Boston Red Sox executive Craig Breslow offered a positive update for the team on contract talks with ace Garrett Crochet.
Every team across the majors is selling hope to their fans: some are selling it in a more immediate fashion, in the form of active offseasons full of free-agent signings and trade acquisitions. Others,
Shortstop Colson Montgomery will make his debut this season, it’s only a matter of when. He goes to camp looking to win an Opening Day job.
Fans got a chance to meet current players and top prospects who are eager to compete to be a part of a team that can start to make change in the form of more wins under first-year manager Will Venable.
The White Sox got word that their rookie pitcher, Drew Thorpe, who had Tommy John surgery in 2024, has suffered a setback this offseason.
The Chicago White Sox invited 24 nonroster players to major-league camp, including top pitching prospects Noah Schultz and Hagen Smith.
Noah Schultz and Hagen Smith won’t be prominent big league performers for the White Sox during the 2025 season. There’s a chance neither young hurler reaches the Majors in ’25, and if they do, it would probably be later in the campaign.
Colson Montgomery might be the most closely watched player for the Chicago White Sox when the team begins spring training in Arizona next month.
Colson Montgomery heard what Chris Getz said, and it sounded good to him. A day after the Chicago White Sox general manager predicted Montgomery is going to make his major league debut this year, the 6-foot-3 shortstop sounded as if he was ready to go.
Right-hander Jonathan Cannon, who posted a 4.49 ERA in 21 starts and two relief appearances his first season, would seem to be the leading candidate, although general manager Chris Getz has dropped veteran free agent Martin Perez’ and Sean Burke’s names into such discussions.
Noah Schultz never played basketball. Some of the buzz ahead of SoxFest was about the left-handed pitcher growing another inch to 6-feet-10. The Oswego native is the White Sox' top-rated prospect and
The rebranded SoxFest Live takes place from 5-9 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the Ramova Theatre in Bridgeport. It’s the team’s first fan festival since before the 2020 season.