This White Sox hurler is ready to be a starter

January 12th, 2024

This story was excerpted from Scott Merkin's White Sox Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

CHICAGO -- Chris Getz spoke to the media for the first time in 2024 via Zoom on Tuesday, and here’s a look at a few topics touched on by the White Sox general manager.

I’ve been on vacation this past week and Jason Beck, our outstanding Tigers’ writer, did a great job of explaining the latest on Dylan Cease and trade talks surrounding the right-hander. So, my focus is on the non-Cease areas.

FOR STARTERS, CROCHET
, the 24-year-old southpaw, always has had a desire to start since being selected 11th overall out of the University of Tennessee in the 2020 MLB Draft. In 2024, Crochet will be stretched out to get that opportunity.

“Feedback on Garrett has been very positive, and he’s preparing this season to be a starter,” Getz said. “It’s something he has done in the past. He has the weapons to do so. He has had some health hiccups along the way. Physically he’s in a very good spot.

“At the end of the season and into the offseason, we continued to have conversations about what the expectations are and how do you see yourself, and this is how we get there. He believes he can be a starter. We’ve seen him be a starter in the past. So we are going to go into spring prepared to stretch him out, and we’ll make adjustments along the way if need be.”

I went back and clarified with Getz and the White Sox after the Zoom regarding whether Crochet’s stretching out will take place as part of the White Sox bullpen, as they did with Michael Kopech in 2021, or as part of a Minor League rotation at the season’s outset. I was told every path is on the table right now for Crochet, with his being treated as a starter come Spring Training being the only certainty.

All 72 of Crochet’s career appearances have come from the bullpen, where he assembled a 2.71 ERA with 85 strikeouts over 73 innings. His 54 1/3 innings in 2021 rank as the most he has logged in the Majors, as he lost the ’22 campaign and part of ’23 to Tommy John surgery and his ensuing recovery.

Crochet spoke with great candor near the end of last season about wanting to give starting a chance in order to at least prove to himself he can or can’t do it. That opportunity has begun.

“I was hoping to get a little bit of an innings base under my belt this year so then I could do that a little bit easier,” Crochet said. “At the end of the day, I feel like that sort of routine is a better routine for me based on the bumps and bruises that have been happening. I feel like I have the stuff to fulfill that role. I just want the opportunity to do it.”

“He hasn’t started in a couple years,” Getz said. “So it’s going to take a little bit of time to appropriately stretch him out. We are going in with the intention for him to be a starter in 2024.”

WHO’S IN RIGHT FIELD?
That decision hasn’t been established yet, according to Getz.

“There are internal options,” Getz said. “We’ve signed some players to non-roster invites.”

Gavin Sheets, Oscar Colas and Eloy Jiménez are 40-man options currently for right. Sheets possesses left-handed power and has worked diligently to learn the position defensively, but is more of a first baseman by trade. Colas, who earned the starting job as a rookie at the start of 2023, has already been talked about by Getz as someone who would benefit from more playing time with Triple-A Charlotte.

Jiménez has been targeted as the team’s primary designated hitter. Getz added the team is “looking to add” in right field.

GOOD HEALTH
Getz provided an interesting explanation about keeping his team much healthier in 2024.

“It starts with the expectation to stay healthy, and I know that’s kind of a simple statement,” Getz said. “But the expectation is to play on a daily basis. With that mindset, you then learn how to prepare on a daily basis. It starts with the messaging, and it breathes itself throughout the organization and certainly at the Major League level.

“We are not going to do anything reckless by any stretch. We are paying attention to where everyone’s bodies are, making sure they are doing what they need to do to put themselves in a position to maintain their health and strength throughout the season. It’s not a perfect science.”

So, staying healthy for Getz has a component of “how we are communicating to them to keep them on the field.”