Chicago Sports

Duncan Keith retires; Blackhawks ‘wanted to be great every single night,’ he says

They called them “hot stoves,” pals Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook did, and what that meant wasn’t complicated at all. Imagine a pair of inseparable defensemen up late swapping hockey stories, and you pretty much have it. But one night, on the road before a game in Edmonton, they sat in somebody’s hotel room — it could’ve been teammate Patrick Sharp’s because he was there, too — and BSed until about 6 a.m.

Let’s just say the ensuing game was a disaster.

“So my advice to you prospects would be to make sure to get your sleep at night before a game,” Keith, a Hall of Fame-bound Blackhawks great, joked Tuesday as he announced his retirement.

But there was no sleeping on Keith throughout his 17-year NHL career and his 16 seasons with the Blackhawks, because he was always ready to go with the very best of them. He roared in as a rookie in 2005 and led the Hawks in ice time, as he would season after season, and playoff run after playoff run, until it was nothing less than automatic. He excelled at both ends of the rink, playing with speed and skill but also toughness and an edge. He blocked shots, spit teeth — seven of them at once in perhaps his signature moment, in the 2010 Western Conference finals — and always came back for more.

And did he ever shine alongside Seabrook — for over 1,000 games, more than any other NHL blue-line pairing ever.

“A lot of great teammates from my time in Chicago, too many great players to name them all,” Keith said from Rogers Place in Edmonton, where he played his final season. “But when I think of those teammates and the special bonds and memories we created, the one guy who sticks out is Brent.”

Four days before his 39th birthday — and one year to the day after the Hawks traded him to the Oilers in part so he could be closer to son Colton — Keith sat with his boy, 9, beside him, and other family members, several from Edmonton, in attendance. Keith grew up in Fort Frances, Ontario, just across the river from International Falls, Minnesota, but he plans to remain in the Edmonton area, where he and brother Cameron can coach their children in hockey together.

“There’s still some part of me that knows I could still play,” Keith said, “but I think that’s kind of how I wanted to go out, knowing I still had some game left in me and I’m still relatively healthy.”

Keith mentioned teammates Marian Hossa, Niklas Hjalmarsson, Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews, Corey Crawford, Dustin Byfuglien, Andrew Ladd, Kris Versteeg, Brian Campbell and Sharp. He thanked Dale Tallon, who drafted him, and Joel Quenneville, who coached the Hawks to Stanley Cup titles in 2010, 2013 and 2015.

“The list goes on and on,” he said. “We wanted to be great every single night.”

He also thanked Hawks fans, who can have fun debating whether Keith is the best Hawks defenseman since Chris Chelios, since Doug Wilson, since Pierre Pilote or since the very first Hawks puck dropped in 1926.

“They really guided us and helped us,” he said, “cheered us through the ups and downs.”

Rarely has it been more down for the Hawks and their fans than it is now. What the heck happened? Pieces of an elite puzzle were lost. Front-office missteps were made. Seabrook, Keith and other long-timers got older and lost a step. The pandemic arrived. The tremendous shame of a 2010 sexual-assault scandal and coverup in the organization stained a championship era. Now, the more-unrecognizable-by-the-hour Hawks are in the early stages of a full-blown rebuild. Any chance No. 7 overall draft pick Kevin Korchinski is the next Keith? No, that wasn’t a serious question.

Juxtaposed with all that, though, Keith’s excellence on the ice impresses even more than it did in real time. He won Norris Trophies in 2010 and 2014 and the Conn Smythe in 2015. He was a two-time Olympic gold medalist and was selected to the NHL’s 2010s all-decade team, along with Drew Doughty, Sidney Crosby, Alex Ovechkin, Marc-Andre Fleury and teammate Kane. Only Stan Mikita played more games as a Hawk. Only Wilson scored more points as a Hawks defenseman.

Keith finishes with 646 career points, 625 of them with the team that selected him in the second round out of Michigan State in 2002.

