White Sox make not-so-clean getaway from Cleveland

CLEVELAND — Another series, another series lost.

Make it nine in a row on the road and 1-12-1 overall in the last 14 series for the White Sox following a 8-4 defeat to the Cleveland Guardians Thursday before a holiday crowd 29,404 at Progressive Field.

Having played somewhat better of late, with four wins in six games going in and a 5-4 record against the AL Central leading Guardians (54-31), swiping a series in Cleveland was within grasp.

But the Sox (25-64) had one of those Soxy days where first baseman Gavin Sheets threw late to catcher Korey Lee on a high chopper instead of taking a sure out in a four-run inning, Lee’s interference on Josh Naylor erased second baseman Nicky Lopez’ diving stop on Naylor’s ground ball and reliever Chad Kuhl, who threw 94 pitches in relief on a bullpen day, forgot about Jose Ramirez rounding third to score as he covered first base.

Lee, whose development at a key position has been a positive in a season of negatives, trotted to first base with two outs in the ninth thinking it was ball four. Then he got called out on strikes to end the game.

Right fielder Tommy Pham mishandled a base hit that cost the Sox 90 feet on the Guardians basepaths, although it didn’t figure in the scoring.

But you get the picture.

“Probably go back to game one, that was the difference in the series,” shortstop Paul DeJong said of a 7-6 walk-off win for Cleveland. “Today they had control, yesterday [8-2 win] we had control. They made some good plays. Their baserunning on me in particular was a huge factor, that ball Naylor got in the way on [on DeJong’s errant throw to third in the first game] then that run with Ramirez today [on DeJong’s return throw to first on an attempted double play]. Good aggressive plays by them and that was the difference.”

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The Sox came up short on multiple attempted double plays in the series.

“Just little things, little details,” manager Pedro Grifol said. “The game [Thursday] came up to a few decisions that we opted in another direction that cost us. And against that team right there, you can’t.”

 

Sosa’s hot streak

 

With an RBI single and two-run homer, third baseman Lenyn Sosa became the first Sox since Jose Abreu in 2022 to have five consecutive multi-hit games. Sosa is 11-for-22 with two homers and three doubles in that stretch.

Sosa beamed upon hearing he joined Abreu in that company.

“It’s just trying to hit the ball through the middle and keep my approach simple,” Sosa said through a translator.

Clevinger closer

 Mike Clevinger will throw 50-55 pitches in a rehab start for Charlotte Friday and could join the Sox next week. When he returns, Grifol said Clevinger might piggyback another starter or make a start himself but on a limited pitch count.

“He’s obviously not going to grab the ball and take it to the seventh inning,” Grifol said.

Clevinger was on an assignment after going on the IL with elbow inflammation May 28, then paused the assignment June 27 because of inflammation in his upper back and neck area.

Clevinger signed a one-year, $3 million contract with the Sox on April 4. He owns a 6.75 ERA over four starts and 16 innings.

“Missing spring training is just not in the cards for anybody,” he said. “Highly necessary, as much as we like to say it’s too long. Six weeks is the right amount of time.”

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This and that

Outfielder Dominic Fletcher’s rehab assignment (left shoulder) was transferred from Arizona to Charlotte.

*Catcher Edgar Quero and shortstop Brooks Baldwin were promoted from Double-A Birmingham to Charlotte.

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