Easter Weekend Magic: White Sox Flip The Script In Sweep
Maybe it was a little divine timing, with the Pope’s team hosting their first home series on Easter weekend, but following a three-game sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays, Chicago White Sox fans are finally beginning to “feel the momentum.”
It’s a slogan that was beginning to look like a punch line after the first six games of the season. A negative 31 run differential, a five-run blown lead, and just one game in the win column. With the defending American League champions rolling into town, it hardly seemed like the ideal time to find their footing.
But the weekend brought a wave of surprises, ones that finally gave White Sox fans something to feel good about. Ozzie Guillen will have his number retired, a former Savannah Banana delivered a walk-off in extra innings, Munetaka Murakami became the first Japanese-born player in MLB history to hit four home runs in his first eight games, and the White Sox pitching staff combined for a shutout.
It marked the first time the White Sox swept their first home series since 2004, a series when Guillen was still managing the team. But it wasn’t just the opponent that made the series encouraging; it was the variety of ways that Will Venable’s squad found to win.
On Friday, it was small ball and timely hitting that helped lead the White Sox to a 5-4 win in extras.
Anchored by Grant Taylor and Sean Burke, combining for seven innings of one-run ball, the White Sox manufactured runs by capitalizing on Toronto’s mistakes, something that has often gone the other way for Chicago. Miguel Vargas opened the scoring on a throwing error, Derek Hill’s tenth-inning bunt forced another miscue from backup catcher Tyler Heineman to tie the game, and Tristan Peters delivered a walk-off single to right field, sending the 33,000 fans in attendance home happy.
On Saturday, it was the White Sox power that was on display.
Once again, the White Sox chose to use Taylor as an opener, and once again, he fired a scoreless first inning. Murakami belted a 431-foot homer to center field in the sixth inning off of Blue Jays southpaw Brendon Little. Moments later, Colson Montgomery connected for his second home run of the season to give the White Sox a much-needed insurance run en route to a 6-3 victory.
On Sunday, pitching and defense helped the White Sox earn a 3-0 shutout.
Davis Martin delivered a gem, tossing six shutout innings with six strikeouts while allowing just four hits and two walks. But it wasn’t without challenges—he had to navigate multiple jams and was quickly piling up pitches. After three innings, he was at 61 pitches, and by the time he exited following six strong frames, that total had climbed to 85, giving a weary bullpen a much-needed quality start.
But that shutout may not have been possible without Tanner Murray, who was making his MLB debut. In the third inning, the Blue Jays loaded the bases with two outs and the dangerous Addison Barger at the plate. Martin worked the count full before getting Barger to hit a ground ball up the middle.
The ball looked labeled for the outfield, but Murray ranged to his left, snatched it, and delivered an off-balance spinning throw to first base, where Murakami stretched out and picked it from the dirt to save multiple runs.
Luisangel Acuna also had his fingerprints all over the win, with a pair of hits, a stolen base, a run scored, and a diving catch in center field. After building a 3-0 lead on an RBI triple from Vargas, an RBI double from Sosa, and an RBI single from Hays, Martin handed the game to the bullpen, where Bryan Hudson, Jordan Leasure, and Chris Murphy closed it out.
“We are a good team. We are finding ways to win,” Venable told reporters on Sunday. “Contributions from everybody. With the way our group is set up, that’s how we are going to have to win games.”
After a rough start to the season, the White Sox sweep of the Blue Jays offered a glimpse of what this team can be—resilient, opportunistic, and versatile. From timely hitting and power displays to standout pitching and defense, a 4-5 record never felt so good.