But again, as Getz indicated, it’s one game over more than a six-month journey. It’s a journey rich with greater expectations for the White Sox.
“You want to look at once we get through this season, reflect back on what 2026 was for us,” Getz said. “Have a better idea of where we are in the development of this Major League club and the organization as a whole.
“So I do anticipate winning more games this year. We don’t focus on [the] win-and-loss record. We focus on winning the game that’s right in front of you. That’s what Will has established. We expect them to take the same approach this season.”
Winning the game in front of you means winning in the macro and micro ways for the White Sox. Working the count, but also attacking the fastball, as they did so well in the second half of last season. Stealing bases, hit and runs, bunts, solid defense across the diamond and always making full use of their roster.
This present 26-man alignment on March 28 might look different by May 1, let alone in June or July.
Left-handed pitchers Noah Schultz (No. 2 White Sox prospect and No. 49 overall, per MLB Pipeline) and Hagen Smith (No. 4 and No. 72) along with right-hander Tanner McDougal (No. 6) and infielder/outfielder Sam Antonacci (No. 9) began their season with Triple-A Charlotte on Friday. They aren’t far away from Major League Baseball contributions.
Players exited camp with a good feeling about this team, a close-knit unit confident in what stood ahead. I assessed that confidence with a couple of White Sox stalwarts leaving Spring Training, asking if it’s possible to go from 60-102 in 2025 to contending for the American League Central title in ’26.
“Yeah, I think so,” right-handed reliever Grant Taylor said. “Every single year, obviously everyone’s goal is to win a World Series. Whether that’s this year, the next year or the year after that, that’s what we are striving toward. That might be taking bigger steps and smaller steps at times. That’s going to be the goal.”
“One hundred percent,” said right-hander Sean Burke, who starts Game 2 tonight against the Brewers. “Everybody is on the same mission. Everybody believes. We are all pulling the same rope to do that. I know everybody here believes that. We are playing like, ‘Why not us?’”