Noah Schultz Return Could Force A White Sox Rotation Reckoning

As the Chicago White Sox prepare for Noah Schultz's return, they face pivotal decisions about their pitching rotation amidst a tight race in the AL Central.

The White Sox are lining up to get a major arm back, and the timing could hardly be better.

Manager Will Venable said before Monday’s 8-2 win in Baltimore that all signs point to Noah Schultz returning this week. Schultz, who has been on a rehab assignment, is feeling really good and could be activated to start as soon as Wednesday. That would put him on the mound in the series finale against the Orioles and give him his first outing in more than a month.

Schultz landed on the IL on May 26 with right knee patellar tendinitis, a problem that naturally sparked some concern given his past knee issues. The rookie appears to have put that behind him, though, and he’s set to rejoin what has become an increasingly interesting Chicago rotation.

His rehab work has been steady over the last couple of weeks. Schultz opened with 1.2 innings for Charlotte on June 16, followed that with 2.2 innings on June 21, and then capped the assignment last week by striking out seven and allowing two earned runs in 4.2 innings.

The results at the major league level haven’t quite matched the hype yet. Schultz has posted a 5.82 ERA in his first eight starts, including a rough last outing against the Giants, when he gave up six earned runs.

Over his previous four starts, he was tagged for a combined 19 earned runs. Even so, the stuff still jumps off the page.

The 22-year-old brings elite strikeout potential with a 95+ mph sinker and fastball, and that kind of ceiling is exactly why Chicago wants him back in the mix.

If Schultz settles in over the second half, the Sox could look even more dangerous as the postseason gets closer. Davis Martin is already performing at an All-Star level, and that gives Chicago a strong foundation even before any deadline additions come into play.

Schultz’s return also raises the possibility of more shuffling in the rotation. Erick Fedde has been part of the mix since the start of the season, but Venable has already shown a short leash with the veteran, using an opener for him in half of his outings this year.

Fedde owns a 4.34 ERA across 74.2 innings. He’s done a decent job limiting hard contact, but the walks and his 1.42 WHIP have kept things from fully smoothing out. With the Sox playing this well, it’s tough to picture him locked into the rotation for the long haul.

Chicago has also gotten a look at David Sandlin. The rookie made a couple of starts while Schultz was out and most recently threw 6.0 innings with six strikeouts and just one run allowed. The Sox sent him back to Charlotte after that outing, but his name is now part of the conversation if another rotation spot opens up.

However the pieces fall, the White Sox still have room to upgrade on the mound. Pitching is the obvious area to watch at the trade deadline over the next month, especially now that a playoff push looks like a real possibility.

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