Carlos Sanchez can turn a double play with the best of them, while Emilio Bonifacio struggles to steal bases without help
On one hand, Carlos Sanchez has received way too much rope. He's hitting .179/.218/.231 over 167 plate appearances, and 20 points the Mendoza Line has been his glass ceiling for the last month-plus. That's problematic for a player whose production is contingent on his batting average, and his batting average is contingent on a strikeout rate that, while improved, is still way too high (20 percent, down from 24 percent). The White Sox could use offense wherever they can get it, and second base is one position where they could theoretically get more of it with in-house solutions.