For the record, he called Oilers teammates Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl “the two best players in the world” and said if Kane or Toews were mulling a possible trade to Edmonton, he’d give the Oilers “a glowing recommendation.”

Things sure have changed. But once upon a time …

“We were a group of young players back in Chicago,” Keith said. “We all cared. We were passionate.”

And when it came to stopping the other guy, let’s tell it like it is: No. 2 was No. 1.

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Chicago Bears hopeful trade for ex-Patriots WR N’Keal Harry can benefit both

Former first round pick wide receiver N’Keal Harry lands in Chicago via trade with a chance to revitalize his career.

Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles made a modest trade for wide receiver N’Keal Harry from the New England Patriots for a 2024 seventh-round pick.  Harry has struggled since his arrival in the NFL mustering only 57 catches for 598 yards and four touchdowns in his career.  The trade isn’t much of an upgrade for the Bears’ receiving core but it gives Harry a much-needed fresh start.

At long last, the #Patriots trade former first-rounder N’Keal Harry and it’s the #Bears as his landing spot for a 2024 7th rounder, per me and @MikeGarafolo. A solid upside move for Chicago, while New England moves on with a strong group itself.

The question is what can Harry do with the change of scenery?  Hopefully begin to realize his potential on a roster that is going to need someone of Harry’s size and talent to elevate the WR production.  Harry has the type of work ethic to turn things around.  Coming out of Arizona State he showed maturity and growth to be a success in the NFL.

Harry’s biggest weakness may be a mental issue with never being the type of person to fit into Boston or with the Patriots culture.  Going from Arizona to Boston is a huge culture shock and can really wear down on a player.  There’s no way to speculate on precisely why Harry has failed in New England

What N’Keal Harry was at Arizona State was a highly productive receiver.  He posted consecutive seasons of 1,000 yards receiving with 8 and 9 touchdowns respectively as a true sophomore and junior.  He was a five-star recruit coming out of high school and made an immediate impact at Arizona State.  Harry showed speed and agility he was able to go up and high point the ball and come down with it.

What Harry has struggled with in the NFL has been gaining separation in his route running.  As a result he hasn’t received many targets or much opportunity to get better with experience.  He did show short area quickness and excellent after the catch ability at ASU, enough that it should translate to the NFL level.

Harry has all of the tools, he’s not slow, he has excellent size and athleticism.  But he needs to shake out the mental block put it all together and become the receiver he’s capable of becoming.

If N’Keal Harry does finally put it all together he could become a surprise addition to the Bears that could absolutely change the depth chart in Chicago. Harry has a chance and now he just to do everything in his power to help himself and the Bears.

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Blackhawks GM Kyle Davidson Goes Scorched Earth. Are Toews and Kane Next?

Who is next to go for the Chicago Blackhawks as new GM Kyle Davidson continues to make changes?

When the Blackhawks promoted Kyle Davidson as their official General Manager in March, he said they were committed to a rebuild. That wasn’t just lip service.

From the time he was an Interim-GM to the present, Davidson has executed the following moves:

Fired Coach Jeremy CollitonTraded Malcolm Subban (future considerations)Traded Alex Nylander for Sam Lafferty

And now for the recent seismic shifts:

Traded fan-favorite Brandon Hagel and two fourth-round picks (2022, 2024) to Tampa for two first-round picks (2023, 2024) and forwards Boris Katchouk and Taylor Raddysh.Traded star-forward Alex Debrincat to Ottawa for the 7th (Kevin Korchinski) and 39th (Paul Ludwinski) overall picks in the 2022 NHL Draft; and a third-round pick in 2024.Traded the Hawks’ former third-overall pick in Kirby Dach to Montreal for the 13th (Frank Nazar) and 66th (Gavin Hayes) overall picks in the 2022 NHL Draft.

In addition to trading Debrincat and Dach, the Blackhawks did not offer qualifying offers to restricted free agents Dominik Kubalik and Dylan Strome. In addition, Henrik Borgstrom was put on waivers.

