I know it's only early April, and I know it's just a series win, but hear me out: after the last few years in Chicago, this actually matters.
The White Sox won their first series of 2026, and for a franchise that's been the punchline of baseball jokes for half a decade, that's worth celebrating.
The hero? Munetaka Murakami, the Japanese import who's already hit four home runs this season. The kid can play, folks. He's showing the kind of power that makes scouts start dreaming about MVP trophies.
In the series clincher, the Sox manufactured runs the old-fashioned way - timely hitting, smart baserunning, and defense that actually made the plays. Murakami came through in the clutch, and when Nathan Lukes grounded out for the final out, the dugout erupted like they'd won the World Series.
And you know what? Good for them.
This is a rebuild. This is a team that's been unwatchable for years. But Murakami represents hope. He represents the idea that maybe, just maybe, the White Sox are building toward something real.
There was another play that showed his baseball IQ: Murakami cut off a throw home and fired to third to end an inning. That's veteran awareness from a player in his first MLB season. That's the kind of thing that makes you believe.
Look, I'm not saying the White Sox are going to compete for a playoff spot this year. They're not. But sometimes hope starts small. Sometimes it starts with a Japanese slugger launching his fourth homer of the season. Sometimes it starts with just winning one series.
For White Sox fans who've suffered through some of the worst baseball in modern history, I'll tell you this: enjoy it. Savor this moment. Because nights like this are where rebuilds begin.
That's what sports is all about, folks.
