White Sox Farm Update Centers On A Prospect Fans Needed To See Break Out

Struggles on the mound and limited offense marked the Charlotte Knights' loss, while the Birmingham Barons ended their slump with a dramatic win.

Charlotte’s night started badly and ended even worse in a 9-4 loss to Rochester, as the Red Wings closed the door with five runs across the final two innings to take both the game and the series. The Knights managed only three hits against Rochester’s 13 and went 1-for-8 with runners in scoring position, a rough offensive showing that left little room for recovery.

Joe Rock, back with Charlotte just a few days ago, never found his footing in a 2 1/3-inning start. He was charged with four runs, three earned, on six hits, including a homer, with two walks and one strikeout. The unearned run came after an error on his own pickoff attempt, turning an already tough outing into a mess.

Charlotte did get on the board in the second when Nolan Jones brought home a run with an RBI ground out. Later, after Ryan Galanie was hit by a pitch and Jones drew a walk, Andy Weber delivered the big swing for Rochester - a game-tying, three-run, inside-the-park homer that made it 4-4.

The game stayed level for a bit after that. Peyton Pallette and Ben Peoples each turned in scoreless innings, and Peoples punched out the side.

But once Javy Guerra took over in the eighth, the Red Wings quickly pressured him with two straight hits to open the frame. Guerra recovered with two strikeouts, then surrendered a two-run single that put Rochester back in front.

Tyler Davis later allowed back-to-back homers in the ninth, and Guerra was tagged with the loss.

Birmingham finally put an end to its skid, taking the series finale from Knoxville 10-5 and snapping an eight-game losing streak that stretched back to June 19. The Barons had to fight through a back-and-forth game early, and they were out-hit 17-9, but they pulled away later to avoid the sweep.

Alex Briley kept Birmingham alive with a two-run homer in the bottom of the fifth to tie things at five while Jake Palisch was grinding through five innings on the mound. Palisch allowed five runs on 13 hits, gave up a homer, and struck out one without issuing a walk.

Phil Fox replaced him in the sixth and ran into trouble before Pierce George came on with two outs to clean it up. George needed just one out and two pitches to earn his first win of the season, and the turning point came shortly after when Caleb Bonemer unloaded a grand slam in the bottom of the sixth.

Bonemer had a huge day, going 4-for-5 with two doubles and the grand slam for five RBIs. It was his first homer since moving up to Double-A, and the swing helped Birmingham put the game out of reach.

Winston-Salem’s finale against Hub City was a quiet one, with the Dash collecting only two hits in a 4-1 loss and committing three errors. Drew McDaniel made his 13th start of the season and worked 3 2/3 innings, giving up three runs on two hits, including a solo homer in the second, along with three walks and five strikeouts.

The bullpen settled things down for the most part, though Frankeli Arias was charged with the fourth run in the seventh, and it ended up unearned after a throwing error by Ryan Burrowes at third. Jeral Perez provided Winston-Salem’s lone run with a base hit to right in the fourth after a brief rally started to form, but the offense never found another gear. Burrowes later singled in the fifth, but the Dash finished 1-for-4 with runners in scoring position and left six on base.

Kannapolis also posted a 4-1 win over Columbia, matching Saturday’s score while still dropping the series. The difference Sunday was the pitching, which held the Fireflies to one run on nine hits, one walk and three strikeouts.

Gabe Tanner, making his third start for the Ballers since signing June 16 out of the Pioneer League, gave Kannapolis a strong foundation. He worked five scoreless innings, allowing four hits and one walk while striking out none, and picked up his first MiLB win. The Ballers gave him a quick cushion in the first when Stiven Flores doubled to left to drive in a run.

They added three more in the third after Jaden Fauske and Matthew Boughton reached and executed a double steal to move into scoring position. Alexander Albertus then hit a grounder to short that led to two runs scoring on a fielder’s choice and throwing error, and Flores added another RBI when he grounded out to third and brought home Albertus for the fourth run.

The bullpen kept the pressure off from there, with all four relievers tossing a clean inning. Columbia’s only run came on Daniel Wright’s watch after he committed a throwing error on a bunt and then gave up an RBI single in the next at-bat, but Wright limited the damage. Landen Payne finished it off for his sixth save of the season.

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