If you look closely, there is a pattern here. Davidson’s first few moves where no-brainers, undoing the horrific mistakes of the previous regime (Colliton, Nylander, Subban). Then you see a more aggressive approach once Davidson’s “Interim” title is removed – an approach that marks not only a rebuilding strategy, but a shifting of pieces a GM normally would retain for a rebuild.

Debrincat, Dach, and Borgstrom are all very young players. Debrincat is already an established NHL top-six scorer; and although Dach and Borgstrom have struggled, they are even younger and still have size, skill, and upside. Even Strome and Kubalik are not “ancient” players – they are both in their mid-twenties – but to Davidson, they are remnants of a failed rebuild. Davidson’s goal is not just to rebuild; it’s to start completely from scratch.

So what’s next for the Blackhawks?

At this point, it’s not a question of “if” Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews are traded, it’s “when.” Both players will be entering the last year of their contracts. They are all that remains of the Cup Era of Blackhawks hockey; an era from which Davidson, and the majority of Blackhawks fans, are ready to move on.

Although his 10.5 million price tag may deter certain teams with cap trouble, Patrick Kane should command plenty of interest. There are already multiple rumors floating around Kane, which include the Colorado Avalanche and New York Rangers. New York makes sense, being close to Kane’s hometown of Buffalo and with a Cup-contending roster which includes his old line-mate in Artemi Panarin.

Unlike Kane, Toews may be harder to move, both in terms of demand and a worthwhile return. His game has diminished over the years, but he is still a solid two-way center who can play special teams; and who is dominant at the dot.

He’d put a Cup-contending team over the top as a third-line center and is still a second-line center on a deep top-six, but will the demand be as high for Toews as it will be at the trade deadline next year? Probably not, but Davidson may not have a choice but to move him this off-season, even if the return is low.

Otherwise, the Hawks could be stuck with an extremely disgruntled franchise Hall-of-Famer for his final season, which wouldn’t be good for either party.

If by some miracle Kane is not moved before the season begins, he most certainly will be by the trade deadline. The only reason for him to stay was to cement his franchise legacy statistically, but that will be all but impossible for him to improve upon next season, particularly without Debrincat.

Is Jonathan Toews future with the Blackhawks?

Toews may stick around – not by choice necessarily, but rather, a lack of interest from Cup-contending teams he’d want to go to; or a lack of return for Davidson.

Only Toews’ no-movement clause will pose a problem in moving him. Eating salary for either player will pose no problem for the Blackhawks, as they will be well below the cap for the next few years, let alone next year. Both Toews and Kane are well aware by now that the organization’s sole focus is a tear down; and there is zero reason why either one of them would want to stick around for that, understandably.

Without Toews and Kane, the Blackhawks’ resurgence – and the three Stanley Cups that followed – would have never happened. Although players like Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook, Patrick Sharp, Dustin Byfuglien, and Corey Crawford were already in the system, that era truly started with them. Although sad, it’s fitting that Toews and Kane are the last two left. The era truly began with them, and it will end with them. The only question now is when.

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Bears acquire WR N’Keal Harry from Patriots: report

The Bears have acquired wide receiver N’Keal Harry in a trade with the New England Patriots for a 2024 seventh-round draft pick, NFL Network has reported.

The 6-4, 225-pound Harry was a first-round draft pick (32nd overall) by the Patriots in 2019, but has been a disappointment in three seasons. Harry has 57 receptions for 598 yards (10.5 avg.) and four touchdowns in 33 games (18 starts). He had 12 receptions for 184 yards (15.3 avg.) and no touchdowns in 2019.

The Bears have a modest wide receiver corps that, by the numbers, is the least-accomplished in the NFL after veteran Allen Robinson was let go in free agency.

