White Sox 4, Tigers 3 (F/10): Walk-off dingers really sting

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After a disappointing mid-week series that the Tigers dropped against the cellar-dwelling Angels, they hit the road for the south side of Chicago for the opener of a trio of games against the White Socks — who were wearing a new City Connects outfit that makes them look like the Bulls — and it didn’t go well as the home team came back to win 4-3 in a gut-punch of a tenth inning.

Troy Melton made his second start of the season, after a late beginning due to right elbow inflammation. He had three solid outings for the Tigers in the playoffs (and a terrible one), and getting any kind of pitching help is definitely welcome at this point. His first start of the year was the nightcap of the doubleheader against the Orioles: he went 5 2/3 innings, and while he walked three he only gave up a pair of hits and a solitary run.

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The Pale Hose went with an opener, lefty Brandon Eisert, before righty Erick Fedde took over. It’s been tough slogging for the veteran lately: after a nice seven-inning outing against the Angels at the end of April, May has not been kind to him and his previous appearance saw him surrender eight runs in 3 1/3 innings. He’s been giving up home runs at a pretty astonishing rate this year: a dozen of ‘em in 49 1/3 innings coming into tonight.

Speaking of that, in the third inning, Dillon Dingler opened the scoring thusly after a Zack Short walk:

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The Chicagoans got a run back in the bottom of the inning with a single and a double, narrowing the gap to 2-1.

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Fedde got himself into a peck o’ trouble in the top of the fourth: the Tigers loaded the bases with two out after a pair of singles and a walk, bringing Short to the plate. Alas, Short lined out to short and the Tigers left ‘em loaded. Would’ve been really nice to get another run there.

Meanwhile, Melton looked good; he gave up four doubles, but managed to strand all those runners. His fastball commmand was a little off and pitching from behind in a lot of counts hurt his strikeout total, but he managed to figure out how to get through innings pretty efficiently, needing only 77 pitches through six frames. At the end of the seventh his pitch count was 89 so his night was done, and his final line was delightful: 7 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 K… don’t worry, Troy, those strikeouts will come along.

Will Vest took over in the bottom of the eighth and gave up an infield single, but got a double play to erase the runner. Now, the last time we saw Vest, things went spectacularly awfully for him late in a long appearance… but this time around he got three pretty crisp outs to take the game to the ninth with the same score.

It would’ve been nice if the Tigers added some insurance in the top of the ninth, but that didn’t happen, so the game was turned over to Kyle Finnegan with a one-run lead, which didn’t go particularly well.

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With one out, Andrew Benintendi singled to right; Tristan Peters did the same to put runners on the corners. Rikuu Nishida bunted back to Finnegan, who threw to first as Benintendi waited off third; as soon as Finnegan threw, Benintendi bolted for home and Spencer Torkelson’s throw home was wild, letting Peters get to third.

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Drew Romo followed with a tricky grounder to Torkelson at first, and with some amount of acrobatics he threw to Finnegan covering first to just nab Romo and send the game to extra innings, which have really not been good for the Tigers so far this year. Tonight was no exception.

The Manfred Man for the Tigers in the tenth was Matt Vierling, who was bunted over to third by Zach McKinstry and driven-in by Short with a sacrifice fly to go up 3-2. The Tigers typically try to play for two in that scenario, but with McKinstry and Short it probably made sense to move the runner and just try for one and hope Drew Anderson could hold it.

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Could the Tigers get three outs before giving up a run? It was decided that Drew Anderson was going to give it a try. Romo started the bottom of the inning on second base, and Anderson got a strikeout, a grounder to third that glued Romo to second, and… well…

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Yep, Miguel Vargas hit a two-run walk-off home run to win the game for the White Sox, 4-3. There ya go. That’s your 2026 Detroit Tigers, everybody. At least the home team’s uniforms were lousy.

Notes and Whatnot

  • Writing a recap that has both Zach McKinstry and Zack Short on the same team is annoying because of how they spell their names just a little bit differently.

  • It was only just today that I learned that my city library’s e-book app also has access to a boatload of magazines, all readable for free. We’ve got National Geographic, we’ve got New Scientist, we’ve got Blue Pants Weekly. Check out you local library; the app around here is called Libby.

  • On this day in 1660, King Charles II (not the current UK monarch’s dad, for the record) was restored to the throne after that little misunderstanding with the Cromwell fellows.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: Sports.yahoo.com