NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help
NBA playoffs: Ayo Dosunmu's 43 points lead Timberwolves over Nuggets, series at 3-1.
Noah Schultz had a strong quality start, pitching six innings with eight strikeouts, but the White Sox offense struggled, leading to a 6-3 loss against the Nationals in ten innings.
Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images
Decades ago, sportswriter John Feinstein famously described golf as a good walk spoiled. In a similar spirit, Noah Schultzâs Saturday afternoon start against the Nationals could be best characterized as a good start spoiled.
Schultz tossed his first ever quality start, going six frames and striking out eight, but the White Sox got just two runners into scoring position while he was on the mound. The offense put together a two-run rally in the eighth inning to tie the game and spare Schultz the insult of being assigned the loss after pitching that well, but the Sox ultimately lost, 6-3, in ten innings.
The good news is that Schultz continues to look like the real deal. Through three starts, Schultz now has a 3.52 ERA, 1.11 WHIP, and 18 strikeouts in 15 1/3 innings pitched.
âHeâs been what we envisioned, with really good stuff, commanding the baseball well, making good in-game adjustments,â manager Will Venable said. âI really like the communication heâs had with the catchers in game. He really takes ownership over what heâs doing out there.â
In Saturdayâs start against Washington, Schultz went six full innings, the two runs he surrendered coming on a two-out single in the fourth by Jacob Young. In the third inning, Schultz walked the leadoff batter and gave up a double to Keibert Ruiz before striking out James Wood and Curtis Mead and then finishing off the inning by getting Andres Chaparro to ground out to Colson Montgomery at shortstop.
Noah Schultz pitched six innings, struck out eight batters, and had a 3.52 ERA with a 1.11 WHIP over three starts.
The White Sox managed only two runners in scoring position while Schultz was pitching and scored two runs in the eighth inning before ultimately losing the game.
The final score was 6-3 in favor of the Nationals after ten innings.
No, Schultz did not receive the loss despite the White Sox ultimately losing the game.
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The success in that spot Schultz chalked up primarily to Montgomeryâs defense, but Venable pointed out Schultzâs ability to get back in the strike zone after drifting out of it against the first couple of batters. Schultz said he felt better with his slider as the game went on, which helped him work through jams like the third inning.
âA lot of it was an eyesight thing, just seeing where Iâm starting to throw it instead of looking where Iâm ending the throw,â Schultz said of his between-starts adjustments with the slider. âA lot of things that we worked on and sat down with [Edgar Quero] and [pitching coach Zach] Bove and the guys in my bullpen that we worked on.â
Schultz is also establishing his four-seam fastball in the big leagues, a pitch that was not necessarily his calling card as a prospect. Opposing hitters have a .067 batting average against it so far. Schultz credits some of his success with that pitch to the ability it grants to change the battersâ eye levels.
âIâm such an east-west pitcher that getting something that can go up, something that helps get guysâ eyes in different spots [helps],â Schultz said.
Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images
The trouble, of course, is when Schultzâs efforts are in vain. Venable praised his ability to work through tough spots, calling it âa big part of survival in being an effective pitcher.â Getting through a couple of tight spots helped him go six innings in just the third start of his major league career, but it can feel all for naught when the offense doesnât pick up the slack on their end.
Going into Saturdayâs game, the White Sox were in the bottom third in baseball in runs scored and just a few spots up from the very bottom in team batting average. There have been bright spots, sure, but so far the bad is too often outweighing the good.
Namely, at the catcher position. Coming the second game of this weekendâs series against the Nationals, White Sox catchers were batting just .153. Worst in baseball. In an effort to spark something, anything, they designated Reese McGuire for assignment and selected Drew Romoâs contract from Triple-A Charlotte on Saturday morning.
âWe just havenât gotten a lot of production out of the catching spot,â Venable said. â[Romo has] been doing a really good job offensively and defensively down there. Just want to see if we can get more production out of that spot â see if that tandem can do something to push Quero, to just get us more offense from that spot.â
In 17 games at Charlotte this season, Romo had a .298/.385/.561 slash line with three doubles and four home runs, so he seems like a decent candidate to boost the offense at least a little.
âI had a good offseason, worked on some stuff,â Romo said. âItâs carried over well into the season. Swingâs feeling good, Iâm seeing the ball well and approach is locked in, too. So everythingâs kind of clicking right now.â
Romo entered Saturdayâs game late, taking over on defense after Luisangel Acuña pinch-ran for Quero in the seventh inning during the first of a couple of failed late-inning rallies. Acuña was ultimately stranded in the seventh by back-to-back strikeouts from Andrew Benintendi and Munetaka Murakami. Romo got to bat in the ninth and led off with a walk, jump-starting what could have been a walk-off rally. Instead, the White Sox went away empty-handed. That proved particularly costly when the Nationals put up four runs in the top of the tenth.
Moments like those can be seen as the growing pains of a team slowly making its way out of the mire of the past two seasons. Through the first month of the 2026 season, the White Sox have looked like a team that can at the very least avoid 100 losses without too much trouble. Finishing at .500 is probably a stretch, but theyâre closer to that benchmark than they are setting records for the most losses in a season, like the White Sox did in 2024.
The offense is improving, albeit slowly at times, but they are a more talented group now than they were even at the beginning of this season. In the future, there will be more times when they come through to back up a strong pitching performance like Schultz had on Saturday.
âItâs been pretty good the last week or so,â Schultz said of the collective mood in the White Sox clubhouse. âItâs been great since I got here. Great guys, great team efforts that Iâm really happy to be here and continue to try and get more wins going forward.â