logo
Smith and Vasil Look Like Two Rule 5 Hits for the Rebuilding Chicago White Sox

Smith and Vasil Look Like Two Rule 5 Hits for the Rebuilding Chicago White Sox

Al Arabiya16-06-2025
Shane Smith pitched a total of 10 1/3 innings during his college career at Wake Forest. He had a shoulder operation as a freshman, and his sophomore year was shut down by the COVID-19 pandemic. Then he had elbow surgery. At that point, even Smith began to wonder if baseball was going to work out for him.
'My dream of playing professional baseball–to say it didn't waver would probably be lying,' he said. 'But I knew there was an avenue somehow.'
There sure was. Smith has turned into a pleasant surprise for the last-place Chicago White Sox after he was selected by the team in the Rule 5 draft. The White Sox also have Mike Vasil, another twenty-five-year-old Rule 5 right-hander who was claimed off waivers from Tampa Bay in March. The Rule 5 draft provides an opportunity for players left off big league teams' forty-man rosters after several minor league seasons. Teams pay $100,000 to select a player in the major league portion. The players must stay on the active twenty-six-man major league roster all season or else clear waivers and be offered back to their original organization for $50,000. Between ten and twenty players are selected in the big league Rule 5 draft most seasons, but most don't actually stick with their new clubs. Even fewer develop into All-Star-worthy contributors. Hall of Fame outfielder Roberto Clemente and two-time Cy Young Award winner Johan Santana are two of the most famous Rule 5 success stories.
So far, it looks as if Smith and Vasil are going to stick with the rebuilding White Sox–quite an accomplishment for an organization from one Rule 5 draft. Smith has a 2.37 ERA in 68 1/3 innings over thirteen starts, and Vasil has a 1.99 ERA in 45 1/3 innings over twenty appearances, all but two in relief.
'Obviously, Mike and I are, I think, putting our best foot forward as of now,' Smith said. 'The biggest thing we can do is just keep it going, keep doing the same stuff.'
Smith or Vasil very well could represent the last-place White Sox at next month's All-Star Game in Atlanta. Dan Uggla, with the Florida Marlins in 2006, is the only player to be named an All-Star in the season after he was selected in the Rule 5 draft, according to Sportradar.
Being a Rule 5 player is a unique situation in that first year, but Vasil said he doesn't think about it very often.
'I've spent my whole life trying to get here,' he said. 'So I think it's already hard enough; don't put more pressure on yourself.'
The six-foot-five Vasil was selected by the New York Mets in the eighth round of the 2021 amateur draft out of the University of Virginia. He was picked by Philadelphia in the Rule 5 draft in December and then traded that same day to the Rays for cash. The White Sox are Vasil's fourth organization since the end of last season.
'It's a lot,' he said. 'But I think for me at the same time, I guess you could say you feel wanted by a lot of different teams.'
Vasil began the season in Chicago's bullpen, recording a 1.89 ERA in his first eighteen appearances. He got his first career win when he pitched 2 1/3 scoreless innings against Houston on May 4 and his first save when he got three outs at Cincinnati on May 14. But Vasil's six-pitch arsenal–highlighted by an effective sinker and sweeper–makes him a strong candidate for the rotation. He pitched four shutout innings in his second start at Texas on Saturday.
'Not something that's unfamiliar for me,' he said of starting. 'I started all my minor league career, so in terms of routine I probably know this one a little bit better than my relief one right now.'
Smith went right into Chicago's rotation during spring training–an unusual spot for a Rule 5 player. Since 2016, Luis Perdomo, Brad Keller, and Mitch Spence are the only pitchers who made at least twenty starts in the majors in the season after they were selected in the big league phase of the Rule 5 draft. Keller began the 2018 season in Kansas City's bullpen before moving into the rotation in late May. He finished his rookie year with a 9–6 record and a 3.08 ERA in twenty starts and twenty-one relief appearances.
'I think you definitely pull for all the Rule 5 guys because I feel like, not to say this in a bad way, but Rule 5 guys kind of get a bad rap, right?' said Keller, a key reliever for the Chicago Cubs. 'It's like they're like, 'Nobody's got a chance.' That's not true. Some organizations are in different situations where they can't protect guys that they want to.'
Smith had been in Milwaukee's organization since he signed with the Brewers as an undrafted free agent in 2021, just weeks after he had Tommy John surgery. He had a 3.05 ERA in thirty-two appearances over two minor league stops last season, finishing the year with Triple-A Nashville.
Smith has a big four-seam fastball that gets into the high nineties to go along with a good slider and curveball. But the biggest key to his success this year has been the development of a nasty changeup that really came together in the offseason after years of work.
Fortunate timing for Smith and the White Sox.
'For a guy that hasn't really pitched above Double-A–he had some innings in Triple-A–but to come here and pitch the way that he does, it just speaks to his ability and his confidence and also speaks to the group of players and staff here to support him,' general manager Chris Getz said. 'Shane is doing really well, and we expect him to have a really productive, healthy season for us.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pakistan T20 captain backs ‘fine' blend of youth, experience ahead of West Indies series
Pakistan T20 captain backs ‘fine' blend of youth, experience ahead of West Indies series

