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Forbes
Forbes
1 May 2023


Phillies White Sox Baseball
Chicago White Sox's Jake Burger (30) celebrates [+][-]
his three-run home run off Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Bailey Falter with Luis Robert Jr. (88) and Eloy Jimenez during the first inning in the second game of a baseball doubleheader Tuesday, April 18, 2023, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
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One of my biggest problems with major league baseball in 2023 is the sheer volume of teams that aren’t even trying to win. Team payroll disparities are massive from top to bottom, and you can write off at least a third of the teams from postseason contention not long after the season’s first pitch is thrown.

The Chicago White Sox, for all of the bad things that can currently be said about them, are not one of those teams. (Two other members of their division, the Kansas City Royals and Detroit Tigers, are.) They spend a reasonable amount of money on payroll on an annual basis, rightly seeing themselves as potential contenders. It leads one to wonder what on earth has happened to drop them into their current predicament, tied for last place in the AL Central through Saturday’s games with a 7-21 record, riding a 10-game losing streak that was snapped by a miracle 9th inning rally on Sunday.

Coming into 2023, the Chisox were rightly seen as a division and playoff contender. I’d say the consensus placed them third behind the Cleveland Guardians and my choice, the Minnesota Twins. Most saw Chicago’s strengths as a potentially dominant starting rotation fronted by Dylan Cease, Lucas Giolito and Lance Lynn and an ascendant group of young position players led by Luis Robert, Andrew Vaughn and Eloy Jimenez. Sure, there were questions, like the bullpen, a couple of questionable spots in the batting order and general overall depth, but about 25 of the 30 clubs have at least one major flaw. The best-case scenario would be an easy division win and perhaps a run at 100 wins, while the worst would be.........well, what they’re currently experiencing is way worse than anything that anyone could have imagined.

What has happened and why, and is this reversible? Are the White Sox already out of the division and playoff race, and what individuals on and off the field might be held accountable for this disaster?

So those were the concerns about this team coming in. The club honestly didn’t do enough offseason work to shore up these weaknesses. Yes, the typically durable high-floor low-ceiling Andrew Benintendi was brought in to stabilize the top of the order and add some patience to the lineup. Otherwise? Not so much.

It’s still a wild-swinging group on balance, with their 71 walks ranking dead last in the AL. Despite Anderson’s absence, they don’t elevate the baseball all that much. They’ve been depleted by injuries, and with Anderson and Moncada on the bench, depth players like Elvis Andrus and Lenyn Sosa have been overexposed and asked to do too much, and rookie Oscar Colas’ struggles have been magnified. The bullpen, which got no real offseason attention, has been a minefield.

Their new manager, Pedro Grifol, and his coaching staff has been thrown into the fire right away, and the early returns aren’t promising. The club has made fundamental mistakes, and Robert in particular has shown a lack of hustle at times. The fact that he was unaware of the name of bench coach Charlie Montoyo in a discussion with media isn’t a good sign.

The new rule changes implemented by MLB this season haven’t been kind to the Sox, either. Burly starter Lance Lynn has been utterly dominant the vast majority of the time - but has a 7.16 ERA thanks to a handful of huge innings allowed when he had to throw a ton of pitches. Saturday’s ugly 12-3 loss to the Rays was a case in point - he had a no-hitter entering the 7th, but just a few batters into the 7th the game got away from him, and the bullpen subsequently set it on fire when he was removed.

The White Sox are not this bad. No one is - except possibly the A’s. But momentum is a real thing, and the season may have already gotten away from this club. Anderson and Moncada will be back before long, but that doesn’t change the fact that the Sox’ younger players haven’t developed as hoped. Even if they go .500 the rest of the way, this would be a very disappointing 74-win team. Changes on the field will be tried first, but despite the long tenures of team President Kenny Williams and GM Rick Hahn and the short tenure of Grifol, significant off-field change could soon follow.

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