Darnell Mooney, a 2020 fifth-round draft pick who had 81 receptions for 1,055 yards (13.0 avg.) and four touchdowns last season, is the Bears’ No. 1 receiver heading into training camp. Rookie Velus Jones, Jr., a third-round draft pick, is expected to get an opportunity to play a key role this season.

General manager Ryan Poles filled in with complementary receivers from other teams — Byron Pringle (Chiefs), Equanimeous St. Brown (Packers) and David Moore, the former Seahawks receiver who had no catches with four teams last season.

The Bears also have holdover receivers Dazz Newsome, a 2021 sixth-round pick, Nsimba Webster and Isaiah Coulter. The other receivers on the roster are Tajae Sharpe, Dante Pettis, Chris Finke and undrafted rookie Kevin Shea.

The Bears open training camp July 27 at Halas Hall.

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White Sox begin eight game divisional road stretch

The struggling White Sox look to turn the season around with upcoming division games.

The Chicago White Sox have not gotten off to the start fans of the south siders were expecting. The Sox currently sit at a 41-44 record and are five and a half games behind the division-leading Minnesota Twins. At this point, last year the Sox had already earned their 50th win of the season and were the front-runners in the division.

Chicago has an important week of divisional games that can get it back on track to its 2021 ways. The Sox will play eight games in seven days before the All-Star break on July 18th.

The first series started Monday against the  Cleveland Guardians, whose surprising play in the first half of the season puts them only four games behind the Twins.

The White Sox did not get off to the start they were looking for in their first game against the Guardians, losing the game 8-4.

Following its series with the Guardians, Chicago will have a quick turnaround and travel to Minneapolis, Minnesota for another important four-game series with the Twins. Minnesota has had an impressive turnaround this season after finishing in last place in 2021. The signing of All-Star shortstop Carlos Correa during the free agency period was a big help in the Twins’ turnaround.

The White Sox must string together some good performances now more than ever, especially with reports of leadership issues affecting the club. Although a division can’t be won from a couple series in July it can go along way for a slumping team like the White Sox.

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Museum Campus improvements make sense whether Bears stay or not, parks advocate says

There’s “not a lot of hope” that Chicago can keep the Bears — even at a domed Soldier Field — but a new “vision” to re-imagine the museum campus can still reclaim parkland and make Northerly Island the nature preserve it was intended to be, a parks advocate said Tuesday.

Friends of the Parks Executive Director Juanita Irizarry served on the 23-member working group that unveiled its ambitious, 50-page plan last week.

She argued the infamous legal battle that forced movie mogul George Lucas to cancel plans to build a $743 million museum on 17 acres lakefront land near Soldier Field set the stage for this moment.

Never mind that an angry Mayor Rahm Emanuel derisively called the group “Friends of the Parking Lot” for killing his pet project and leaving behind a surface parking lot used by Bears fans a handful of days each year.

“That fight was all about this moment. How can we turn these concrete paths on our lakefront into more green space?” Irizarry told the Sun-Times.

“We are thrilled that there were serious conversations about how to minimize surface parking lots.”

A 2015 rendering of the proposed Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. The project, which would have been built on the site of a parking lot just south of Soldier Field, was ultimately abandoned.

Lucas Museum of Narrative Art/ Distributed by the Associated Press.

Although she is an open space advocate, Irizarry is also a realist. She does not expect “all surface parking lots will disappear” at Soldier Field.

But she is justifiably excited about at least beginning to honor the promisethen-Mayor Richard M. Daley made years ago, when he created the Museum Campus: moving Soldier Field parking lots to the west side of DuSable Lake Shore Drive.

“There were serious conversations about how to utilize other existing parking lots, for example Millennium Park, where there is under-utilization at certain times of the day and certain parts of the week to get folks to park there remotely and then be able to take shuttles and other modes of transportation,” she said.

When Daley famously sent in a fleet of bulldozers to carve giant X’s into the only runway at Meigs Field, the goal supposedly was to turn Northerly Island into a nature park that would provide a genuine urban oasis.

