The Mariners bounced back from a 1-5 homestand with a sweep in San Diego, outscoring the Padres 15-3 in three games. The rotation was good, the bullpen was good, and the lineup was good. The Mariners now hold the top spot in the AL West heading into one of the “friendlier” stretches of the season — three of their next six series are against the AL’s cellar dwellers. It comes at a good time, too. The Mariners lineup has cooled to average in May after having one of the org’s best months ever in April. But they’ve shown massive home-road splits this month, with a .244 wOBA and 31.1% strikeout rate at home, and a .332 wOBA and 19.3% strikeout rate on the road. The rotation, missing its top three arms, has struggled to pitch deep into games, exposing a shallow bullpen. The next three weeks will take the Mariners to the summer months with a (hopefully) more complete roster.

At a Glance

Mariners

White Sox

Mariners

White Sox

Game 1

Monday, May 19 | 4:40 pm

RHP Luis Castillo

RHP Davis Martin

59%

41%

Game 2

Tuesday, May 20 | 4:40 pm

LHP Jhonathan Díaz

RHP Bryse Wilson

61%

39%

Game 3

Wednesday, May 21 | 11:10 am

RHP Logan Evans

RHP Shane Smith

52%

48%

*Game odds courtesy of FanGraphs

Team Overview

Overview

White Sox

Mariners

Edge

Overview

White Sox

Mariners

Edge

Batting (wRC+)

77 (15th in AL)

115 (3rd in AL)

Mariners

Fielding (OAA)

-6 (12th)

-7 (14th)

White Sox

Starting Pitching (FIP-)

109 (9th)

93 (6th)

Mariners

Bullpen (FIP-)

108 (12th)

104 (10th)

Mariners

Last year, the White Sox were 14-33 through 47 games. They would finish as the worst team ever. This year, the White Sox are 14-33 through 47 games. They just got swept by 18 runs at the Cubs. There’s reason to believe this year’s squad is a bit improved (their negative run differential is about half what it was at this point last year), and the Rockies seem to be redefining what “worst ever” means. But the White Sox remain one of the weakest opponents the Mariners will face this year. Still, the White Sox took a home series against the Astros earlier this month and a home series against the Red Sox in April. They have a respectable -1 run differential at Rate Field, which has played colder than any other park this year. It’s expected to be cold, wet and windy this week. The series won’t be a breeze.

White Sox Lineup

Player

Position

Bats

PA

K%

BB%

ISO

wRC+

Player

Position

Bats

PA

K%

BB%

ISO

wRC+

Chase Meidroth

SS

R

92

15.2%

12.0%

0.074

114

Miguel Vargas

3B

R

180

17.2%

9.4%

0.176

114

Joshua Palacios

RF

L

89

24.7%

10.1%

0.065

69

Luis Robert Jr.

CF

R

176

29.5%

11.9%

0.125

69

Edgar Quero

C

S

94

14.9%

10.6%

0.037

106

Andrew Vaughn

1B

R

182

23.6%

3.8%

0.132

45

Josh Rojas

2B

L

39

33.3%

10.3%

0.000

28

Tim Elko

DH

R

22

31.8%

4.5%

0.286

93

Brooks Baldwin

LF

S

142

26.8%

4.9%

0.115

64

The White Sox lineup is bad. There’s some chance you’ll recognize more names on their coaching staff. Rookie shortstop Chase Meidroth has been interesting, showing a great eye and contact rate while batting leadoff. Fellow rookie Edgar Quero has also shown a great eye and contact rate, albeit with a bit more power than Meidroth. Miguel Vargas, who the White Sox acquired from the Dodgers last year in the Michael Kopech deal, struggled early but has been hot for a month now and hit four homers last week. Everyone else has been bad. Luis Robert Jr. doubled his walk rate this year and leads MLB in stolen bases at 17. He also has a 30% strikeout rate with no power. Andrew Vaughn has pushed his walk rate to a new low as a first baseman with no power. Former Mariner Josh Rojas is looking for his first extra base hit after starting the year on the injured list.

