CLEVELAND -- The White Sox are back in first place in the AL Central, but nobody in their clubhouse is pretending the job is anywhere close to finished.
Sunday’s 7-6 win over the Guardians gave Chicago a split in the four-game series and pushed the club one game ahead in the division with 73 games left. It also capped a stretch that included a 1 hour and 27 minute rain delay, with an hour spent getting the Progressive Field warning track ready to play.
For a team that has spent the past three seasons buried under 100-plus losses, this is unfamiliar territory. It’s also exactly where they want to be, even if the bigger picture still feels far off.
“That’s fine. That’s where we are at,” Davis Martin told MLB.com after hearing a television broadcast outside Chicago still trying to place the White Sox in the 2026 picture. “We are going to play for ourselves and we don’t really listen to the outside noise.”
The series had the feel of a playoff fight, and Colson Montgomery said as much after homering for the second straight game.
“This whole series has felt like a playoff series,” Montgomery said. “But then I look at the calendar and we are not even past the All-Star break yet. It’s a good learning experience for down the road.”
Chicago set the tone early. Kyle Teel opened the scoring with a two-run homer to left in the first inning off Tanner Bibee, and the catcher has now hit in eight of his 11 games since making his season debut on June 22. Teel returned after dealing with a right hamstring strain suffered while playing for Team Italy during the World Baseball Classic and a right knee issue that popped up during his rehab assignment.
His return matters because it gives the White Sox even more punch in a lineup that already has been producing. First baseman Munetaka Murakami is set to begin a brief rehab assignment Tuesday with Triple-A Charlotte as he works back from a Grade 2 right hamstring strain that has sidelined him for more than five weeks.
If Murakami is ready for a weekend home series against the A’s, it would mark the first time this season the White Sox have their full lineup. Cleveland could be in the same spot when the teams meet again in Chicago on Aug. 7-9, with José Ramírez and Angel Martínez on track to return from injury.
The games between these teams have been tight from the start. Seven meetings in, every one has been decided by two runs or fewer.
Martin said that’s part of what makes this stretch so useful for Chicago.
“Every team does certain things better than others. We do a really good job of scoring a lot of runs and playing good defense,” Martin said. “Cleveland is built around pitching, playing in close games and constantly putting pressure on the other team to be perfect.
“I think it’s just a great marker for us to see where we are at in that aspect. It’s a great learning tool for us to be able to say, 'This is what a playoff series looks like.'
You are not going to go boatrace everybody in a playoff series. It would be nice if you could.
The reality is that we have to learn how to win these close games. We do a really good job at home, and on the road we need to do a little bit better job.”
Cleveland took the first two games of the series in walk-off fashion, which understandably had White Sox fans grinding their teeth. But for Chicago, that’s part of the deal now: meaningful games, pressure-packed innings and a place in the standings that looked impossible not long ago.
“We are in a good spot. It’s exciting and it just shows the kind of growth we are at,” Martin said.
“It doesn’t matter if we are playing bad. We still find a way to find ourselves in every game.
“It’s a great time. We love winning.
We do a good job celebrating each other’s successes. We are having fun being ourselves and enjoying it.”
In Other News...
White Sox Are Suddenly Linked To A Deadline Move Fans Will Debate
As the trade deadline gets closer, the White Sox are being connected to a familiar kind of August conversation: whether a pitching add from Colorado could help stabilize a roster that still needs depth in both the bullpen and the rotation. The Rockies have several arms drawing attention, and Chicagos interest makes sense on paper because the Sox are looking for options that can fit different roles without forcing a bigger, riskier swing.
What makes this one worth watching is the range of possibilities. One target has already shifted out of the rotation and into relief, another brings a more established track record and a pricier contract, and a third would come with extra team control beyond this season. For a White Sox club trying to balance immediate help with longer-term value, that kind of menu can spark debate quickly, even before anything gets close to the finish line. [Read more 🡒]
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Berroa is the one who could end up mattering first in the big leagues, which is why his path is being watched so closely. The White Sox do not need a perfect solution as much as they need bodies who can stabilize innings and give the staff some depth, and even one of these arms returning on schedule would be a meaningful development. For now, the encouraging part is simply that the list of pitchers moving forward is getting longer. [Read more 🡒]
White Sox Suddenly Face A Franchise Defining Choice At No. 1
Winning the 2026 Draft Lottery gave the White Sox a rare kind of leverage, and it arrived at a time when the organization can actually afford to think big. Chicago is in the mix for the top spot in the American League Central and a playoff berth, which makes the No. 1 overall pick feel less like a consolation prize and more like a franchise-shaping decision for a club that has spent years trying to rebuild the right way.
The early conversation has centered on a handful of elite prospects, with Roch Cholowsky long viewed as the presumed front-runner before Grady Emerson surged ahead of him in MLB.coms rankings. The White Sox have stressed patience in player development, but this is the kind of choice that can define an era, especially with last years top pick Billy Carlson still sidelined since late May by a thumb fracture and the organization once again preparing to make a selection that will be scrutinized from the moment it is announced. [Read more 🡒]