Instead came Huntington Bank Pavilion, a 30,000-seat venue for outdoor concerts. It was supposed to be temporary, but has been open for 17 years and counting.

A rendering of a music venue between Soldier Field and the Field Museum.

City of Chicago/Skidmore, Owings and Merrill

The working group called the pavilion “incongruous” with Northerly Island and recommended removing it, and building a 9,000-seat venue for outdoor concerts between Soldier Field and the Field Museum.

The recommendation was music to Irizarry’s ears.

“Friends of the Parks has, for a long time, been saying that the Huntington venue needed to go. It’s a bad place for a concert venue and Northerly Island is often blocked off to other uses when there is an event going on” there, she said.

“We are thrilled at talk of removing that. … It was not meant to be there permanently. The Park District used to tell us all the time that it was there to generate revenue to help pay off the costs associated with developing Northerly Island and once those costs were paid off, it would go. That has turned out not to be the case.”

The proposal to create a pedestrian bridge to Northerly Island over Burnham Harbor is potentially costly and not among, what Irizarry calls the report’s “low hanging fruit.”

But, the need is undeniable.

“Northerly Island is quite long and walking all the way out there along Solidarity Drive, then all the way out to the point is a long walk. So part of the idea was to have another access point to it. And it is inspired by past Worlds Fair activities there,” she said.

To restore Northerly Island and protect it from “additional erosion damage,” the report resurrects the idea of “barrier reefs” once suggested by renowned Chicago architect Jeanne Gang. That would “result in a man-made lagoon with the potential for snorkeling, calm water for boating and deep water swimming,” the report states.

A rendering of an aerial view of Soldier Field and the Museum Campus, included in a report issued by a mayoral working group, includes a proposed pedestrian bridge over Burnham Harbor, a new plaza along the east side of the stadium and a new music venue between the stadium and the Field Museum.|

City of Chicago/Skidmore, Owings and Merrill

The cost — anywhere from $100 million to $300 million — might sound exorbitant.

But, Irizarry argued, Northerly Island was “one of those early indicators of places where revetments created by the Army Corps of Engineers” were not “standing up to the frequency and severity of storms.”

“The islands idea … might be something we need to do in other places along our lakefront as well, in order to protect parks and homes and other places along the lake that are being battered by erosion,” she said.

“All of these plans tend to be inspirational and visionary. There are part of them that don’t get done. But those that are related to lakeshore erosion are going to be particularly important. … And the city is gonna have to find ways to address these things.”

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Abbey Pub’s Tom Looney dead at 81 of COVID, transformed modest Chicago bar into a music mecca

Tom Looney turned a modest pub into a music mecca.

Mr. Looney, 81, died at a rehab facility Monday of complications related to COVID-19. The coronavirus damaged his lungs after he became sick in April, according to his family.

In the mid-1980s, he and his wife Breege were the landlords for the Abbey Pub, 3420 W. Grace St. After the bar’s owner became ill, they took over, expanding and upgrading the space.

Before long, new acts and established stars were making their way to the Abbey. Musicians found a family atmosphere.Mr. Looney and his son Patrick booked the performers, and the Looney kids would pick them up at the airport.

During the 30 years the Northwest Siders operated the Abbey, it hosted performances by stars as varied as Kris Kristofferson, Wilco, Brad Paisley, Florence + the Machine, Snow Patrol, Wiz Khalifa, The Ting Tings, Christy Moore, Arlo Guthrie, Bonnie Koloc and The Wolfe Tones.

Mr. Looney, an electrician who invested in real estate, also took on the role of president of the Irish American Heritage Center and helped acquire its building at 4626 N. Knox Ave. in the mid-1980s.Some people involved with the center were wary about buying the old Mayfair grade school. But Mr. Looney figured that Irish tradesmen would do the repairs it needed and that descendants of Irish immigrants would donate money to improve the site.

