Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Déjà vu All Over Again
Not too long ago, the Orioles completed a rebuild to die for. Talent up and down the lineup, talent ready to make the jump from the minors. But after postseason appearances in 2023-24, things have gone downhill fast, sort of like the 2020-21 White Sox. Bad baseball from the home team was on full display last night in the 10-2 drubbing administered by Vibes Venable and company.
The score was actually tied at two going into the eighth inning. That’s when things began to fall apart for the home team. It wasn’t the Orioles’ fault entirely. I mean, nobody in the league has figured out how to avoid hitting Sam Antonacci, who led off the inning with his seventeenth hit-by-pitch. After that, it was only a matter of time. One out, to be precise.
After Miguel Vargas struck out, O’s manager Craig Abernaz did something that, analytics-wise, maybe made sense—he kept in lefthanded reliever Grant Wolfram to face lefty-swinging Colson Montgomery. Either Abernaz didn’t have the stats in front of him or, more likely, didn’t bother to check them to see that Montgomery is hitting 37 points higher against lefties than righties. Which helps explain Montgomery’s run-scoring double. After that, the Orioles slowly imploded, giving up six run over the final two innings.
But the hitting star of the night may have been another rookie, Jacob Gonzalez, who had two hits to go with three RBIs. That gives the 24-year old infielder nine in his last four games and fourteen in 68 at-bats. More, please.
Meanwhile, Chris Getz may want to consider keeping Gonzalez around once Munetaka Murakami comes off the IL. At least, I would.
Monday, June 29, 2026
Pitching, Please
You’d think four runs against a team like the Royals would be enough to secure a sweep, but you’d be wrong. Starter Anthony Kay couldn’t make it through the fourth inning in a 5-4 loss. Oh, and White Sox hitters twice gave Kay a lead to work with.
Which leads us to the odd decision by GM Chris Getz to send David Sandlin down after pitching six innings of one-run ball on Friday. What, we have too much pitching? Just look at Kay, whose ERA stands at a hefty 4.50, to know that’s not the case. Oh, Noah Schultz is supposed to be close to coming off the IL. So? There’s no saying Schultz can pitch injury-free, or, if he can, that he’ll be effective.
One columnist yesterday beat the drum for Tarik Skubal. Talk about silly. The Sox a team playing with house money; nobody expected them to do anything better than not lose 100 games. It would be shortsighted verging on criminal if Getz shipped off good young players for two or three months of Skubal. With Scott Boras for his agent, Skubal wouldn’t be anything more than an expensive rental on the South Side.
See what Schultz and Sandlin can do in the rotation.
Sunday, June 28, 2026
History Not Repeating
The game after scoring 22 runs in Boston, the 1970 White Sox managed nineteen fewer in a 4-3 loss to the Senators. A day after scoring 22 runs against the Royals, the 2026 White Sox were held to two runs, and they still won in a walk-off, 2-1.
Rookie Jacob Gonzalez did the honors with an opposite field single past a drawn-in shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. Grant Taylor got the win, pitching a scoreless eighth and ninth innings. Taylor pretty much threw gas, striking out four of the six Royals he faced. More, please.
I have to wonder what’s going to happen to Gonzalez once Munetaka Murakami comes off the IL. After enduring an 0-for-25 streak, the 24-year old infielder has been on a 6-for-12 tear, with six RBIs. Gonzalez makes an attractive trade candidate. I just don’t want to see him shipped off for a rental pitcher. And, yes, I’m talking the likes of Tarik Skubal.
Saturday, June 27, 2026
I Remember the Last Time
I remember the last time the White Sox scored 22 runs prior to last night’s 22-1 romp over the Royals. I was dressed in a white tuxedo jacket on my way to Medinah Temple for high school graduation. Walt Williams and Luis Aparicio both had five hits. Bill Melton homered. Chicago 22 Boston 13. I think my mom made her potato salad for the party.
Last night, the Sox had 22 runs on 23 hits. In other words, just about everything that could go right, did, the only possible exception being Braden Montgomery going 0-for-5, though he did score two runs. Oh, and just about everything went wrong for the Royals. Flashbacks of Mike Sweeney and Billy Butler lead me to say, Boo-hoo.
