Jacob Gonzalez has turned his season around fast enough to make the White Sox think twice about what comes next.
The rookie spent an eight-game stretch from June 10th through June 22nd stuck in a hitless rut, but the bat has come alive in a big way since then. Over his last six games, Gonzalez has gone 11-for-24 with a home run and 12 RBIs.
That run included a walk-off single against the Kansas City Royals, and he kept it rolling Tuesday against the Baltimore Orioles with a 3-for-5 night and three RBIs. One of those hits was an RBI double with a 100 mph exit velocity, and another was a 102 mph two-run single.
That kind of production has given the White Sox another dangerous bat near the bottom of the order and helped cushion the blow of Munetaka Murakami’s absence. But the more Gonzalez keeps hitting, the more the roster picture starts to get crowded.
Murakami is nearing a return, and Gonzalez’s natural spots in the middle infield are already spoken for by Colson Montgomery and Chase Meidroth. That leaves Chicago with a familiar front-office problem: a useful player who may not have a clean place to stay.
At this point, Gonzalez might not even have an obvious route to stick on the major league roster. He can help as a bench bat and a utility infielder, but the White Sox have a bigger immediate need for another outfielder in Junior Perez.
The squeeze doesn’t stop there. Long term, Gonzalez is also caught in an organizational jam. The White Sox are widely expected to take a shortstop with the first overall pick, and the farm system already has plenty of infield talent.
That makes Gonzalez an interesting name to watch as the trade deadline approaches. The next few weeks could serve as an audition for the rest of the league, and while moving him would be hard, it may be the move that helps Chicago solve a more urgent problem.
There’s real trade value here. Gonzalez brings defensive flexibility and a left-handed bat, the kind of profile that can tempt a team looking for depth and upside. Watching him hit somewhere else would sting, but that’s the kind of decision good clubs sometimes have to make.
The White Sox can look at Miguel Vargas as a reminder of how that works. Vargas once had major prospect value in the Los Angeles Dodgers system, and the Dodgers included him in a three-team deal that brought back Michael Kopech. Kopech then became a key bullpen piece during their run to the 2024 World Series title.
The Dodgers probably aren’t thrilled to see Vargas develop into one of the best third basemen in baseball, but they got the championship payoff they were chasing. That’s the tradeoff: move upside when the moment demands it, or keep it and hope it all lines up later.
Chicago may not be a World Series contender yet, but this season has given the club something it can’t afford to waste. After three straight 100-loss seasons, the White Sox know these kinds of runs don’t show up often. And while they may not be in their contention window in the traditional sense, they do have a real chance to make the playoffs.
The AL is open, the division is there to be won, and if the White Sox grab the AL Central, they could set themselves up for a favorable home playoff matchup to start October. That’s the kind of opportunity teams don’t get to take for granted.
The lesson from the last rebuild is simple: nothing is guaranteed. If Chicago has a chance to seize the moment, it can’t just wait around and hope the window stays open.
In Other News...
White Sox Fans Wont Love Where Nick Madrigal Just Resurfaced
Nick Madrigals career has taken another turn, and it brings back a familiar name for White Sox fans who remember how quickly his time on the South Side changed. The former fourth-overall pick once looked like a cornerstone in the infield, showing real contact skills in a brief run with Chicago before being sent to the Cubs in the Craig Kimbrel deal, a move that still lingers as one of those reminders of how fast a rebuild can shift direction.
Now Madrigal is trying to get back on track after a stint with the Angels, where he was the odd man out when the roster got healthier and he opted for free agency rather than accepting a minor league assignment. The Rays have parked him at Triple-A Durham for now, with a chance to earn a return to the majors, and his path will be worth watching for a White Sox club that has since moved on from the old draft-and-development approach that once made him such a central part of the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
White Sox Could Change Everything With One Massive Lineup Move
The White Sox have positioned themselves well in the American League Central, and that has made every potential upgrade feel a little more real. With the lineup still looking for another impact bat, the discussion around possible additions is starting to turn from general to specific, and Houston has become part of that conversation for obvious reasons.
One name that keeps surfacing is Yordan Alvarez, a hitter who would instantly change the shape of Chicagos order if he ever became available. The complication is that Houston still controls him for two more years, and whether that changes may depend on how the Astros look over the next two weeks, which leaves the White Sox watching closely and waiting for the market to clarify itself. [Read more 🡒]
White Sox Face Defining First Pick Question As Draft Pressure Builds
Since Mike Shirley took over as scouting director in 2020, the White Sox have built a pretty clear draft identity: steer away from high school pitching, lean into hitters who get on base, and use the middle rounds to stock up on college arms who can move faster through the system. It has been a balanced approach overall, but with a definite lean toward college pitching when the board reaches those deeper stages, and recent names in the pipeline reflect that mix of strike-throwing upside and everyday offensive skill.
Now the real challenge arrives with the 2026 draft, where the White Sox will have to decide how much of that philosophy carries over when the stakes are highest. Their success in that class will hinge on how they use the first overall pick, a choice that could shape the organization for years and force a test of whether their established habits fit the player who might be available when they are on the clock. [Read more 🡒]
