
The White Sox's struggles were highlighted by being swept by the Baltimore Orioles and losing two out of four games to the Kansas City Royals, indicating roster depth issues.
The White Sox swept the Toronto Blue Jays, which was a surprising turnaround after a rocky start to the season.
The roster depth issues may hinder the team's ability to maintain consistent performance, as evidenced by their recent losses following an early season high.
The Chicago White Sox initially impressed by sweeping the Toronto Blue Jays but have since struggled, suffering a sweep by the Baltimore Orioles and losing two out of four games to the Kansas City Royals. This performance highlights significant roster depth issues.
White Sox two-man offense highlights massive roster depth issues originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
After a rocky start to the season, the Chicago White Sox turned some heads last week. They swept the defending AL East champions, the Toronto Blue Jays.
They went from one of the worst teams in MLB the first week to a team that had the middle of the pack well within their reach.
However, they have taken quite the fall since sweeping the Blue Jays. The Baltimore Orioles swept them but took two games in a four-game series against the Kansas City Royals last week.
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A big reason for the White Sox's troubles this past week, and all season, has been the state of the offense. While Munetaka Murakami is thriving and Colson Montgomery is showing flashes, they are nearly the only two getting anything done offensively.
That's not ideal, and Bleacher Report's Joel Reuter has dropped them back quite a bit in his latest power rankings, ranking them the second-worst club across MLB.
"The White Sox are hitting a paltry .193/.278/.306 as a team and averaging just 3.1 runs per game. Colson Montgomery and Munetaka Murakami are the only regulars with an OPS above .700 and that duo has accounted for seven of the team's 12 home runs."
Having an anemic offense is never ideal, but it gets even worse when the White Sox hold the fifth-worst ERA at 4.70.
Hopefully, that changes a bit with the club calling up their top pitching prospect, Noah Schultz. He is expected to make his MLB debut on Tuesday against the Tampa Bay Rays.
Offensively, someone else needs to step up and be a sparkplug for this club. Maybe it's time for the front office to call up their top prospect, outfielder Braden Montgomery, who has three home runs in nine games in the minors so far.
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