Nick Madrigal keeps finding another door to open.
The former White Sox first-round pick has signed a minor league deal with the Rays only days after the Angels designated him for assignment, giving him yet another chance to hang around a big league organization. Tampa Bay assigned Madrigal to Triple-A Durham, but there’s a real chance he gets back to the majors soon enough.
For the Angels, Madrigal was a roster move more than a revelation. He had been getting his opportunity in the big leagues because the team needed coverage, even though his Triple-A production was only so-so.
Once the roster got healthier, he was the odd man out. He chose free agency rather than accept a minor league assignment, then landed with the Rays the next day.
The 29-year-old did manage a respectable little run in Anaheim. In 15 games, he hit .273 and walked more often than he struck out. But the same old limitations were still there: just one extra-base hit, and a slugging percentage below .300.
That’s the part of Madrigal’s game that has always made him such a frustrating player to sort through. The contact is real, but the impact has never matched the pedigree. And for White Sox fans, he remains one of the clearest reminders of a rebuild that went sideways.
Chicago took Madrigal fourth overall in 2018, banking on a profile built around elite contact and hoping the rest of the game would come along for the ride. He didn’t even make it through one full season on the White Sox roster before being traded, and the flaws that were easy to see then have only become more obvious since.
Still, the White Sox version of Madrigal wasn’t nearly as ugly as many remember.
He hit .340 in 29 games during the shortened 2020 season, though the lack of power showed up immediately with zero home runs and three doubles, leaving him with a .745 OPS. He was also off to a strong start in 2021, batting .305 with a .774 OPS before a season-ending injury shut him down. Even with those numbers, the White Sox dealt him to the Cubs at the deadline in the Craig Kimbrel trade.
At the time, that was a hefty price. In the end, neither side got what it wanted. Madrigal didn’t stick with his new team, and Kimbrel didn’t work out either.
Now Madrigal is back in the Rays’ system, where the path forward looks at least possible. Tampa Bay sits in first place in the AL East and has a long track record of helping players find another level. For Madrigal, that might make this his best shot since leaving Chicago in 2021.
And for the White Sox, his latest move is just another reminder of how much went wrong with the old approach. The organization has changed its draft strategy under Mike Shirley, and with the 2026 draft approaching, the club is set to make its first overall pick. After years of watching former top picks stall out, the White Sox have every reason to treat that selection like it matters.
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