Miguel Vargas had three hits, which puts him to within four points of the magic .250 BA mark. Sam Antonacci had three hits, which puts him within six points of the magic .300 mark. Chase Meidroth woke up to chip in with four hits while Tristan Peters added six RBIs.
David Sandlin was called up for a spot start. The rookie responded with six innings of one-run ball. Sandlin looked almost as sharp as he did in his MLB debut against the Twins. Way to make an impression, young man.
Friday, June 26, 2026
Stop Me if You’ve Heard This One: Two Old Guys…
First thing I do at The Rate is head for the public service desk. So, that’s what I did Wednesday, almost bumping into an elderly gentleman, at least older than me, as we both reached for the same item.
And what would that be, you ask? Why, a pre-printed scorecard, of course, with enough to go around. “Old guys’ corner,” I joked, looking up.
“Yes, you have to be over 60 or 70 for one of these,” he replied.
“Unfortunately, right both times, “ I said as we each went our own way.
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.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Still Not Ready
Anthony Kay pitched like Davis Martin did the night before; the White Sox bullpen took the night off; and the Sox laid a second egg in the Bronx, losing to the Yankees 10-5. No pitching, no postseason, by the way.
Right now, the hitting shows more promise long term. The Sox won’t go anywhere with Colson Montgomery hitting under .250. Last check shows him 25 points below that mark, but, like I said, there’s hope. Montgomery hit a three-run homerun last night to bring his team to within a run in the third inning, and he hit it lefty-on-lefty against Carlos Rodon. Montgomery added a second homer in the eight for the first multi-homerun game of his career.
In addition, Sam Antonacci homered for the second time in three games, so that’s nice, and Chase Meidroth continues to impress. His two hits yesterday give him a .278 BA with a .347 OBP. Bet you the Red Sox regret including Meidroth in the deal for Garrett Crochet.
Braden Montgomery is doing what I’ve seen him do twice in the minors after a promotion—start hot, then struggle. After a 4-for-9 start with three extra-base hits, Montgomery is batting .222 in 27 at-bats since being called up. If past is prelude, the rookie should go from hot to cold to hot again before long. Tonight would be a good time to start.
Last and not least, Edgar Quero went 3-for-4, which makes me think he doesn’t want to be the catcher sent down when Kyle Teel returns from his rehab stint in Charlotte. Just keep hitting to make that happen, young man.
Because, if the Sox don’t get better pitching, they’ll need to score a whole bunch of runs.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Not Ready for Prime Time
Davis Martin laid an egg in the Bronx last night, and the rest of the White Sox clucked along in a 12-2 drubbing from the Yankees. Ouch, in case I forgot.
Martin gave up nine earned runs, all earned, in a labored 3.1 innings; Chase Meidroth and Jacob Gonzalez gave the Yankees two extra outs in a four-run third inning. And nine Sox batters managed four hits along with two walks. Ouch, again.
Game two features Anthony Kay going up against ex-Sox lefty Carlos Rodon. I can’t wait.
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Different Memories
Paul Sullivan wrote a column in the Trib today about the White Sox going to New York in mid-June of 2000 and sweeping a four-game series from the Yankees. You’d think I’d remember something like that, but I don’t. My mid-June memory dates to 2008, when I took Clare to a softball-skills’ evaluation camp.
The weather was perfect, sunny and cool, the sky blue and my daughter’s face a darkening shade of red as the day progressed. It seems the coach didn’t think much of her hitting ability. We suspected that from the way he acted with her then. The report he mailed didn’t exactly come as a surprise.
Sullivan’s point was that a team can surprise from time to time. Young ballplayers, too, especially when they go on to set homerun-hitting records in college.
Monday, June 15, 2026
Up Next
When your leadoff hitter in an inning homers and the guy five batters later homers in the same inning, you know things are going good. When those batters are Sam Antonacci and Chase Meidroth, respectively, it’s cause for celebration.
