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.

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