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Paul Sullivan: Adrian Houser turns out to be a bona fide hurler in White Sox's 2-1 win over Blue Jays

Paul Sullivan, Chicago Tribune on

Published in Baseball

CHICAGO — As the Chicago White prepare to celebrate the past this weekend with the statue ceremony for Mark Buehrle and the 20th reunion of the 2005 World Series champions, the future remains a guessing game.

Will the Sox be able to deal struggling star Luis Robert Jr. before the trade deadline? Can Colson Montgomery become the player the Sox envisioned when making him their 2021 first-round draft pick? Is manager Will Venable capable of showing displeasure over the team’s losing? And is the rebuild progressing at a fast enough pace for future owner Justin Ishbia’s liking?

Some things we may never know, but it never hurts to ask.

The Sox are 31-62 after Wednesday’s 2-1 win over Toronto, snapping the Blue Jays 10-game winning streak before an announced crowd of 11,123 at Rate Field.

Starter Adrian Houser — general manager Chris Getz’s best in-season pickup, as well as his most obvious trade bait — pitched seven strong innings, allowing one run on five hits for his fifth win, while Grant Taylor and Jordan Leasure finished it off with two scoreless innings.

Houser shrugged off a first-inning stomach issue, throwing up in the dugout afterward and going on to win his third straight start.

“Puke and rally,” he said in a T-shirt-ready quote.

Houser admitted it was “about the fifth time” in his career he became physically ill over a start, which makes him an empathetic figure to fans who also have gotten sick over many a Sox performance.

“It’s nothing new,” Houser said. “The trainers knew. I told them when I came in, ‘Hey, this is a possibility.’ Once I get it out, it’s all good. Ready to rock ‘n’ roll.”

The way Houser has pitched this season, maybe the rest of the White Sox staff should follow suit. The puke-and-rally strategy just might be what the Sox needed to turn their season around. Nothing else has worked, including the Pope wearing a Sox cap.

But until the Sox can put together a weekslong stretch of winning baseball, it’s going to be one step forward and two steps back in the rebuild. Former Sox third baseman Todd Frazier once said during the Rick Hahn rebuild in 2017 that the Sox needed to change the terminology from “rebuild” to “refuel,” but no matter what it was called, something had to be done.

“We haven’t won in a long time, so what’s the worst that can happen, I guess?” Frazier said.

The same could be said of Getz’s Rebuild 2.0, in which the worst that could happen already happened last year. So the Sox might as well relax and play without fear the rest of the season, with nothing to lose but their lunch.

This month could be the end of the line in Chicago for Robert, who came off the IL on Tuesday and spoke with the media before Wednesday’s game. Robert basically said the same things he has been saying for more than a year about the possibility of being dealt — it’s out of his hands and he has no preference about staying or going. No one really believes he wants to stay, but that’s his line and he’s sticking to it.

Is Robert tired of being asked about being dealt for a year and running?

 

“Not really,” he said through an interpreter. “I don’t even feel like you guys ask me enough about it. It’s just something that’s not on my mind.”

That was the first time in 38 years covering baseball that I had heard a player say he hasn’t been asked enough about possibly being traded, so now I can say I’ve finally heard everything.

The game started 12 minutes late because of a pregame drizzle, then the humidity was turned down and a cool breeze came in off the lake. The Sox treated the ball like it was kryptonite early on. Houser botched a bunt from Tyler Heineman in the second that brought home a run and was scored as an infield hit. Third baseman Miguel Vargas let an infield popup drop in the second, then muffed the pickup before recovering and getting a forceout at second.

Venable explained that Vargas let it drop on purpose to have Vladimir Guerrero Jr. as a base runner, though he was fortunate to get the out at second. Moments later, Houser’s pickoff attempt eluded first baseman Tim Elko, who was called up Wednesday when Brooks Baldwin was placed in the 10-day IL with a lower back strain. Chase Meidroth’s throw eluded Montgomery, and Guerrero took off for third when he saw no one covering the base. But Houser got there and tagged Guerrero out, ending the wacky inning.

The Sox grabbed the lead in the fourth on Edgar Quero’s RBI double and Lenyn Sosa’s run-scoring single, and Houser put up zeros from the third through the seventh, lowering his ERA to 1.56 in nine starts. The last time the Sox snapped an opponent’s 10-game winning streak was in 2008, also against the Blue Jays.

Houser isn’t the kind of pitcher who likely will command a top prospect at the deadline. But he has been one of the best starters in baseball since joining the Sox, and at this point he may be more valuable to a contender than Robert, whose power mysteriously disappeared after his 38 home run season in 2023.

Houser repeated his mantra on being Sox trade bait.

“Whatever, it’s out of my control,” he said. “I’m just here to pitch.”

Not quite as catchy as “puke and rally,” but it will have to suffice.

Since Getz has said he doesn’t intend on dealing some of the young players, the Sox don’t have much to offer. Starter Aaron Civale also figures to go, though he has a 5.85 ERA over his last four starts and might not draw much interest after Tuesday’s poor outing in a 6-1 loss to the Jays.

Houser has been a good influence on the Sox staff, much like Garrett Crochet was last season before he was dealt in the winter.

“Kind of hoping he was going to be an All-Star,” Leasure said of Houser. “But I think for him to come in and do that has been really impressive. We all love him as a person too. He’s been a great guy to have around.”

He might not be around much longer, but at least Sox fans will always remember the way Houser hurled on a memorable afternoon against the Jays.


©2025 Chicago Tribune. Visit chicagotribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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