The White Sox announced a series of roster moves this morning, including that they’ve activated left-hander Shane Drohan from the 60-day injured list and designated him for assignment. In a separate move, the club selected the contract of left-hander Sammy Peralta. The club optioned right-hander Nick Nastrini to make room on the active roster. Chicago’s 40-man roster stands at 39.
Drohan, 25, joined the White Sox organization over the offseason when he was selected from the Red Sox in the Rule 5 draft. Chicago will have one week to either trade or waive Drohan, and if he clears waivers they must offer him back to Boston for $50K. If he lands with a new organization by trade or on waivers, Drohan’s Rule 5 obligations will carry over to that new club. Drohan underwent shoulder surgery back in February but began a rehab assignment on May 10. The 30-day window for Drohan’s rehab assignment ended today, meaning that he had to be activated from the IL and either placed on Chicago’s active roster in compliance with Rule 5 restrictions or designated for assignment.
The White Sox evidently chose to part ways with Drohan, and given his struggles during his rehab assignment it’s not hard to see why. In 9 1/3 innings of work over ten appearances spread across three levels of the minors, Drohan struggled to an 8.68 ERA with a 17.4% walk rate despite an excellent 32.6% strikeout rate. Those results worsened when he departed complex ball, as he yielded a 9.53 ERA with identical 20.7% strikeout and walk rates in seven appearances split between High-A and Triple-A. Even for a 17-48 club like Chicago, it’s difficult to justify dedicating an active roster spot to a player facing struggles that deep against minor league hitters.
Prior to the aforementioned shoulder surgery, Drohan had the look of an interesting pitching prospect in the Red Sox organization. The lefty dominated Double-A pitching to the tune of a 1.32 ERA with a 28.1% strikeout rate across six starts last year before being promoted to the Triple-A level. Drohan hit a wall during his time at Triple-A, however, as he walked 14.9% of batters faced across his 21 appearances (19 starts) while yielding a 6.47 ERA in 89 innings of work.
Those struggles were seemingly enough to convince Boston to leave Drohan off their 40-man roster this winter, although Chicago evidently believed that a move to short relief could help with Drohan’s control problems enough to make him a viable big leaguer. Should he wind up returning to Boston, it’s possible the Red Sox will keep Drohan in his new short relief role or perhaps look to stretch him back out as a potential depth option for the big league club in the event he manages to sort out his control issues.
As for Peralta, the lefty’s contract was first selected to the club’s roster back in May of 2023. He performed decently in a middle relief role for the club last year, with a 4.05 ERA and 4.41 FIP in 20 innings of work. Peralta’s lackluster minor league numbers and worrisome big league peripherals were enough to make him expendable for the White Sox as they sorted through their Opening Day roster crunch, and he was designated for assignment to make room for right-hander Jordan Leasure on the 40-man roster. That led to him being claimed off waivers by the Mariners, who then designated Peralta themselves to make room for righty Eduardo Salazar.
The White Sox then claimed him off waivers from Seattle to return him to the organization, only to designate him for a third time in two months in order to make room for righty Jake Woodford on 40-man roster. Peralta then finally cleared waivers and was outrighted to the minors in late May, but he spent less than two weeks there before being selected back to the roster today. Peralta’s rollercoaster first two months of the season have led him to a familiar role: that of a fill-in relief option who can pitch from the left side. The lefty struggled badly during his time in the Mariners organization but has 3 2/3 scoreless innings of work at the Triple-A level for the White Sox this year. He’ll hope to take that success into the majors with him as he joins the club’s bullpen alongside fellow lefties Tanner Banks, Jared Shuster, and Tim Hill.
As for Nastrini, the right-hander was a key component of the return for right-handers Lance Lynn and Joe Kelly after Chicago traded them to the Dodgers last summer. Nastrini has made six starts at the big league level so far this season and has generally struggled badly, with a 8.39 ERA and 7.92 FIP in just 24 2/3 innings of work. While he held the Red Sox to just one run over 4 1/3 innings last night, he walked five of the 19 batters he faced. That performance at the big league level has clearly indicated to the Sox that the 24-year-old needs more time in the minors before he can contribute on the south side on a more permanent basis.
Human Being
If he is claimed, could he continue on the IL and continue his rehab assignment or be put back on the IL? If so, he might not be a bad pick up for an organization who needs a lefty in the bullpen. In his last appearance in Charlotte, he allowed no runs, two hits, two walks, and struck out five over four innings.
Poolhalljunkies
No his rehab is over must be on 26 man active rostor of any claiming team for duration of the season per rule 5 or sent back to boston
avenger65
NO NO NO! Not Shane Drohan!! Where else are we gonna find another pitcher with a 9.35 ERA? Oh, that’s right. In the White Sox farm system.
Big Hurt
I know trying to be funny, but the Sox farm system is actually pretty strong now, including great pitching staffs at AA and low A. The problem is they have 2 AAA teams, the Charlotte Knights and the Sox, and I’m not sure which one’s better.
Poolhalljunkies
Well ..the charlotte knights currently reside in last place in thier triple A division so not sure how good any of the players on that team are..so by default the chicago version is better but the real question is would the chicago version fare much better in the international league than the knights because unless some of this great pitching talent lower manifests..they just suck all around
Dumpster Divin Theo
AAA not very relevant to a team’s long term future. You do realize a club’s top prospects typically are in AA?
Poolhalljunkies
Dump..I realize this and was merely commenting what big hurt wrote ..if you are lacking context please read the big hurts post i replied to..it should have been obvious but perhaps you missed it..did you also miss my comment on supposedly great pit thing talent lower?
Dumpster Divin Theo
No worries- hard to follow all this scintillating chatter! Just don’t get hung up on AAA rosters. Where AAAA roster depth goes to hang
Serubian
trade Hill
Dumpster Divin Theo
They offer Drohan back to the Red Sox before they leave town, pocket the $50k, and use the proceeds to cover their share of the $100k Sox split they were advertising all weekend and due to be paid out Sunday evening. Crafty!