Probable Pitchers

Updated Stuff+ Explainer

MLB: Miami Marlins at Chicago White Sox

Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

Game 1 Pitching Matchup

Pitcher

IP

K%

BB%

HR/FB%

GB%

ERA

FIP

Pitcher

IP

K%

BB%

HR/FB%

GB%

ERA

FIP

Davis Martin

49 1/3

15.7%

5.7%

10.7%

45.7%

3.65

4.26

Luis Castillo

49 1/3

18.2%

9.3%

6.5%

43.5%

3.65

3.86

RHP Davis Martin

Pitch

Frequency

Velocity

Stuff+

Whiff+

BIP+

xwOBA

Pitch

Frequency

Velocity

Stuff+

Whiff+

BIP+

xwOBA

Four-seam

29.3%

93.5

98

92

103

0.357

Sinker

7.5%

92.3

97

Cutter

22.0%

88.9

94

86

106

0.341

Changeup

24.1%

90.0

99

61

92

0.363

Curveball

2.4%

77.7

Slider

14.7%

83.8

97

89

95

0.426

Across his first three seasons in the majors, encompassing 162.2 innings, Davis Martin has posted FIPs of 4.28, 4.27, and 4.24. While the peripherals have stayed relatively stable, his ERA has dropped from 4.83 in his rookie season to 3.65 this year. He uses a kitchen sink approach to keep batters off balance, though none of his individual pitches are standouts. With a command-over-stuff profile and deep six-pitch repertoire, you might expect that his contact quality metrics would be driving his success. Unfortunately, his low ERA is a pretty significant mirage; he’s allowed a 47.5% hard hit rate this year, a ten point increase over last year, and batters are barreling up his pitches more than 10% of the time. Regression is coming.

Game 2 Pitching Matchup

Pitcher

IP

K%

BB%

HR/FB%

GB%

ERA

FIP

Pitcher

IP

K%

BB%

HR/FB%

GB%

ERA

FIP

Bryse Wilson

33

12.4%

9.2%

17.8%

35.7%

6.00

6.47

Jhonathan Díaz

30 2/3

19.9%

7.4%

16.7%

53.7%

5.87

5.10

Díaz’s stats from minor leagues

RHP Bryse Wilson

Pitch

Frequency

Velocity

Stuff+

Whiff+

BIP+

xwOBA

Pitch

Frequency

Velocity

Stuff+

Whiff+

BIP+

xwOBA

Four-seam

12.3%

92.2

98

Sinker

26.0%

91.9

108

69

90

0.369

Cutter

24.7%

88.1

89

86

60

0.528

Changeup

19.3%

85.8

86

47

88

0.385

Curveball

17.7%

80.4

107

57

65

0.450

It’s been a long time since Bryse Wilson was a top prospect for the Braves; nearly a decade in fact. In that time, he has bounced around a bunch of teams, carving out a role as a swingman and long reliever for the Pirates, Brewers, and now White Sox. Every rebuilding club needs innings eaters, no matter their quality, and Wilson just happens to be the guy for Chicago right now. He has eaten innings, but has done nothing else to really benefit the Sox.

Game 3 Pitching Matchup

Pitcher

IP

K%

BB%

HR/FB%

GB%

ERA

FIP

Pitcher

IP

K%

BB%

HR/FB%

GB%

ERA

FIP

Shane Smith

48 1/3

21.3%

7.9%

4.2%

43.8%

2.05

3.17

Logan Evans

21

15.1%

8.6%

7.7%

37.1%

2.57

4.15

RHP Shane Smith

Pitch

Frequency

Velocity

Stuff+

Whiff+

BIP+

xwOBA

Pitch

Frequency

Velocity

Stuff+

Whiff+

BIP+

xwOBA

Four-seam

43.1%

95.0

91

131

94

0.310

Sinker

7.1%

94.9

97

Changeup

21.8%

90.0

103

111

83

0.296

Curveball

8.1%

81.5

96

Slider

19.4%

88.7

94

77

79

0.289

Shane Smith’s success has been the brightest beacon of hope for the White Sox this year. A Rule 5 pick from the Brewers, Smith has had a wild path to the majors. He threw all of 10.1 innings in college thanks to injury and COVID, signed with Milwaukee as an undrafted free agent, and very quickly rose through their system as a one-inning reliever. He only made the switch to the rotation midway through last year, but gaudy strikeout numbers in the minors made him an enticing pick for the White Sox, who had the roster room to take a risk on someone like Smith. Across his first nine starts in the big leagues, Smith has been brilliant, pitching to a 2.05 ERA and a 3.15 FIP.

The Big Picture:

AL West Standings

Team

W-L

W%

Games Behind

Recent Form

Team

W-L

W%

Games Behind

Recent Form

Mariners

26-19

0.578

W-L-W-W-W

Astros

24-22

0.522

2.5

W-L-W-L-W

Rangers

25-23

0.521

2.5

W-W-L-W-L

Athletics

22-25

0.468

5.0

L-L-L-L-L

Angels

20-25

0.444

6.0

L-L-W-W-W

The Astros and Rangers split their four-game set last weekend, keeping them tied in the standings and well behind the M’s. Houston travels to Tampa Bay this week while the Rangers head to New York for three games against the Yankees. In a huge upset, the Angels swept the Dodgers during Rivalry Weekend and now travel to Sacramento to face the Athletics.