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Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
Sport
LaMond Pope

3 offseason questions facing the Chicago White Sox at pitcher and catcher, including filling Mike Clevinger’s impact

The 2022 Chicago White Sox had one of baseball’s top starters in Dylan Cease and one of the game’s best relievers in Liam Hendriks. But inconsistency and injuries affected the rotation and bullpen as a whole.

Catcher Yasmani Grandal will look to rebound after career lows in hitting (.202), on-base percentage (.301) and slugging (.269).

What’s next for the Sox behind the plate and on the mound? Here are three questions to monitor this offseason.

1. What will be Mike Clevinger’s impact?

The White Sox entered the offseason with a hole in their rotation.

“Obviously we need another starter,” pitching coach Ethan Katz said during a video conference call Nov. 17. “That right now is our biggest need from the pitching standpoint.”

The team addressed that need Sunday, signing free agent Mike Clevinger.

The right-hander is familiar with the American League Central, spending parts of five seasons with Cleveland before being traded to San Diego in 2020.

Clevinger, who turns 32 on Dec. 21, went 7-7 with a 4.33 ERA and 91 strikeouts in 23 appearances (22 starts) for the Padres in 2022 after missing all of 2021 recovering from Tommy John surgery. It will be interesting to see what steps he takes after being further removed from that surgery. He had 114⅓ innings in 2022.

His career high in innings (200) came while going 13-8 with a 3.02 ERA and 207 strikeouts in 2018. He matched the career high in wins the next season, going 13-4 with a 2.71 ERA in 21 starts (126 innings).

Clevinger takes a spot occupied by Johnny Cueto last season.

Signed to a minor-league deal, Cueto gave the Sox a lift once he joined the big-league team in May, going 8-10 with a 3.35 ERA in 24 starts (25 appearances). He was the definition of an innings-eater (158⅓) and pitched at least six innings in 19 of the 24 starts.

Clevinger joins a group led by Cease, who placed second in AL Cy Young Award voting. The Sox will be looking for more out of Lance Lynn, Lucas Giolito and Michael Kopech.

Lynn, who was out until June because of right knee surgery to repair a torn tendon, battled back to go 8-7 with a 3.99 ERA in 21 starts. Giolito’s ERA hovered around 5.00 for much of the final two months before finishing at 4.90.

Kopech showed promise returning to a starting role after spending much of 2021 as a reliever, but his season was cut short by injury. He underwent surgery in late September to address what the team called an “issue with (his right) meniscus” and is expected to be “ready for spring full go,” according to pitching coach Ethan Katz.

2. How is the bullpen shaping up in terms of health and responsibilities?

The Sox added to their bullpen leading up to 2022 with Kendall Graveman and Joe Kelly and before the trade deadline with Jake Diekman.

Graveman was steady (3.18 ERA in 65 appearances), but Kelly (6.08 ERA in 43 appearances) and Diekman (6.52 ERA in 26 outings) weren’t as effective.

Hendriks had another strong season, finishing third in the majors with 37 saves. Reynaldo López and Jimmy Lambert made solid contributions, while injuries slowed Aaron Bummer and sidelined Garrett Crochet.

Overall, Hahn thought the bullpen was “a positive” in 2022.

“Certainly Liam performed at his traditional excellent All-Star level,” Hahn said. “Graveman served the role that he was brought in to serve. And Reynaldo López made a nice step forward. Jimmy Lambert acquainted himself well to the big leagues in a reliever role, which was new to him.”

Hahn said Kelly’s “underlying metrics” were “awfully positive.”

“Given that he was coming off the (right biceps nerve injury),” Hahn said, “(it) wasn’t shocking that it took him a little while to get his legs under him.”

Hahn said if Crochet and Bummer were healthy the Sox bullpen would have gone from “very good” to “excellent.” He anticipates López, who has experience starting, to remain in his bullpen role. Same with Lambert.

As for what’s ahead for Crochet, who missed all of 2022 after undergoing Tommy John surgery, Katz said: “Realistically, I don’t think starting is in the cards next year.”

“This is just me speaking, because if he’s starting — say he is ready maybe a month after the season (and) he starts — his innings are going to be done with his rehab process,” Katz said. “You also have to factor in how’s he feeling, how’s it going. And it’s pretty tough to go out there saying, ‘You’ve got two innings, you’ve got three innings.’ That kills a bullpen. So you’re looking at maybe a piggyback situation.

“Thinking creatively, I don’t know if that’s realistic in the beginning of the season with him coming back. It’s just a matter of getting him on the field, see how he’s feeling, going from there. In the bullpen you have a better opportunity to manage him a little bit more, to take care of him, and he can get multiple ups so he’s still getting a workload under him. But it’s a little bit more controlled, whereas starting you have to take care of the other guys on the team as well.”

3. What’s the key to more production at catcher?

Not that Hahn needed a reminder, but he has heard from fans about the Sox’s lack of production at catcher.

“Do we need to add a catcher to accomplish what we want to do next year? No,” Hahn said. “Do we have to get better at various positions? Yes. And that was one area where we underperformed last year. Doesn’t mean we feel we necessarily have to go out and address that.

“Once at O’Hare and once even at the airport (in Las Vegas) when I was getting my bag, I had various fans tell me that catcher was an area we need to improve at. Word is out on that. I get that’s out there. Certainly an area where we can stand improvement.”

That starts with getting Grandal back to his best. He went from 23 homers in 93 games in 2021 to five homers in 99 games in ‘22.

Grandal, 34, had offseason right knee surgery in October 2021, missed more than a month after suffering lower back spasms in mid-June and had a 10-day IL stint in late August with a left knee strain.

“(Grandal) obviously struggled, had his physical issues in ‘22, and it’s important not to lose sight of how productive he was the year before,” Hahn said. “And having Yasmani right — the 2021 version of Yasmani Grandal, much less the guy he was several years leading up to that — is a huge asset to the ‘23 White Sox. Fortunately we’ll have a full offseason to get him healthy, get all things aligned properly there.

“His work with (manager) Pedro (Grifol) we think will be beneficial. And, knock on wood, we’ll get him back to the level he was at in ‘21, which would be a huge shot in the arm.”

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