“Tom was the best leader and supporter one could ever have for any Irish cause, whether it be a benefit, music, dance, sports, immigration, culture,” accordionist Jimmy Keane said on Facebook. “I can’t imagine the IAHC being in existence without Tom pulling and pushing for it.”

“He always used to quote Daniel Burnham, ‘Make no little plans,’ ” his daughter Deirdre Looney Reardon said.

The Looneys, whose club was featured in 2011 on the TV show “Bar Rescue,” sold the building around 2015.

Mr. Keane grew up in the Irish village of Ballycashen in the town of Kilnaboy in County Clare. The youngest of seven children, he was just 11 months old when his mother died. People came together to support the family, but, by 10, he was a farmworker, and, “by the time he was 12, he was put in seven different houses,” his wife said.

She said that, at 15, he and a friend went to a bog and cut a big load of “turf” — peat used as fuel –“and took off to England,” landing in Manchester.

In 1960, he immigrated to the United States. Two years later, he was drafted into the Army.

While home visiting Chicago, he called a friend to ask if she’d like to go to a dance. The friend wasn’t home, but the phone was answered by an Irish immigrant who’d arrived in Chicago that very day: Bridget Ellen McGuire, whom he’d later nickname Breege.

He asked her out. She said yes. They had such a good time that he invited her on a date the next night, too. This time, she declined.

“She had only one dress, and she thought, ‘I couldn’t have him pick me up with the same dress two nights in a row,’ ” their daughter said.

“He started writing me all these lovely love letters,” his wife said. “He was the most respectful man I ever met.”

They were married in 1966.

As a father, “No matter what he was doing, he never missed a game” in which his children played, his daughter said.

Another daughter, Siobhan Carroll, said, “Even as an adult — I live out in California –he’d come out and go to all my [tennis and hockey] matches and all my kids’ matches.”

Mr. Looney liked boxing and especially hockey because its speed reminded him of the Irish sport of hurling. On one favorite trip, the Looneys took an RV to the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, where they cheered on the Irish athletes.

“He could tie Ireland into everything,” said his son, linking his homeland to advances in science, marine navigation and the heritage of prominent people, including boxer Muhammad Ali and President Barack Obama. His children joked that, to him, it seemed that every U.S. president was Irish.

He loved poetry and singalongs and was “ever cheerful, kind, inquisitive, charming, with a hearty laugh, smile, firm handshake…and a loving tap on the back,” Keane said.

Mr. Looney is also survived by his son Thomas and eight grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending.

“I was so lucky to have these parents who actually liked each other,” Deirdre Reardon said. “Right before he died, he opened his eyes, looked at my mom and kissed her. He puckered his lips.”

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White Sox’ Tony La Russa agrees with VP Ken Williams: ‘The talent is here’

CLEVELAND — White Sox vice president Ken Williams spoke to the team last weekend.

Manager Tony La Russa agreed with what he had to say.

How could he not? The White Sox are the most disappointing team in baseball.

The Sox continued to stumble during an important road trip with a 4-1 loss Tuesday to the Guardians in Game 1 of a split doubleheader. That followed Monday’s 8-4 loss to the Guardians. The Sox entered Tuesday trailing the Twins by 51/2 games in the AL Central and the Guardians by 11/2 games. After this four-game series concludes, the Sox play four games against the Twins before the All-Star break.

Williams spoke at the occasion of a team gathering to acknowledge shortstop Tim Anderson being named an All-Star starter.

“He spoke up about his observations of the first half,” La Russa said before the game. “And there wasn’t anything he said I disagreed with.”

The gist of Williams’ message?

“We have had our ups and downs and the talent is here to make it more ups than downs in the second half of the season,” La Russa said.

Perhaps. Those watching the Sox’ first 85 games wonder how leading the majors in errors and most defensive metrics, ranking 26th in the majors in homers and 25th in slugging and OPS and running into too many outs on the bases equates to talent.

