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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
James Fegan

With veterans traded, White Sox’ young players need to fill leadership void

Chicago White Sox’s Gavin Sheets (32) high-fives Jake Burger (30) after Burger hit a home run during the sixth inning of a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians, Friday, July 28, 2023, in Chicago. (Erin Hooley/AP)

In shipping out Lance Lynn, Kendall Graveman, Joe Kelly, Lucas Giolito and Reynaldo Lopez, the White Sox carved up their pitching staff and dismantled much of their clubhouse leadership structure.

“It’s going to be a real interesting clubhouse over the next couple of months in a good way,” general manager Rick Hahn said. “There’s going to be room for some of these young guys to grow and blossom and take some of the leadership reins.”

When Lynn, Graveman and Kelly were acquired, their experience was cited by the Sox’ front office as crucial to guiding a young team to contention. With the Sox (42-63) 21 games under .500 after a 3-0 victory against the Guardians on Friday night, the new leadership vacuum is being billed as an opportunity.

“We have players in there with characteristics of becoming really good leaders that have to take the next step, and we have to facilitate those guys in that regard,” manager Pedro Grifol said. “You’ve got to develop leaders in the clubhouse. People have got to step up now and lead.”

In addition to asking him ahead of time for his opinion on new trade acquisition (and old college teammate) Korey Lee, Hahn tabbed third-year first baseman Andrew Vaughn as a potential team leader. Vaughn was out of the lineup Friday with a bruised left foot that has hampered him during a difficult July (.196/.211/.214), but he is one of a handful of Sox regulars that doesn’t need to sweat out the next few days before Tuesday’s trade deadline.

Other candidates, Grifol hopes, will emerge during the team’s last 57 games. He and departing veterans described the rest of the season as a potential proving ground.

“There’s still a lot of talent in that locker room,” Lynn said. “Maybe doing some things here will kind of let guys fall into places where they can become the players [they can be] or take the steps to become great players.”

“A lot of us see it that way, and you can already tell who wants to be in that leadership spot,” said Jake Burger, who swatted his 25th home run Friday. “Aside from leadership, it’s just building a really good culture and going from there.”

A new closer

With Graveman gone and Liam Hendriks sidelined, rookie reliever Gregory Santos got his second save of the season, striking out two in a scoreless ninth.

Whatever save chances the stripped-down Sox can create, Santos is likely to receive a good portion of the opportunities.

“He’s got the makings of it, the characteristics of being a good closer,” Grifol said. “Those guys are born with characteristics you can teach and mold and give them the experience, then you find out what they’re about.”

The next Cuban mainstay?

Before making his organizational debut with Double-A Birmingham on Friday, newly acquired catching prospect Edgar Quero showed familiarity with the line of Cuban players he’s following with his new team.

“I know [Yoan] Moncada, [Luis Robert Jr.], [Jose] Abreu before, [Oscar] Colas now, so I know that this team loves the Latin guys, the Latin players and the Cuban players especially, and I feel grateful for that,” Quero said.

Sox catching coordinator Julio Mosquera was a regular presence with the big-league team during the first half, but the roving instructor is expected to work extensively with Quero.

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