White Sox must prioritize stability in 2026 Winter Meetings

The White Sox need to approach this year’s MLB Winter Meetings with one primary goal: diversifying their talent. Last year, Chicago focused on acquiring high-ceiling prospects and veterans who had strung together a couple of average seasons. While that was enough to get them through their first full rebuild year, the Sox now face a conundrum with their position players.

An exploratory exercise to understand how Sox hitters stacked against the league reveals a roster gap. Using R, I plotted 2025 batting statistics for players who played at least 50 games, according to age. The horizontal lines on each graph indicate the league average among MLB players who played at least 50 games, and the dots are color-coded to highlight how the Sox hit against that average. The three graphs below, examining batting average, slugging percentage, and on-base plus slugging percentage, display two significant problems.

 

 

 

First, talent is concentrated among young players ages 20 to 25, as evident in all three plots. Specifically looking at batting average, four of the best five hitters are under 26 — Kyle Teel, Edgar Quero, Lenyn Sosa, and Chase Meidroth — while Mike Tauchman is the only veteran with a batting average above the .242 league average. Without Tauchman, the Sox need to inject consistency into their lineup. While several players like Colson Montgomery and Miguel Vargas hover near the league batting average, the Sox are clearly underperforming. To win more games and advance their rebuild, consistency needs to be a bottom line.

Second, the South Siders are missing reliable players who are in the prime of their careers. There aren’t any high-performing 26 to 31-year-olds who add much power above the league slugging percentage (.394) on-base plus slugging (.706) average to stabilize the lineup. Andrew Benintendi and Austin Slater — the latter of whom was dealt to the Yankees before the trade deadline — were the only hitters who produced near- or above-league-average numbers in all three metrics. The cause for this missing roster backbone is Chicago’s roster collapse in 2023 and the team’s inability to develop its former young core of Tim Anderson, Eloy Jiménez, Yoán Moncada, and Andrew Vaughn.

In Chicago’s previous rebuild position, solid middle-aged free agents didn’t make sense to sign. However, now it makes complete sense.

These graphs indicate that the Sox must find guys who can hit closer to league average and aren’t at the start or end of their careers. With these roster vacancies, here are two position players Chris Getz and Co. should target at the Winter Meetings.

Ty France, 1B

Chicago needs a steady bat who can bring the lineup’s hitting closer to the league average, and France checks those boxes. In his seven years in the majors, France has slashed .262/.334/.400. While his power has dipped a bit since his 2022 All-Star season with the Mariners, he’s remained relatively healthy throughout his career.

The Sox could easily pony up the money for France. Spotrac’s projected $1.67 AAV is considerably low given his infield versatility and recent Gold Glove Award. Even if France commands $4-5 million AAV, he would still be within Chicago’s price range.

Max Kepler, RF

Kepler may be on the older side of the target veteran age range, but his power is hard to pass on in the current right field market. He has a .425 slugging percentage and .741 OPS in his 11 major league seasons. At his best, he crushed 36 home runs, slugged .519, and didn’t commit a single fielding error. The biggest issue is that injuries have prevented Kepler from gaining enough traction to become a mainstay power hitter in the league. He has missed at least 30 games in each of his last five seasons.

While the injuries may be a red flag, Kepler is worth it. He’s more established than Brooks Baldwin, the current starting right fielder, and his defense is a tremendous asset. A one-year, $8-9 million contract is a fair price to pay for a lefty bat to replace Tauchman, solidify right field, and keep Braden Montgomery’s seat warm.

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