logo
Mike Tauchman is on a mission after switching from Cubs to White Sox

Mike Tauchman is on a mission after switching from Cubs to White Sox

CBS News14-02-2025

GLENDALE, Ariz. (CBS) -- The White Sox have mostly overhauled their roster after that brutal 2024 season, with probably quite a few players fans won't know too well.
But there is at least one fan who'll be playing on the South Side who is very familiar to Chicago baseball fans — from the other side of town.
Mike Tauchman has changed his stripes from Cubbie blue to South Side black. The Palatine native's rebirth with the White Sox was spurred by staying close to home with a newborn at home.
"You know, we have a great support system at home. You know, all our parents are still close, and my sister and my wife's sisters all live in the Chicago area. So just kind of having that community, especially with the little one — they've been great so far," Tauchman said. "Baseball season is crazy, so sometimes you need an extra set of hands, and having somebody right down the road really helps.
Among the handful of 30-somethings on a young Sox roster, the 34-year-old Tauchman welcomes being the old man in the clubhouse.
"I was a young player once, and you know, this is my 11th spring training — getting a little bit older," he said. "The opportunity to give a helpful piece of advice or let somebody vent or download something, you know, I had so many great role models in that way, and obviously, I love this game — and I'm looking forward to interacting with some of those guys.
Without risking getting him into trouble, Tauchman was asked what team he rooted for growing up in Chicago.
"I mean honestly, it's a little bit of a cop out, but probably both. I was just such a huge baseball fan growing up," he said, "and my mom is from the South Side, so she's always been more of a Sox fan. Sox games were on at night when you were a kid. Dad would get home from work, and that's what would be on at night before we went to bed."
Tauchman said once he was a little older and had a driver's license, he drove out to Wrigley Field to see Cubs games. But the first game he ever went to was a White Sox game.
Now, his mission is to raise White Sox fans' expectations by playing good baseball.
"The Cubs have great fans, and the White Sox have great fans too. I've always said in this city it feels like if you're a White Sox fan, you chose to be a White Sox fan — and you live and die with that team," Tauchman said. "An extremely passionate fan bases, you know, and they deserve some quality baseball this year — and we're going to try and give it to them."
Tauchman says since it's early in camp, he isn't too concerned about his on-field role with the team. But the lefty does expect to get a decent number of at-bats either, platooning in right field or at DH.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Christian Walker turnaround can change Astros' trade deadline priorities
A Christian Walker turnaround can change Astros' trade deadline priorities

