White Sox frustrated after losing another close game

HOUSTON — White Sox third baseman Miguel Vargas got almost all of Astros closer Josh Hader’s slider down in the zone in the ninth inning with the Sox trailing by a run after pinch-hitter Mike Tauchman’s home run.

But Vargas didn’t get enough to send the ball over the wall in left field for a game-tying home run. Instead, the ball bounced off the wall for a two-out double. Left fielder Austin Slater struck out in the next at-bat to end the game.

“A good battle against a really good pitcher, [Vargas] put a good swing on it . . . need a couple more push-ups on that one,” manager Will Venable said.

The Sox (23-46) lost Thursday’s game 4-3 against the Astros, losing the series. It was a frustrating day for the Sox’ offense. They struck out 16 times, and when they made hard contact it found the gloves of Astros defenders.

Vargas and catcher Edgar Quero enjoyed success Thursday. Quero had two RBI, and he and Vargas combined for six of the Sox’ 10 hits.

With the game scoreless in the third, Quero drove in Vargas on an opposite-field RBI single that gave the Sox a 1-0 lead.

Vargas led off the fifth with a triple with the Sox trailing by two runs. Quero once again drove him in with an RBI single to cut the lead to 3-2. But the offense squandered several scoring chances, going 2-for-8 with runners in scoring position.

“Not a good day because we didn’t win the ballgame,” said Quero, who went 3-for-4 with two RBI. “These days we’ve been playing really good so we’re going to keep playing hard.”

Thursday’s loss was the Sox’ 21st one-run game, and they fell to 4-17 in those games. The Sox are frustrated and want to turn these close losses into wins.

“You’re starting to feel our reaction to these are no longer, ‘Way to go, we competed,’ it’s we’re upset that we didn’t win the game,” Venable said. ‘‘That’s the reflection of the growth of this club, and that’s what you earn by playing good baseball.”

White saves the bullpen

Right-hander Owen White was huge for the Sox in Wednesday’s loss. With right-hander Sean Burke going just 3⅔ innings, the Sox had a lot of innings to cover. White being able to work 4⅓ innings, allowing three runs on seven hits, was vital to keeping the bullpen fresh for what is likely a bullpen game on Saturday.

“He helped us out big-time and I thought he did a great job,” Venable said of White. “I know we talked about it last night, the line maybe wasn’t great, but . . . we asked him to do a lot, maybe asked him to cover an inning more than we should have.”

Injury updates

  • Starter Jonathan Cannon doesn’t have a timetable yet for his return from a lower back strain that forced the team to place him on the 15-day IL.
  • Second baseman Lenyn Sosa (right hip flexor strain) will start a rehab assignment at Triple-A Charlotte on Friday.
  • Sosa was placed on the 10-day IL on June 4.
Latest on the White sox
The Sox (23-46) fell 4-3 to the Astros on Thursday, losing the series. It was a frustrating day for the offense. The Sox struck out 16 times, and even when they made good contact, it resulted in hard outs.
“We knew that we had some of these young guys coming up here, and we wanted to ideally find the right time to get them up here and have some success and continue to develop,” assistant general manager Josh Barfield said. “From that standpoint, it’s been positive.”
It’s already benefitting from backing down. According to an industry source, viewership was up an average of about 60% during CHSN’s first weekend on Comcast compared to the previous weekend.
“Just one of those nights where you get hit around a little bit,” Burke said. “They hit some pitches that I made mistakes on, and they hit some pitches that I thought I made some decent pitches on.”
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