White Sox Buyers Face One Deadline Decision Fans Wont Ignore

The Chicago White Sox are focused on bolstering their starting rotation as they eye a significant shift to buyers ahead of the trade deadline.

The White Sox have put themselves in an unusual spot for July: instead of shopping veterans away, they’re in position to add. That alone changes the conversation around Chicago, and it puts the spotlight squarely on the rotation as the trade deadline approaches.

MLB.com's Mark Feinsand identified starting pitching as the White Sox’s biggest need, and the reason is pretty straightforward - the group has a major workload concern hanging over it.

"Chicago's improbable season has made the White Sox into unlikely buyers, and the rotation figures to be an area for GM Chris Getz to upgrade," Feinsand writes.

There are reasons to like parts of the staff. David Martin has broken out with a 3.00 ERA, and Sean Burke has posted a 3.69 ERA.

But after those two, the picture gets a lot less stable. Anthony Kay owns a 4.50 ERA, Erick Fedde sits at 4.34, and Noah Schultz had a 5.83 ERA in his eight starts before landing on the injured list.

So it’s not just about performance. It’s about whether this group can hold up.

"Even with fewer innings thrown (352 2/3) than any other rotation in the AL, some of the Sox starters - Davis Martin and Sean Burke, in particular - will have their workloads monitored carefully given their lack of innings during their career," Feinsand writes.

That’s the real wrinkle for Chicago. If Martin and Burke are going to be watched closely, then the White Sox need more than just decent depth - they need another arm, maybe even two, to keep the rotation from wearing down.

The best fit would be a controllable starter, the kind of piece that can help beyond this summer. A name like Reid Detmers would make more sense for Chicago than a rental such as Robbie Ray or Freddy Peralta.

However they go about it, the larger story is clear: the White Sox are finally in buyer mode. After years of selling, that’s a meaningful shift, and it makes the deadline feel a lot more interesting in Chicago.

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