Arab News

time16 minutes ago

  • Arab News

Pakistan T20 captain backs ‘fine' blend of youth, experience ahead of West Indies series

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan T20 captain Salman Ali Agha has expressed confidence in the team's 'fine' blend of youth and experience as they take on the West Indies in the United States for a three-match series starting Aug. 1, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said this week. The three T20Is, beginning on Thursday, July 31 (1 August, 5 am Pakistan Standard Time) at the Central Broward Park and Broward County Stadium in Florida is the first meeting between the two teams in T20Is since December 2021. The second and third T20I are scheduled to take place on 2 and 3 August at the same venue with the first ball slated to be bowled at 8pm local time (3 and 4 August, 5 am Pakistan Standard Time). 'We have a fine blend of youth and experience in our squad, and it is highly productive that we are going into yet another T20 series as the build-up toward the T20 World Cup picks up pace,' Agha said. Pakistan's T20 squad comprises experienced cricketers such as Fakhar Zaman, Hasan Ali, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Haris Rauf along with youngsters Abrar Ahmed, Hassan Nawaz, Sahibzada Farhan, Sufyan Moqim and Saim Ayub. 'We are really looking forward to playing at this wonderful venue and our time here so far has been exciting,' the Pakistan captain said. 'I feel the three T20 will also be entertaining and as a team we are eagerly looking forward to take the field.' He added that Pakistan will need to play their best game to 'outfox a formidable T20 side.' The ODIs will be played at the Brian Lara Cricket Academy in Trinidad & Tobago on August 8, 10 and 12, with Mohammad Rizwan set to lead Pakistan as its captain. Pakistan will take the field in Lauderhill for the second time, having previously defeated Ireland by three wickets at the same venue during the ICC T20 World Cup 2024. Pakistan has won 15 out of 21 T20s played against the West Indies, while the hosts have won three matches, with three ending without a result. Pakistan and the West Indies will be looking to bounce back from their recent T20I series defeats against Bangladesh and Australia, respectively. PAKISTAN SQUADS: ODI: Mohammad Rizwan (captain), Salman Ali Agha (vice-captain), Abdullah Shafique, Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Faheem Ashraf, Fakhar Zaman, Hasan Ali, Hasan Nawaz, Hussain Talat, Mohammad Haris (wicket-keeper), Mohammad Nawaz, Naseem Shah, Saim Ayub, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Sufyan Moqim T20I: Salman Ali Agha (captain), Abrar Ahmed, Faheem Ashraf, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf, Hasan Ali, Hasan Nawaz, Hussain Talat, Khushdil Shah, Mohammad Haris (wicket-keeper), Mohammad Nawaz, Sahibzada Farhan (wicket-keeper), Saim Ayub, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Sufyan Moqim

100th running of the Hambletonian marks a century of the biggest event in harness racing
100th running of the Hambletonian marks a century of the biggest event in harness racing

Al Arabiya

time5 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

100th running of the Hambletonian marks a century of the biggest event in harness racing

