White Sox, Will Venable and Rangers
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The White Sox have two pitchers from December’s Rule 5 draft on their roster, and each one looks like he belongs in the major leagues.
MLB vet, MLB Network and White Sox analyst Dan Plesac joined CB to talk about his level of confidence in the Cubs, PCA break-out first half, the Cubs pitching situation, and his thoughts on the White Sox after spending a week calling their games.
The Chicago White Sox have been quick to claim Pope Leo XIV as their own. Leo, born Robert Francis Prevost in Chicago, was quickly discovered to be a White Sox fan after his elevation to head of the Catholic Church earlier this year.
The White Sox’ revolving door at first base continued Saturday after the team sent Tim Elko to Triple-A Charlotte and activated Ryan Noda. Noda, who went 0-
Rookie right-hander Kumar Rocker pitched five scoreless innings with help from some pickle juice, Ezequiel Duran put Texas in front for good with an RBI double and the Rangers finished a sweep of the
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Aaron Civale is a Chicago White Sox starting pitcher — for now. The 30-year-old right-hander joined the White Sox this week after he was traded to them by the Milwaukee Brewers. This came after he asked for a trade when was moved to the bullpen as Milwaukee made way for the Major League debut of its top pitching prospect, Jacob Misiorowski.
Preview the June 15 matchup between the Texas Rangers and Chicago White Sox with recent trends, how to watch, livestream info, and more.
In his first words directed specifically to Americans, Pope Leo XIV told young people on Saturday how to find hope and meaning in their lives through God and in service to others. “So many people who suffer from different experiences of depression or sadness — they can discover that the love of God is truly healing,
I have him penciled in the lineup for Tuesday,’’ manager Will Venable said. ‘‘Give him the day and see where he’s at. We expect him to be in on Tuesday.’’