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Free agent Luis Arraez may be a fit for the Chicago White Sox
The Chicago White Sox have created a youth movement that has taken over the team in recent years. But the team is still in need of veteran players.
Enter infielder Luis Arraez, who is still in need of a new team entering December.
The Athletic’s Andy McCullough recently predicted that Arraez would sign with the White Sox.
“As the White Sox continue their rebuilding effort, it wouldn’t hurt to have a guy like Arraez, especially if his bat catches fire and he can be dealt for prospects in July,” McCullough wrote.
What Can Fans Expect?
Arraez is a three-time all-star and three-time batting champion who would bring a great hit tool to a team that had a .232 team batting average in 2025, good for 27th in the majors.
With a .317 lifetime batting average and a .329 lifetime batting average with balls in play, Arraez excels at getting balls in play. He also has struck out just 215 times across seven seasons, good for a minuscule 6.1 strikeout percentage.
But despite his success as a contact hitter, there are reasons he hasn’t been signed yet, as well as questions about his fit on a 26-man roster.
“I couldn’t find a perfect fit for Arraez, because it’s hard to find a fit for such a player,” McCullough wrote. “Everyone knows the things he doesn’t do particularly well — run the bases, play the field, hit for power — and everyone knows the thing he does as well as anyone in baseball: hit singles.”
With 31 career stolen bases and 36 home runs, his power numbers and base-running have always been a weakness. However, his defense in recent years has made him a potential liability.
The worry with Arraez is where a team would place him in the field. According to Baseball Savant, Arraez had -9 Outs Above Average, good for fourth percentile in the majors.
With a 25th percentile sprint speed, he’s not able to get to balls as easily as other infielders are.
Although he has played all over the infield throughout his career, having Arraez as a utility infielder would not be a good idea, given his poor defense. In recent years, his usage at first base has increased dramatically, going from 533 innings at first in 2024 to 994 innings in 2025.
However, his OAA at first was -7 in 2025, despite playing the vast majority of his innings there.
So Where Does Chicago Theoretically Place Arraez?
With the major youth movement in Chicago, there is not much room for Arraez to get substantial playing time anywhere in the infield but first base.
With young players in Colson Montgomery, Miguel Vargas, Chase Meidroth, Lenyn Sosa and others waiting in the minor leagues, there is a major logjam in the infield for the White Sox.
However, the White Sox are in need of a player with experience at first base.
With only Vargas and Sosa having experience at first base among those aforementioned names, and both being much better defensively, Arraez may have trouble sliding into the lineup. As a lefty bat, he could platoon with Sosa.
But is it worth displacing Sosa, who hit a career-high 22 home runs in 2025? That’s for GM Chris Getz to decide.
Matthew Singer Matthew Singer is a sports reporter covering MLB for Heavy.com. He has written for Heavy since 2025, and has two years of experience covering local professional, collegiate and high school sports, including writing for Cronkite News and Arizona PBS. More about Matthew Singer
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