White Sox Let A Winnable One Slip In Tight AL Central Race

In a tight-knit doubleheader, the White Sox narrowly missed a last-minute victory against the Royals, concluding their homestand as co-leaders in the AL Central.

The White Sox and Royals managed to squeeze two games worth of action into a single nine-inning showdown that had fans on the edge of their seats. Early on, it seemed like we were in for a marathon, with the teams trading blows in a way that suggested the scoreboard might explode. But what started as a slugfest transformed into a showcase of bullpen brilliance, as the game wrapped up in a tidy 2 hours and 52 minutes, with Kansas City edging out a one-run victory.

The Royals wasted no time getting on the board. Anthony Kay found himself in trouble early, surrendering a run in the first inning thanks to Carter Jensen's RBI single, which extended his impressive hitting streak to 19 games.

However, the White Sox weren't about to let the Royals have all the fun. Luinder Avila faced the wrath of Miguel Vargas, who launched a 407-foot homer into the wind, putting the Sox ahead after a Sam Antonacci walk.

In a game that felt like a back-and-forth tennis match, Kay struggled in the second inning. A hit batter, a costly error by Colson Montgomery, a single, and a sac fly allowed the Royals to reclaim the lead.

But the Sox weren't done. Avila handed back the advantage with two-out hits from Antonacci, Vargas, and Kyle Teel, the latter two managing broken-bat hits that put Chicago up 4-3.

The seesaw battle continued as Kay allowed another run in the third and yet another in the fourth, giving the Royals a 5-4 edge. By this point, the game had already exceeded an hour and a half, with both starters laboring through a barrage of pitches-Kay with 73 in just over three innings, and Avila with 86 through four.

Then came the bullpen showcase. Five White Sox relievers combined for 5 1/3 innings of shutout ball, allowing just four hits and a walk.

Seranthony Domínguez, pitching in the sixth rather than his usual ninth, was particularly effective. Meanwhile, the Royals' bullpen was even stingier, surrendering just one hit over five innings.

A key defensive play came courtesy of Braden Montgomery, whose excellent throw nailed Starling Marte after a shot down the right field line. This play proved crucial, as Salvador Pérez followed with a single, but the Royals couldn't capitalize further.

Despite the bullpen heroics, the score remained 5-4 from the end of the fourth inning onward. While the Royals took the win, the White Sox still claimed the series and wrapped up a successful 4-2 homestand.

With an impressive 43-39 record, the Sox find themselves tied with the Guardians atop the AL Central. Next up, they hit the road for a three-game series in Baltimore, followed by four crucial matchups in Cleveland.

In Other News...

White Sox May Be Seeing Another Chris Getz Draft Find Emerge

The White Sox have spent much of the summer seeing young players push their way into the conversation, from Colson Montgomery and Miguel Vargas to Braden Montgomery and Sam Antonacci, and that wave of development has only added to the optimism around a club sitting atop the AL Central. With the first pick in the 2026 MLB Draft still ahead of them, the organization is also continuing to mine value from the lower levels, where another recent draftee has started to turn heads with the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers.

Matthew Boughton, taken in the 11th round last year after being pulled away from his Texas A&M commitment, has been making a stronger case by the week that he is more than a lottery ticket. He earned Carolina League Player of the Week honors two weeks ago and has followed that up with a June surge that has him looking increasingly like one of the more intriguing young players in the system, the kind of late-round find every front office hopes to uncover. [Read more 🡒]

White Sox Top Prospect Just Delivered The Breakout Fans Wanted

Caleb Bonemer keeps making the White Sox look smarter for betting on his bat, and his latest showing at Double-A Birmingham was the kind of all-around night that turns heads in a hurry. In a 10-5 win over Knoxville, the 20-year-old prospect came through with his first homer at the level and finished 4-for-5, his first four-hit game of the season and only the second of his career.

Bonemers season line already had him near the top of the organization in several offensive categories, and the power production has become impossible to ignore. The bigger question now is how quickly that bat keeps forcing its way into the conversation, because nights like this tend to change the temperature around a prospect fast. [Read more 🡒]

White Sox Face Obvious Move As Catching Struggles Persist

Kyle Teels return from the injured list gave the White Sox a small boost, but the catching picture still looks unsettled. Chicago has been searching for more production behind the plate, and Drew Romos bat has not given the lineup much help, with his .137 average underscoring how little offensive impact the position has provided.

Korey Lee, meanwhile, has been in Triple-A and has shown better offensive numbers, which naturally keeps his name in the conversation as a possible upgrade in a backup role. For a White Sox club trying to piece together more reliable offense wherever it can find it, the next move at catcher is starting to look less like a question and more like an obvious decision waiting to be made. [Read more 🡒]