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The White Sox are struggling with a 6-10 record, despite a surprisingly strong starting rotation. The team's offense has been underwhelming, especially after trading Lenyn Sosa to the Blue Jays for a minor prospect and cash.
Apparently not the Jordan Rich that that the White Sox traded Lenyn Sosa for.
If you told someone you were writing a script and had the White Sox at 6-10 a tenth of the way into the season, theyâd reply, âSounds about right. Extrapolates to a normal season for them.â If you then said that half the victories were against the defending AL champions, that same person would say, âThat stretches the suspension of disbelief. Better rewrite that part.â
Incredulity would stretch further if you also wrote that the major failure was not from the expected terrible starting rotation, which has instead been very good except for Shane Smith, whose fall has been as rapid as his 2025 Rule 5 rise â back when, itâs worth noting, Ethan Katz was the pitching coach â but rather from a pathetic offense, which was supposed to be much improved.
With Lenyn Sosa off to botch up the Blue Jaysâ defense (has there ever been a major league player with less in the way of baseball instincts?) in exchange for an 18-year-old 17th-round draft pick and a PTBNL or Jerry Reinsdorfâs favorite â cash â even last yearâs home run leader has departed, so the almighty quest for power, power, POWER!!! becomes even more difficult. Sosa, incidentally, was the last remaining member of a White Sox team that didnât have a losing record, except for Reese McGuire, who left and came back, so that doesnât count.
How bad is the lineup? Let us count the ways.
So far in 2026, the Sox are dead last in the majors in scoring runs, at 3.06 per game, even with all the gifts from the Blue Jays and Royals. Sure, small sample size and bats generally warm up with the weather, but thatâs true for the other 29 teams as well.
How awful is 3.06 runs per game? Last year, they scored 3.99, which was 27th. Worse yet, even the record-setting 2024 horror team scored more â 3.13 runs per game.
This yearâs team is also 30th in average at .193, an astounding 29 points below the 121-loss team, and last in OPS, 34 points below 2024, in both cases by a wide margin. Theyâve improved from that team and matched 2025 to tie for 23rd in home runs so far, and beat both years in rank in stealing bases, where theyâre 10th with 12.
And apparently Braden Montgomery wonât be riding to the rescue soon, since heâs hitting .212 in Birmingham. San Antonacci, on the other hand, is clobbering the ball in Charlotte.
And, oh, yeah â theyâre back to striking out like crazy, second to last. Or second best, if you think striking out is a good thing.
WHOâS TO BLAME FOR THIS MESS?
Well, Jerry Reinsdorf, of course, and to a lesser extent, Chris Getz. But among players, thereâs plenty of awfulness to share. And thatâs even before we get into a defense that is dead last in both defensive runs saved and RTOT, which is Baseball-Referenceâs range factor, and by a wide margin in both cases.
B-R has an algorithm that measures Wins Above Average, a more persnickety version of WAR, by team and position. As you might imagine, the numbers arenât pretty for the White Sox, but letâs look anyway.
STARTING PITCHING
As youâd expected, a very bright spot, and one that should (we hope) shine even more brightly when Noah Schultz comes in playing the deus ex machina role. The starters come in eighth out of the 30 teams despite Smithâs struggles, a big jump up from last seasonâs 18th, but â amazingly â below 2024âs fifth. See, I told you that was amazing (but remember, Garrett Crochet was on that team)!
RELIEF PITCHING
The Sox fall here to a dismal 27th, far below last yearâs 14th, but â and this is disheartening â in line with 2024âs 28th.
ON TO THE POSITION PLAYERS (PLEASE AVERT THE EYES OF SMALL CHILDREN)
In each case, letâs go to the placement by year, going backward â 2026, 2025, 2024.
Catcher â 28/8/30. Obviously, the absence of Kyle Teel so far has been a major negative, but the collapse of Edgar Quero to a pathetic .162/.244/.162 line (a 21 OPS+) after a solid 2025 is horrid, and McGuire and his .125 average havenât helped.
First base â 22/29/26. This was supposed to be a really bright spot with the acquisition of Munetaka Murakami. Still, after his red-hot four-homer start that made it look like a brilliant move for the Sox, Murakami has basically hit zilch, now checking in at .157/.323/.392, making the other 29 teams look smarter. Chances are, heâs neither as good as his start, nor as bad as he is now, and he wouldnât have set records in Japan if he werenât capable of making adjustments. A .154 BABIP indicates some bad luck, but Murakamiâs 34% K rate (even young Kyle Schwarber wasnât that bad) and 50% grounder rate arenât good signs.
Second base â 29/25/29. Yep, near the bottom at second, despite Chase Meidroth usually being fun to watch. The problem is, despite occasional cool plays, he scores negatively in both DRS and RTOT, and his average is now down to .196, not workable for a singles hitter, leaving him with a 72 OPS+ despite a good walk rate.
Third base â five-way tie for 5/25/29. Thatâs a hard jump up to explain since Miguel Vargas is only hitting .180 and is just a wash defensively. Maybe itâs a collapse by other third basemen around the majors.
Shortstop â 16/20/29. Colson Montgomery only had part of a season last year, so heâs beating himself here, despite just hitting .200/.302/.418 for a 108 OPS+ thanks to three homers. His 30% K rate doesnât help, though, and his hard-hit rate is well below league average.
Left field â 29/28/29. Correlation doesnât necessarily indicate causation (except when it really does), but the White Sox have lost 100 or more games every season Andrew Benintendi has been on the team. Maybe with Sosa gone, he can go full-time DH and just be bad at offense. Tanner Murray looked good out there Sunday.
Center field â 29/21/26. Turns out, Luis Robert Jr. at his worst was better than whoever the Sox have sent out in his stead, which has mostly been Luisangel Acuña. Having escaped the Sox, Robert is hitting .319 for the Mets, while Acuña is hitting (and slugging) .196.
Right field â 22/22/30. This has been a throw-somebody-out-there-because-we-have-to situation since Austin Hays was hurt, and he only had a 69 OPS+ anyway. Must be a lot of bad right fielders around the big leagues to make it up to 22, though Dustin Harrisâ homer-saving catch to save the game Sunday was quite nifty.
WHICH MEANS?
All those top-100 MLB prospect shortstops in the system need to move on up the ladder quickly and spread across the field. Otherwise, ⊠well, letâs not think about it.
The Chicago White Sox currently have a record of 6-10.
The White Sox traded Lenyn Sosa to the Blue Jays for an 18-year-old 17th-round draft pick and cash.
The White Sox starting rotation has performed surprisingly well, except for Shane Smith, who has struggled.
Lenyn Sosa's trade has further weakened the White Sox's offense, which was already expected to be underwhelming.

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