Teams play good baseball or they don’t. The Sox (41-45) aren’t, so stringing games together with good pitching, hitting and defense have been few and far between.

“Win a couple, lose a couple, here we are again,” La Russa said Tuesday. “We haven’t had that sustained hot streak. So it seems like you’re always grinding, always swimming against the tide. But there is a truism if you follow seasons. At some point your skin has to get tough. You have to have scabs as a team. It’s been rough enough, you don’t walk through the season, show up in October and not have any scars. We keep our toughness going, this is putting stuff in the bank that will pay off later.”

Throughout spring training and April and May, the Sox almost assumed playing in a third straight October was a given.

Not any more.

It’s to the point where things like “team chemistry” are talking points in mid-July.

“A lot of times it gets tested, because of adversity, especially when the adversity lasts for a while,” La Russa said.

“We’ve had the spark but haven’t been able to turn the flame into an inferno,” closer Liam Hendriks said. “That was something we did last year [when the Sox won 93 games and the AL Central title]. But we can catch fire at any point.”

Shane Bieber limited the Sox to three hits and became the first Cleveland pitcher to throw a nine-inning complete game with fewer than 100 pitches since Corey Kluber on Aug. 4, 2018.

Davis Martin, called up from Triple-A Charlotte as the Sox’ 27th man, gave up four runs on eight hits over six innings. The Guardians got three in the third on two-out hits, an RBI double by Amed Rosario and a two-run single to Jose Ramirez.

Rosario doubled in another run in the fifth. Eloy Jimenez singled home Andrew Vaughn in the seventh for the Sox’ first run, bringing the tying run to the plate. But Gavin Sheets rapped into an inning ending double play.

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Colson Montgomery soars up Baseball America prospect rankings

We take a look at where Chicago White Sox prospect Colson Montgomery landed in the updated rankings

Colson Montgomery, the current #1 prospect for the Chicago White Sox, is playing spectacular baseball.  Scouts around the league are beginning to take notice.  Baseball America recently released their mid-season top 100 prospect rankings.

Montgomery slots in at number 53 on the newly released rankings.  At the beginning of the season, he did not even rank in the top 100!  For a prospect to move up so many spots in half a season is truly remarkable and should have White Sox fans excited for Montgomery’s future.

Montgomery was drafted in 2021 by the White Sox as the #22 overall pick in the draft.  For fans that do not know much about him yet, certainly will soon enough.  Indiana’s 2020-21 male high school athlete of the year is turning heads.  His on base streak sits at an absurd 45 straight games!

Colson Montgomery jumped to No. 53. The White Sox 2021 first-rounder is riding a 45-game on base streak. https://t.co/bJUqvTwIN3

Colson Montgomery’s successful debut in Arizona Complex League

In 2021, Montgomery played 26 games in the Arizona league.  He immediately produced a .287, .396, .362 slash line in these games.  He also scored 16 runs along with 27 hits, 7 of them being doubles.  Montgomery immediately showed he belonged with solid production, and has only continued to improve as he moves up in level of competition.

2022 single A ball in Winston-Salem and Kannapolis

So far this baseball season, Colson Montgomery has continued to rake.  He holds an active on base streak of 45 straight games as of July 10th.  It took only 13 games with the Winston-Salem Dash for Montgomery to be promoted to the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers.  In 58 total games with both ball clubs, Montgomery has posted a .326, .431, and .484 slash line.

He has produced 21 extra base hits so far this season, with 6 being homers along with 33 runs batted in.  His patience at the plate has been spectacular.  Montgomery boasts a .915 OPS and 36 walks.

What lies ahead for the #1 White Sox prospect?

It is difficult to predict what comes next for Colson Montgomery.  Whether he will have a spot on the big league roster in the future, or if he will become an enticing trade piece for management.  It’s important to remember that his primary position is shortstop.  As we know, the White Sox now have a 2 time all-star at that position, in Tim Anderson.