That’s what happened yesterday when a Dodgers’ 1-0 lead vanished in the bottom of the sixth as the Sox scored six runs on three homers, with Colson Montgomery sandwiched between Antonacci and Meidroth. The bullpen tried but failed to give the game back, for a final score of Sox 6 Dodgers 4. Dodgers’ fans, enjoy your ride back to the airport.
If this keeps up, I’m going to have to start calling manager Vibes Venable by his given name; I can live with that. Hey, if Venable can get one or more of his young starters—Sean Burke, Noah Schultz, Hagen Smith, who gave up four homeruns in his latest Triple-A start—to step up, I’ll be more than happy to refer to myself as “New Mickey.”
Up next, the Yankees on the road. No Aaron Judge or Giancarlo Stanton, though. It’s only fair they should have injuries if we do, too.
Sunday, June 14, 2026
One Stepped Up, The Other Didn't
Ozzie Guillen, bless him, said this week that White Sox starter Sean Burke is his own worst enemy. The 26-year old righthander proceeded to prove Ozzie’s point by grooving the second pitch of the game to Shohei Ohtani. For added measure, Burke then gave up a two-out, two-run homer to Max Muncy. Dodgers 7 Sox 1.
On top of our bad pitching, the Dodgers’ YoshinobuYamamoto came within four outs of a perfect game, until shortstop Mookie Betts booted a groundball by Chase Meidroth. But that still left the no-hitter intact.
Which Tristan Peters took care of with a homer to right to lead off the ninth inning, thank you very much. Miguel Vargas said the hit made it feel “like we won the game after that. We really needed it.” [quote from story today on team website] I’ll say.
Nobody, myself included, expected anything from Peters going into this season; he was just a guy. But given a chance, the onetime Savannah Banana has shown himself to be a plus-defender and, so far, a surprisingly good hitter, especially in the clutch.
That homerun included.
Saturday, June 13, 2026
About Last Night
Clare and Chris went to the White Sox-Dodgers’ game last night, leaving the Katzenjammer Kids to sleep over. I’m pretty sure they didn’t burn down the house and our hair was already green before they stepped through the door.
What an evening. After batting practice and hot dogs outside, we went in for lots of Bluey mixed in with baseball, so I could be wrong about some of what I saw, or think I saw. The White Sox beat the Dodgers, 8-2, before a packed house at the Rate. I think.
I do know I wanted to shout some inappropriate words at the TV screen for how Sox starter Anthony Kay was pitching in the second inning—two runs in, two runners on, nobody out, then bases loaded one out after the second hit-by-pitch in the inning. Miracle of miracles, the Dodgers were done scoring. In fact, Kay and three relievers retired the last nineteen Los Angeles batters in a row.
Leo cheered Andrew Benitendi’s first-inning homerun while I cheered Miguel Vargas and Chase Meidtroth picking up three hits. As for Tristan Peters, he tripled on pitch shoulder-high, driving in two runs. Way to go, young man. You squash that bug.
Funny how quiet a house gets with the kids gone.
Friday, June 12, 2026
The Business of Baseball
White Sox rookie Rikuu Nishida has a personality so infectious it would make even Ted Williams smile. But Nishida wasn’t hitting all that well (7-for-29, all singles), and Braden Montgomery looked to be ready. It only made sense to move one prospect up and the other down.
Derek Hill had himself some nice hits as a spare outfielder for the Sox, including a pinch-hit homerun that beat the Royals back in May. Like Nishida, the veteran Hill was a positive presence in the clubhouse. But Hill is 30, and Everson Pereira clocks in at five years younger, with some pop in his bat. The smart move was to trade Hill, which GM Chris Getz did yesterday in a move with the Phillies, and active Pereira from the IL, where he’s been since late April with a pectoral sprain. Not that Pereira should feel too comfortable.
Munetaka Murakami will be coming off the IL, late this month if his hamstring heels quickly. That means Pereira or rookie Jacob Gonzalez will go. And when Kyle Teel is activated, either Edgar Quero or Drew Romo most likely will have to find a new home.
