victory with six innings of shutout ball, at one point retiring sixteen straight San Diego batters, with a little help from a double play. Did I mention Colson Montgomery and Sam Antonacci? My bad.
Montgomery started the second by walking; two batters later, Antonacci drove him in with a single. Montgomery also homered in the fifth while Antonacci had two hits on the night with a run scored and RBI. More, please.
Now, to give the devil his due. Schultz and Montgomery were both drafted by the old regime headed up by Rick Hahn (or Hahn-Kenny Williams, the uncertainty of which was a big part of the problem). So were starter Hagen Smith and infielder Jacob Gonzalez, both of whom are putting up call-up worthy numbers at Triple-A Charlotte.
Hahn deserved to be fired. That said, if this rebuild—I forget which number we’re on—starts taking off, Hahn deserves part of the credit. You have no idea how much it pains me to say that.
Friday, May 1, 2026
Market Discipline
I saw a survey not too long ago that found baseball fans are warming to the idea of a salary cap. So, maybe I should get onboard, too. In fact, I will just as soon as owners can spell out how savings for them will be passed on to me. In the meantime, I’m still inclined to point out how well the market works on its own: The Dodgers get what they’ve paid for. The Mets, not so much.
After blowing the rubber game to the Nationals at home yesterday, the Mets have themselves a 10-21 record to go with a $357.6 million payroll, the highest in baseball for a 40-player roster (per USA Today from 3-25-2026). Francisco Lindor is hurt; Juan Soto has been hurt; and free-agent acquisition Bo Bichette is hitting .230 with fourteen RBIs. Guess who has fifteen? Miguel Vargas.
Speaking of ex-Sox players on the Mets, Marcus Semien is looking every bit of 35, with a .218 BA and nine RBIs in 110 at-bats. And Luis Robert Jr., who not too long ago was saying how nice it was to play in front of a lot of fans for a change, just went on the—wait for it—IL with “lumbar spine disc herniation.” Bet that clears up real fast.
The only way for things to improve is if everyone starts to play up to the stats from the back of their baseball card. If they don’t, the Mets end up like a Rick Hahn team. Wait, wasn’t Hahn the one who told Sox fans to chill because it was only a matter of time before Yasmani Grandal—wait for it—played up to the stats on the back of his baseball card? Only it didn’t happen.
Mets’ owner Steve Cohen spent recklessly and is paying the price. Why let a salary cap protect a fool from his folly?
Thursday, April 30, 2026
By Way of Comparison
And the young shall lead them. Rookie Sam Antonacci tripled in the tying run with two out in the bottom of the ninth yesterday afternoon against California. One inning later, second-year player Colson Montgomery delivered a walk-off single. White Sox 3 Angels 2 for a Sox sweep.
Antonacci isn’t setting the AL Central on fire, but he exhibits an intriguing skill set, heavy on contact and hustle. He has nine hits in 40 at-bats for a .225 BA, with four walks; five runs; and six RBIs, including yesterday. He also has a double, two triples and an inside-the-park homerun. Did I mention a .347 OBP?
Now, compare that to Fernando Tatis Jr., the one who got away. Tatis is hitting .250 in 112 at-bats with eleven runs and thirteen RBIs. The thirteen walks help elevate his OBP to .323, but the 32 strikeouts are more than a little concerning, especially when you consider Tatis has yet to homer. Tatis is averaging just south of $24.3 million a year, part of a fourteen-year deal with the Padres worth $340 million.
The Sox travel to San Diego for their next series. This could be interesting.
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