Believe it. The Chicago White Sox are 1st place in the AL Central, over .500, and have the third-best record in the AL. They have a better record than any team in the AL West. 6 of their starting 9 have a WAR of 1.7 or higher, and the team's top 10 WAR leaders all have WARs of 1.5 or more. Only two members of the lineup are over 30, and they both have either 9 or 10 homers. And it took getting rid of Luis Robert, Garrett Crochet, Lenyn Sosa, Andrew Vaughn, Curtis Mead, Eloy Jimenez, Dylan Cease and Lucas Giolito to get them there.
The team is being led by rookies and second years, and they're winning games. They have Sam Antonacci playing a very crucial contact role and playing left, and he's delivering! 23 years old, no MLB experience, and he's hitting .291 with an .803 OPS and 65 hits in as many games. Like Peters and Meidroth, Antonacci isn't really a power guy, but he's consistently on target and he's able to keep the hits coming. That's an underrated skill that this team is already going all-in on, the contact specialists. It's nice having a Murakami or a Colson Montgomery who can hit homers, but there's serious depth here. Kyle Teel's back, and he has 5 hits and 6 RBIs in 6 games. Tristan Peters is a doubles machine. This team does have 3 guys with over 19 homers, but they're not banking fully on that, which may be why they're a first place team. It's easy for the Guardians to do the sustainable cheap contact thing, but there's way more depth with this Chicago team.
You're also seeing the White Sox combine a 2024-era approach [get two recently-returned KBO/Japanese league exports and plug them in before they become too expensive] with modern thinking [just draft great pitchers]. Anthony Kay and Erick Fedde are here to eat innings mostly, but Fedde's been very good recently when opened for, and Kay still has some tricks left despite all those HBPs. Davis Martin and Sean Burke are the real thing though, and hopefully whatever was troubling Shane Smith clears up soon. It's looking more like a rotation now and less like an array of people who needed a job. Same with the bullpen: Sean Newcomb and Seranthony Dominguez have been plucked into unlikely roles but they're having some nice moments. Newcomb has a 2.54 ERA and is once again proving how smart it was to make him a bullpen guy. Dominguez has kept the closing position and has 12 saves, despite Bryan Hudson arguably giving him a run for his money.
Are the White Sox in the clear, despite this nice run? No, absolutely not. The Guardians just got Chase de Lauter back and are still a very good team. You can also never truly count out the Tigers with their level of talent, or even the Royals. I think there's a chance the White Sox keep this pace up and go for a playoff spot, but I also wonder what this team could do differently from the more tested late-2010s teams, all of which struck out given the chance at playoff supremacy. They have to prove, if they are for real, that they're better than their predecessors. Which will be difficult, but with this many contact hitters it's possible.
Coming Tomorrow: This guy's ceiling has been said to resemble Ronald Acuna's but with more power. He's three years in and all that's missing is the name brand recognition.

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