Even teams evoking talk of Cinderella and magical seasons go about the business of baseball.
Thursday, June 11, 2026
Tuning Out the Static
We lost power just before 4 o’clock yesterday afternoon; it didn’t come back on for close to ten hours. Did I mention it was a little hot and stuffy in the house?
Instead of sweating in the dark, I decided to spend much of the evening on the back porch, windows open radio in lap, trying to get the White Sox game, only it was all static until the bottom of the sixth inning, lightning bugs flashing, Sox ahead of the Braves, 2-0. Len Kasper’s voice faded in and out, loud if I pointed the antenna one way, then a whisper if I repositioned the radio for a second. It was dark by the time Bryan Hudson locked down the save in a 2-1 Sox win.
Oh, to beat Chris Sale. I like how winning starter Davis Martin put it. He looked out at the scoreboard, where his and Chris Sale’s career strikeouts marks were posted, “mine at 250 punchouts and he had 3,000 or 2,000 or something like that. Some crazy big number. And I was just like, ‘Man, this is fun.’ This is who you want to play against and this is why you want to be in the big leagues.” [Tribune online story today] Yes, indeed.
I’m guessing Braden Montgomery feels pretty much the same. The 23-year old rookie followed his walk-off homerun debut the night before with a 2-for-4 performance, both hits doubles, the first one coming against Sale and leading to a run in the fourth inning. The Sox picked Hagen Smith over Montgomery in the first round of the 2024 draft; now, they have both.
Like I said, pinch me. I must be dreaming.
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Pinch Me
Pinch me. I must be dreaming. Since when does a White Sox rookie hit a walk-off homerun in his major-league debut? Well, it happened last night in the bottom of the tenth inning when Braden Montgomery connected off of Braves’ closer Raisel Iglesias. Sox 6 Braves 5.
Where to start? It was Montgomery’s second RBI hit of the night, following a fourth-inning single. Iglesias entered the game with a 0.87 ERA and thirteen saves in 22.1 innings of work; he had yet to give up a homerun this season. Well, that changed.
And let’s not forget fellow rookie Jacob Gonzalez, who also had two hits on the night, along with an RBI. Or Miguel Vargas, who hit a two-run homer. Or (gulp) Erick Fedder, who pitched five innings in relief, giving up two runs, one earned. As for the following, best to remember in order to stop doing.
By that, I mean the Sox had two runners thrown out at the plate on failed squeeze attempts and a third trying to score on a two-out single from second base. Hard to win games when you do that, especially against the best team in baseball. And you don’t want to do anything like that against tonight’s starter, ex-Sox lefthander Chris Sale. Clean baseball, smart baseball, winning baseball. Please.
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Bears and Sox
I’ll do the silly stuff first. On Friday, the Bears announced they were moving forward on plans for a new stadium in Indiana. They also signaled a willingness to keep talking to the relevant powers that be in Illinois. Huh?
Oh, it gets better. Today, a state Republican legislator announced he’s going to introduce a bill to give Bears-like megaprojects the power to negotiate payments in lieu of taxes (PILOT) with local governmental bodies. The bill also provides a property-tax relief provision. Only you can’t square a circle.
The lower the payment negotiated, the greater the need for the affected governmental body to make up for the loss revenue, that or cut services. The greater the tax relief, the less willing governmental bodies will be to sign off on those payments in lieu of. Good luck with getting this thing to fly, sir.
Now, for something completely different—the White Sox just called up outfielder Braden Montgomery. Alleluiah, alleluiah. May Hagen Smith follow soon after.
Monday, June 8, 2026
Chris Getz, Meet John Ford
The White Sox had enough hitting—five runs, ten hits—but next to no pitching against the Phillies, with an opener and three of four relievers coughing up nine runs on ten hits. The Sox could’ve scored as many as five more runs with some clutch hitting and along with a little luck; the wind kept two balls in the park. Not that it kept the other guys from cranking two out. Philadelphia 9 Chicago 5. We won’t talk about the Sox going into the bottom of the fifth up 5-4.
