Rick Hahn seeing signs Yoan Moncada getting back on track

SHARE Rick Hahn seeing signs Yoan Moncada getting back on track
ap170750048685521.jpg

Yoan Moncada is congratulated by third base coach Nick Capra after his seventh inning solo home run during a spring training baseball game against the Kansas City Royals in Glendale, Ariz., Wednesday, March 15, 2017. (John Sleezer/The Kansas City Star via AP)

Prized second-base prospect Yoan Moncada’s 2017 joyride has been halted somewhat, but White Sox general manager Rick Hahn is seeing signs he is getting back on track.

Moncada, who missed 10 days in May with a bruised left thumb at Class AAA Charlotte, has struggled to get back to his pre-injury form. Entering play Tuesday, Moncada was hitting .162 with one home run in his last 10 games. On the plus side, Moncada had walked seven times in his last four games and Hahn said he’s pain-free, partly because of an adjustment with the padding in his batting glove.

‘‘Although he initially was a little bit rusty, he has gotten back to form now in the last few days,’’ Hahn said.

Of course, the big question is whether Moncada will be called up this season.

‘‘Moncada, I would think so at some point,’’ Hahn said. ‘‘We have a handful of guys down there that are pushing, forcing the issue, so to speak.’’

Black-and-blue Sox

Hahn and manager Rick Renteria provided updates on the extensive list of Sox injuries.

Right-hander James Shields (strained right lat) pitched five innings Tuesday at Charlotte. Left-hander Carlos Rodon (bursitis in left biceps) also will make another rehab start at Charlotte. Hahn said reliever Michael Ynoa (strained flexor in right hip) is ‘‘progressing nicely’’ and might not need a rehab assignment. As for reliever Nate Jones (neuritis in right elbow), Hahn said the Sox are going to let him get 100 percent pain-free before ‘‘ramping him up again.’’ Hahn said reliever Zach Putnam (inflammation in right elbow) also is having trouble getting pain-free.

As for the position players, infielder Tyler Saladino (back spasms) is improving, and the Sox hope to send him to Arizona to increase his activity sometime during the upcoming road trip. Outfielder Charlie Tilson (stress reaction in right foot) is progressing, and the Sox hope to get him on a rehab assignment by the end of June or early July. And X-rays on outfielder Leury Garcia’s left hand were negative.

Hanging around

Outfielder Avisail Garcia’s chance to be voted an American League starter for the All-Star Game on July 11 in Miami took a little hit. After ranking fifth among AL outfielders last week, Garcia fell to sixth with 698,876 votes in totals released Tuesday. The third AL outfield spot was held by the Astros’ George Springer (804,826).

Garcia was hit in the left elbow with a pitch in the sixth inning but stayed in the game.

The first start

Alen Hanson made his first start for the Sox, playing second base and going 0-for-4. Yolmer Sanchez moved to shortstop, and Tim Anderson was rested.

Follow me on Twitter @BrianSandalow.

RELATED STORIES

Bats a clear priority for White Sox in MLB draft

Davidson, Garcia get help from Holland in White Sox’ win

The Latest
The DEA’s proposal would recognize the medical uses of cannabis. However, it would not legalize marijuana outright for recreational use.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office estimates the drugs— which include Wegovy, Mounjaro and Ozempic – will cost taxpayers $210 million the first year. But others put that number much higher.
Leading this sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report are spring signs on Lake Michigan and inland waters plus the perch closure beginning May 1 on Illinois’ Lake Michigan waters and Wisconsin’s general inland opener coming Saturday.
The campus joins hundreds nationwide in calling on their universities to divest from companies supporting Israel.
The regulation is designed to prevent many rear-end and pedestrian collisions and reduce the roughly 40,000 traffic deaths per year.