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

A Christian Walker turnaround can change Astros' trade deadline priorities

HOUSTON — An answer to the Houston Astros' most apparent need is already in their clubhouse. He switched lockers some time last month, hoping to harness a sliver of luck amid an otherwise subpar season. Christian Walker went 8-for-42 across his next 12 games, negating whatever nirvana the superstition may have spurred. He averaged at least a 96.5 exit velocity during eight of those 12 contests, continuing a confluence of poor luck and putrid results. Advertisement 'Sometimes it can get really frustrating when you don't get your hits,' manager Joe Espada said. 'You see other players (get) end-of-the-bat knocks, and they get lucky on some of these balls. You as a hitter, you're like, 'Man, I'm doing everything I can to put the barrel on the ball and they're not falling for me.'' Few aspects of Walker's horrific start have been more frustrating. Stretches of three or four games have offered hope for a turnaround, only for the subsequent seven or eight to erase all momentum. For instance, he had a three-RBI game on May 11, only to follow it with a 5-for-47 funk. So, assign proper perspective to Walker's first four-RBI game as an Astro on Wednesday night. The beleaguered first baseman broke out of a brutal slump in a season full of them, spearheading a 10-2 shellacking of the Chicago White Sox with his first three-hit game since May 25. ALL-STAR SMASH.#VoteWalker ⭐️ — Houston Astros (@astros) June 12, 2025 Walker's performance raised his OPS to .653. He hasn't had a higher one since that aforementioned outburst on May 11. The anemia that followed is the story of Walker's season. Whether he can avoid it is the Astros' most pertinent question. Parlaying a performance like Wednesday into something more sustainable would crystallize the club's focus toward the July 31 trade deadline. A left-handed hitter and starting pitcher sit atop the Astros' wish list, but any prolonged success from Walker may alter their priorities. The development would lessen Houston's urgency to address a lineup still missing Yordan Alvarez, its most potent left-handed threat. Alvarez's return — whenever it arrives — already represents a pseudo-deadline acquisition, but pairing him with a well-performing Walker would be a permutation Houston hasn't yet seen this season. Advertisement 'The nature of the at-bats — taking good pitches, swinging at good pitches — I feel good,' Walker said. 'I'm happy with how competitive I feel in the box right now.' Walker still awoke Wednesday with a .623 OPS. Of the 17 qualified major-league hitters with a lower one, only Michael Harris III and Willy Adames had taken more plate appearances. Of the 27 players worth fewer wins above replacement, just Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez had played more than Walker. Like Perez, Walker has salary, service time and status as a respected veteran that afford an almost endless runway to correct whatever ails him. Houston's lack of other options only widens it. Walker will start at first base and slot somewhere in the middle of the Astros' order regardless of what the club does during the trade deadline. Espada slid Walker to the five-hole before the series opener against the White Sox on Tuesday. In 147 plate appearances as the cleanup hitter, Walker slugged .296. 'It's trusting the process and having the confidence that, at some point, this is going to turn,' Espada said. 'He knows this tide will turn for him.' Finding better fortune is a factor, but Walker still boasts his highest chase rate, whiff rate and strikeout rate of the past four seasons. He entered Monday with a .208 batting average and, according to Statcast, a .243 expected batting average. Forty-three of Walker's 74 strikeouts have come with a runner on base, problematic for an offense that has scored the sport's seventh-fewest runs. Whether a wholesale turnaround from Walker and full health from Alvarez will fix that is what general manager Dana Brown must ponder over the next seven weeks. Even if both of those circumstances come to pass, a left-handed bench bat or outfield platoon partner would be beneficial for an imbalanced roster. Either would profile as cheaper for an Astros team short on tradeable assets. Focusing the few they have on fortifying a pitching staff staggered by injuries is another byproduct of Walker's potential renaissance. Advertisement Gauging whether one is looming is difficult. Hammering a hanging slider for a two-run home run during Wednesday's first inning ignited the dugout, but it should be standard for someone of Walker's caliber. A more telling sequence came two frames later. Four-seam fastballs have flummoxed the first baseman all season, strange for a player who produced a run value of nine against the pitch last year, according to Baseball Savant. Walker entered Wednesday with a minus-1 run value against the pitch. His .203 batting average against them was 43 points lower than last season and 79 away from the career-best mark he established in 2023. Opponents are aware and attempting to seize advantage. During the third inning, White Sox starter Sean Burke believed he did. Walker waved through one of his elevated four-seamers to even the count at 1. 'It's something we're working on for sure, but it's hard to plan for that,' Walker said. 'You start looking at the top and you get your hanger and you miss it because you're looking for something else.' Drivin' in the runs. #VoteWalker ⭐️ — Houston Astros (@astros) June 12, 2025 Part of Walker's work to remedy the problem involves 'maybe daring guys to go up there,' reasoning that 'if they miss a spot two inches, three inches lower, now we're talking about a ball that can get hit 107, 108 (mph).' Burke did. The 1-1 four-seamer he threw grazed the top rail of Walker's strike zone. He struck it 106 mph into the left-center field gap. Two runs came home. 'It felt good to turn that around,' Walker said.

White Sox get clobbered by Houston Astros a night after win
White Sox get clobbered by Houston Astros a night after win

CBS News

time3 hours ago

  • CBS News

White Sox get clobbered by Houston Astros a night after win

Christian Walker homered among his three hits and had a season-high four RBIs to lead the Houston Astros over the Chicago White Sox 10-2 on Wednesday night. Jose Altuve added two hits to give him 2,300 in his career, joining Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman (2,342) as the only active players with at least 2,300. Altuve got things going with an RBI double in the first. There were two outs in the inning when Walker homered to left field off Sean Burke (3-7) to make it 3-0. Houston starter Ryan Gusto (4-3) allowed seven hits and two runs with a season-best seven strikeouts in a season-high six innings. Josh Rojas had two hits for the White Sox, who fell to 7-27 on the road. Altuve singled with two outs in the third before Yainer Diaz walked. Walker then smacked a line drive to center field for a double to score them both and push the lead to 5-0. There was one out in the fourth when Cam Smith hit a ground-rule double. With two outs, Jeremy Peña doubled on a ball that bounced off the wall in left field to make it 6-0. Isaac Paredes followed with another RBI double to chase Burke, who yielded eight hits and seven runs — both career highs — in 3 2/3 innings. Rojas singled in the fifth and moved to third on a ground-rule double by Vinny Capra. Rojas scored on a groundout by Mike Tauchman to cut it to 7-1. Miguel Vargas hit an RBI single to make it 7-2. Paredes had three hits and two RBIs to help the Astros snap a two-game skid. Key moment Walker's home run that put Houston up 3-0 early. Key stat Walker had just two RBIs in his previous six games. Up next Houston LHP Framber Valdez (6-4, 3.07 ERA) opposes RHP Davis Martin (2-6, 3.62) when the series concludes Thursday night.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store