If this were a John Ford movie (and baseball is a form of entertainment, right?), the cavalry would be showing up to save the day. In case anyone is wondering, Hagen Smith struck out nine batters in 4.2 innings of scoreless work for Triple-A Charlotte yesterday while Braden Montgomery upped his BA to .315 (with a .417 OBP!). Help could be on the way, and would be with Ford at the helm.
But someone else is in charge of this production. He needs to send in the cavalry. Now.
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Get Used To It
The White Sox are going to be the White Sox, very unpredictable, and I can either get used to it or go crazy. I’ll take door #1, please.
Yesterday, they jumped all over Phillies’ starter Adrew Painter, scoring four runs in the first inning on their way to a 6-3 win. Later, Colson Montgomery homered, his sixteenth, though he still doesn’t look good at the plate. Rookie Jacob Gonzalez, who does look good at the plate, also went deep for his first major-league homerun. Go figure.
Sam Antonacci went hitless but got the first inning started by getting hit for the fourteenth time this season, most in the majors. Tristan Peters has come out of nowhere to claim a starting job in the outfield with a combination of hitting—3-for-4 with an RBI—and fielding. We’re talking Ken Berry-caliber glove here.
So, it’s going to be a roller coaster of a season. All I ask is for Chris Getz to call up Braden Montgomery. Montgomery hit .313 at Double-A Birmingham, which earned him a promotion to Triple-A Charlotte. The pitching must be tough in the International League. The 23-year old outfielder is “only” batting .312.
Montgomery and a heeled Kyle Teel added to the lineup, oh my. Now, that I could definitely get used to.
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Not Ready for Prime Time
If the White Sox want to play with the big boys, they’re going to have to do better than they did last night in Philadelphia. Given a 2-0 lead going into the bottom of the second, starter Anthony Kay turned it into a three-run deficit, courtesy of four hits and a walk. At the end of the night, it was Phillies 8 Sox 6.
The Sox actually tied the game at six in the seventh, only for the bullpen to go south. Bryan Hudson gave up a run on his own and was charged with another when Seranthony Dominguez bounced a ball past catcher Edgar Quero.
Bad pitching was followed by bad luck in the eighth and maybe some bad decision-making in the dugout. The Sox put two runners on with nobody out when Rikuu Nishida lined into a double play. Maybe baserunner Jacob Gonzalez was to blame for not getting back to second base in time, but why was Nishida swinging away in the first place? Speed is the essence of Nishida’s game. Him bunting puts pressure on the defense. First baseman Bryce Harper had already misplayed a ball in the inning to put on a baserunner. What’s to say he wouldn’t have done it again?
So, again we’re going to see what this team can do in a tough situation. Some good starting pitching would be nice, and timely hitting, too. Oh, and some help out of the bullpen Yes, a tall order, but that’s what you have to do in order to beat the big boys.
Friday, June 5, 2026
Perchance to Dream
History didn’t repeat itself in the Illinois General Assembly early Monday morning; it didn’t even rhyme. No, the Bears went home—wherever that is—empty-handed.
Back in 1988, state house majority leader Mike Madigan employed an old trick as the clock approached midnight on May 31st, the yearly end to the legislative session in Springfield; Madigan literally stopped the clock on the assembly floor. This allowed Gov. Jim Thompson time to wrestle up the votes for a publicly funded White Sox stadium, technically, after the midnight deadline. That’s what the Bears and just about every Chicago sports and news journalist figured would happen again. Only they were wrong.
What happened? Well, these are different times, and what the Bears wanted—the power to negotiate (more like dictate) their own property taxes for their proposed stadium/entertainment district in Arlington Heights—rubbed a whole lot of people the wrong way. You could tell by the lukewarm reception legislators gave to the idea. They had to be getting an earful from constituents back home.
On top of that, the Bears were the Bears, mixing incompetence with arrogance as is their style. They threatened more than cajoled, and it blew up in their face. Now, the team has to decide if it really wants to relocate to northwest Indiana, where brown fields grow if they don’t exactly glow.