What is undeniable, is that Montgomery’s stock is rising and rising fast! His performance in the one year he’s been in the White Sox system, show that they might have hit it out of the park with this draft selection.

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2022 MLB draft: Options for the Chicago White Sox

The 2022 MLB Draft is coming up this weekend, and there are many different ways the Chicago White Sox could go, so who should they draft at 26?

We have hit the point in the MLB season where the focus shifts to the All-Star Week and the draft as teams get a break mid-season. This year’s draft will be an interesting one for the Chicago White Sox as they are set to pick at No. 26 overall following a AL Central title last year.

With a farm system that needs rebuilding, who should the White Sox look at for the pick? We have some options below.

Kumar Rocker

Kumar Rocker is easily one of the most interesting names currently in the draft. Last year’s tenth pick in the draft by the Mets obviously did not end up with the team, and instead played in the Frontier League, so where will be drafted this year?

With less than a week until the MLB Draft, @keithlaw gives his latest mock draft:
2️⃣: @Dbacks, Druw Jones
9️⃣: @Royals, Elijah Green
1️⃣1️⃣: @Mets, Jace Jung
2️⃣4️⃣: @RedSox, Kumar Rocker
https://t.co/QUeJv0U1MP

He won’t go as high as the tenth pick this year, many people believe he will be selected in the second half of the first round, but no one can figure out exactly where. His stats in the Frontier League are skewed because he is better than pretty much all of his competition, but they are still incredibly impressive. Rumors have been circling that Rocker could be called up earlier than the other players drafted and used as a reliever, similar to what the Chicago White Sox have done with both Garret Crochet and Chris Sale.

Stats:

Frontier League = (1-0) 1.35 ERA 20 Innings 32 K’s

College = (28-10) 2.89 ERA 236 Innings 321 K’s

Cade Horton

Horton out of Oklahoma is an interesting prospect. He missed all of 2021 due to Tommy John surgery and played okay to well in the 2022 regular season. However, his draft stock has risen very quickly because of how well he played in the 2022 College World Series. Horton had broken the World Series record for strikeouts in a World Series finals game with 13 strikeouts.

The White Sox have drafted position players in four out of the last five drafts so you would think that they could look to bolster their pitching prospects with this draft. Horton’s fastball ranges from mid to upper 90s and a slider that has touched 90mph multiple times in college. After having Tommy John surgery, this is still very impressive for a 20 year old.

Cade Horton is the 4th pitcher since the NCAA Tournament expanded in 1999 with multiple starts of 10 strikeouts in a MCWS.
Alex Faedo for Florida in 2017
Trevor Bauer for UCLA in 2010
Jason Windsor for CSU Fullerton in 2004 https://t.co/2lz302ETrK

Stats:

College = (5-2) 4.86 ERA 53 Innings 64 K’s

Gabriel Hughes

Hughes has had a terrific career at Gonzaga, with very similar talents as Horton, a power pitcher that throws an upper 90s fastball and hard off-speed as well. He is another pitcher that could greatly benefit a team that is looking to quickly move a player up and use him in the bullpen rather than being a starter from the get go.

In terms of drafting a pitcher, if Rocker is taken, Hughes should be the guy the Sox look at drafting at #26. He is someone that would fit in very nicely with a White Sox pitching staff that has benefited from power pitching as of late.

Stats:

College = (12-8) 3.05 ERA 171 Innings 218 K’s

Chase DeLauter

The only non-pitcher on this list is a powerful left handed outfielder from James Madison University. DeLauter is a power bat with outstanding exit velocity. He has shown signs of being a swing and miss guy but has gotten progressively better over his three seasons at JMU. The White Sox already have two top outfield prospects with Yoelqui Cespedes and Oscar Colas, but DeLauter could be used as a DH and as an outfielder, plus the Sox desperately need more left handed bats in the organization.

Stats:

College (3 Seasons) = .402/.520/.715 66 G 15 HR 70 RBI 24 SB 62 BB

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