White Sox Farm Update Suddenly Has Real Meaning For The Big Club

A strong night at the plate and on the mound highlights mixed results across the White Sox farm system, showcasing promising talent in both hitters and pitchers.

Wednesday was a loud one in the White Sox system. The lower minors were packed with offense, and the big theme was simple: bats kept humming, and the starting pitchers mostly kept damage in check. Every starter for Winston-Salem and Kannapolis reached base in wins, while all five starters across the affiliate slate allowed two runs or fewer.

At Triple-A, Charlotte dropped a 6-3 decision to Nashville after the game got away in the seventh. David Sandlin gave the Knights a solid start, working five innings and allowing two runs with three strikeouts, but the bullpen couldn’t hold the line.

Munetaka Murakami added another hit, an RBI double, and is reportedly headed back to Chicago to join the White Sox. Rikuu Nishida and Nolan Jones each finished with two singles in the loss.

Nishida went 2-for-5 with two runs and a stolen base, while Murakami was 1-for-4 with a double, a run, an RBI and a walk. Edgar Quero drove in a run, and Javy Guerra and Wikelman González both turned in scoreless relief outings.

Double-A Birmingham had more contact than Columbus, but not more runs, falling 3-2 despite a 7-6 edge in hits. The Barons struck out 17 times and drew only one walk, a rough formula in a one-run game. Alec Briley and Colby Shelton each delivered RBI singles, and Dylan Campbell chipped in two hits and two stolen bases.

Juan Carela made his first Barons appearance of the season and handled himself well enough, allowing two runs over four innings with five strikeouts and one walk. Liam Paddack followed with two scoreless innings out of the bullpen.

High-A Winston-Salem turned Wednesday into a slugfest and came out on top, beating Asheville 15-9. All nine Dash starters reached base, and eight of them did it twice. Ryan Burrowes, Jeral Perez, George Wolkow and Kaleb Freeman each had three hits, while Burrowes launched two homers, Wolkow added a homer of his own, and Arxy Hernandez also went deep.

The offense had to carry the load because the pitching staff wasn’t exactly cruising. Justin Sinibaldi worked five innings, gave up two runs and somehow survived six walks, and Garrett Wright picked up the win with 1.2 scoreless innings.

Burrowes finished 3-for-5 with two homers, three runs, a walk and a stolen base. Perez went 3-for-5 with two doubles, two runs and three RBI.

Wolkow posted a 3-for-6 line with a double, a homer, two runs and two RBI. Freeman matched the three-hit pace with three doubles, two runs, three RBI and a walk.

Kannapolis had its own fireworks show and escaped with a 9-8 win over Delmarva. The Cannon Ballers built a 6-0 lead, then had to fend off a late push before closing it out.

Like Winston-Salem, every starter reached base, and the offense piled up 12 hits. Alexander Albertus supplied the only extra-base hit with a triple.

Jesus Mendez finished the job with a perfect ninth to earn the save. Gabriel Rodriguez gave Kannapolis 3.2 scoreless innings to start things off, striking out three while allowing two hits and three walks.

Stiven Flores had a big night with three hits, while Jaden Fauske reached four times, scoring twice and driving in a run. Steven Lancia added two RBI, and Landon Hodge’s day in the ACL included a double and a triple.

The ACL White Sox were on the other side of a shootout, dropping an 8-7 game to the ACL Dodgers. The Dodgers scored five times in the sixth and once more in the seventh to pull it out.

Landon Hodge stood out at the plate, going 2-for-3 with a double, a triple, two runs and a walk. Orlando Suarez worked 4.1 innings and allowed two earned runs with four strikeouts, while Cesar Nunez covered the final 1.2 innings.

Across the system, Wednesday belonged to the hitters. George Wolkow, Ryan Burrowes and the rest of the lower-level bats made sure of that.

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