I have a sneaking suspicion Chicago is back in play as a preferred stadium site. All it will take is jilting Indiana and Arlington Heights. If any organization can pull that off, it’s your Munsters of the Midway.
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Oh, Ye of Little Faith
I set yesterday’s White Sox game to TIVO and went about my business, namely, washing fifteen windows and fifteen screens around the house. I thought my reward would be a job well done. Wrong.
With the ladder and hoses put away and the towels and buckets brought back in the basement, I settled my bulky back into the couch to catch up on the game. Four runs in the top of the first? Erick Fedde going 4.2 innings before giving up a hit in an 8-0 Sox win over the Twins? Jacob Gonzalez recording his first two MLB RBIs with a bases-loaded single? What was going on here?
Well, I wondered how much the 2026 White Sox had grown, and here was my answer. This was yet another game they might have frittered away. Instead of the bad overwhelming everything else (see 2023, 2024 and much of 2025), the good kept the bad at bay. And by bad, I mean Colson Montgomery. Sam Antonacci went 4-for-4 and reached base six times. Montgomery went 0-for-6 with four strikeouts. Antonacci vibes ruled.
It would’ve been nice to have Munetaka Murakami available for the next series, in Philadelphia, for a Murakami-Kyle-Schwarber matchup. Oh, well. Someone gives you a lemon, you make Antonacci and Gonzalez out of it.
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Rebound or No?
Well, this had to happen eventually. Davis Martin got pounded by the Twins last night, giving up six runs on ten hits in not even five innings of work. Twins 6 White Sox 4. Oh, and Erick Fedde is slated to go this afternoon.
Now we find out just how much the Sox have grown.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Nothing Doing
White Sox rookie starter David Sandlin and the Twins squared off for the second time in six days, and the Twins were ready. The Sox righthander gave up eight runs on eight hits and four walks in four-plus innings. Twins 9 Sox 6, with two homeruns from Miguel Vargas and not much of anything from Colson Montgomery. I have to remember it’s all a marathon.
Like the Bears getting a new stadium. Team McCaskey may have thought the Illinois General Assembly was going to roll over for them and pass sweetheart property-tax legislation, only it didn’t happen. I think voters sent a message legislators couldn’t ignore, that everything costs too much, and a billionaire’s tax break would inevitably raise taxes for everyone else.
Oh, to be a fly on the wall of the conference room where the Bears’ “brain trust” will meet to figure out a next step. The weeping, the gnashing of teeth, the realization that Indiana is in Indiana…
Monday, June 1, 2026
Déjà vu(s)
I remember a game when Chris Sale was still with the White Sox, against the Rangers in June of 2015. Sale was vintage Sale, which meant that he was virtually untouchable. In this instance, the lanky lefty threw eight shutout innings, giving up two singles and no walks while striking out fourteen, all this on 111 pitches. The Sox went into the ninth with a 1-0 lead.
Well, manager Robin Ventura decided to pull Sale for David Roberston, who proceeded to give up two runs and lose the game. The next morning, I was out walking the dog and heard a woman’s voice off in a yard somewhere. “Why did he [Ventura] do that?” the unseen fan demanded to know. “I mean, Chris Sale was pitching!” Something like that happened yesterday, only it was the Tigers’ Keider Montero pitching and manager A.J. Hinch making like Robin Ventura.
Hinch opted to lift Montero after six innings of two-hit, shutout ball accomplished with a mere 65 pitches on a pleasant Sunday afternoon a little on the cool side (66 degrees). In other words, a pitcher-friendly day. But Hinch did what he did, and the Sox again did what they did on Friday night, mixing longball and smallball. First, Colson Montgomery homered off of Drew Anderson, who then gave up three straight singles to Chase Meidroth, Jacob Gonzalez (his first major-league hit in his first game) and Tristan Peters, the last one scoring the first one. Rookie reliever Tyler Davis came in to pitch the nine and recorded his first save. Sox 2 Tigers 1.
I hope that Chris Sale fan, wherever she is, enjoyed the outcome nearly as much as I did.
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