Growing up in a family of horsemen in Ontario, John Campbell knew how prestigious the Hambletonian was. Then he saw good friend Ray Remmen win the first to take place at the Meadowlands in 1981. 'It was beyond a big deal,' Campbell said. 'It was something special.' On Saturday, the biggest event in harness racing celebrates a centennial anniversary with the 100th running of Hambletonian. While harness racing, like its thoroughbred equivalent, no longer holds the same prominence it once did in the US sporting landscape, the storied history of the Hambletonian and its evolution to grow interest in Europe are responsible for its longevity. 'To have this big event still going on 100 years, it's something that I'm sure they didn't even envision when it was formed,' said Campbell, a Harness Racing Hall of Fame driver who won the Hambletonian a record six times and participated a record 32 consecutive times from 1983-2014. 'It's the consistency of it. They raced it no matter what, through the Depression, through World War II, so it was always there.' Campbell is now president and CEO of the Hambletonian Society that has shepherded the race named for the founding sire of standardbred horses through changing times. The purse is the sport's richest at $1 million, a long way from the nearly $75,000 on the line during the inaugural rendition in 1926 at the New York State Fair in Syracuse. The Hambletonian bounced around to Lexington, Kentucky, Goshen, New York, and Du Quoin, Illinois, before finding a home in East Rutherford, New Jersey. 'Even during the war, they did have to, because of gas rationing, take it to Yonkers,' said Tom Charters, who worked at the Hambletonian Society from 1984-2017, including a lengthy stint as president. 'That's part of the charm of it, I think: the multiple venues and where it's gone and where it's been.' Another charm? The winning horse gets to drink out of the trophy. That is something Charters saw pictures of and made sure would become part of the Hambletonian ceremony – with the name of the race and the horse logo always facing the cameras. 'It's become as symbolic as drinking milk at Indianapolis for me anyway,' Charters said, referring to the Indy 500 tradition. Campbell has his favorite memories, notably he said, 'Winning.' His first victory with Mack Lobell in 1987 and winning with Tagliabue– trained by his brother Jim and named after longtime NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue – in '95 stand out as special, along with 2006 with Glidemaster to revitalize his career after injury. Chris McErlean, who worked at the Meadowlands from 1992-2007, remembers filly Continentalvictory beating the colts in '96, amateur Malvern Burroughs winning with Malabar Man in '97, and Swedish owner/trainer/driver Stefan Melander taking the race in 2000 with Scarlet Knight following efforts to encourage European participation. 'It made it a big international sensation,' McErlean said. 'He had a lot of international interest.' It has garnered so much interest across Scandinavia and even France that of the 10 horses in the Hambletonian this year, nine have European trainers. Moira Fanning, who has worked at the society since 1987 and has been chief operating officer since 2017, expects more than $9 million to be wagered worldwide on the 100th Hambletonian. Fanning credits crossover horse betting from Saratoga Race Course and national television for keeping the event in the spotlight internationally, even though the on-track attendance is now expected to be 8,000-10,000. At its height in 2005, a crowd of 31,000 packed the old Meadowlands – and the current limit is roughly a third of that. 'Harness racing is a niche kind of regional sport. It has lost ground. Tracks have closed,' Fanning said. 'Racing had a wonderful 200-year gambling monopoly that it no longer has, so it has taken a lot of work to keep it prominent and keep it on national TV and keep the big days big.' Essentially the Kentucky Derby of the harness world, Fanning said the Hambletonian might be the one trotters race known in the mainstream public. 'Inside the industry it remains a big deal and something special.' 'Even though the sport in general's been challenged and it maybe is not at the peaks it used to be, the Hambletonian is still the biggest thing, the biggest prize out there,' McErlean said. 'It almost has as much international cache as it does prominence over here because of its longstanding history and being the richest race, being the biggest race on the calendar.'

‘Nobody's crying!': Debate on gender pay gap in WBNA and sports
‘Nobody's crying!': Debate on gender pay gap in WBNA and sports

Al Arabiya

time8 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

‘Nobody's crying!': Debate on gender pay gap in WBNA and sports

Gender discrimination? Or a general disparity in skill? What's the real reason female professional athletes are often paid so much less than men? The WNBA has thrown the issue back into the spotlight as talks to negotiate a new pay deal break down. When some of the world's best female basketballers hit the court for the annual All-Stars game earlier this month... it was their warm-up attire that captured the most global attention. Their shirts read: 'Pay us what you owe us.' The league is in crisis. Players have refused to sign the latest collective bargaining agreement and are demanding fair pay. And you'll note the of the word 'fair' pay. They're not calling for equal pay but rather a fair proportion of the money they generate for the league. NBA players receive between 49 and 51 per cent of their league's revenue. The NHL - about 50 per cent. NFL players get about 48 per cent of league revenue... While WNBA players are only paid 9.3 per cent of the money they generate for their league. That's despite record attendance, viewership and merchandise sales figures during the 2024 season. Some sports do boast pay parity. Grand Slam tennis has the same prize purse for men and women. Indian cricketers receive the same match fees regardless of gender. BUT bonuses and sponsorship deals remain hugely unbalanced. So - with all that in mind – we'll ask our panel: - Why aren't female athletes receiving a fair pay cheque? - Why does women's sport attract less attention - on tv and in person? - How can the challenges for fair pay be overcome?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store