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Spare Parts: The World Series is set

Arizona Diamondbacks celebrate World Series appearance

(Photo by Kyle Ross/USA TODAY Sports)

The Rangers put forth one argument for White Sox fans who want a front office to aggressively add to the 26-man roster without concern about payrolls six years from now.

The Diamondbacks offered a rebuttal for doing barely enough.

After sneaking into the final postseason seed at 84-78, the Diamondbacks are heading to Texas to face the Rangers in the World Series. They swept the Brewers in the Wild Card Series, swept the Dodgers in the NLDS, and they rallied from series deficits of 2-0 and 3-2 by winning the final two games of the NLCS at Citizens Bank Park, disappointing a lot of fans who found the Phillies the superior choice for entertainment.

When Chris Getz repeatedly references the division the White Sox play in, it's with this kind of outcome in mind, where everybody can set aside things like weak competition and a negative run differential because October is essentially a randomizer. The White Sox are terrible at creating their own luck, because 2005 is the only time in the last century where the Sox won a postseason series, but until the Sox are thrown into a situation that incentivizes greatness, Arizona has provided a more recent example they can recently site for blind luck. Hopefully Josh Barfield knows a little bit how that can be done.

Spare Parts

Karan Patel, the first player of Indian descent taken in the MLB draft by the White Sox back in 2017, was the first player selected in a four-team Dubai-based draft on Monday. He's part of the Mumbai Cobras, on a team managed by Chris Sabo of all people. I don't think Mumbai is going to remind him of Cincinnati.

A survey of the other three rosters for ex-Sox (or former farmhands) turns up Bartolo Colon and Hector Sanchez on the Karachi Monarchs, Alex Katz, Courtney Hawkins and Dwight Smith Jr. on the Dubai Wolves, and Andre Rienzo, Alejandro De Aza, and Sam Abbott* on the Abu Dhabi Falcons, a team whose honorary GM is Nick Swisher.

(*Abbott's water polo background made it easy to overlook that he was born in Kuwait.)

AJ Preller will get a chance to hire his third manager in four seasons after letting Bob Melvin interview and accept a job with the San Francisco Giants. This tweet made me laugh, because Preller still has two more years before he reaches White Sox level of absurd security:

On the other hand, Preller gets points over Rick Hahn for having his relationships with his managers immediately deteriorate.

Craig Breslow, the lefty reliever who rose to assistant GM for the Cubs, will get to lead the team he used to pitch for. The Red Sox are following the Rangers/Chris Young route by tapping a former player who attended an Ivy League school. Young was drafted out of Princeton, while Breslow graduated from Yale with a degree in molecular biophysics and biochemistry.

Jon Heyman says Eduardo Rodriguez is going to opt out of the three years and $49 million remaining on his contract with the Tigers to become a free agent. Rodriguez got five years and $77 million from the Tigers after going 13-8 with a 4.74 ERA over 157⅔ innings for the Red Sox in 2021, so he probably figures he might get the same after going 13-9 with a 3.30 ERA over 152⅔ innings for the Tigers in 2023. But he's had a couple of injuries and absences, and he rejected a trade to the Dodgers at the deadline, so his market isn't the easiest to gauge. Still, anybody who helps fatten up the starting pitching market benefits a team like the White Sox, who will likely need to sign multiple starting options over the winter.

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