White Sox vs Diamondbacks Spring Training: Measuring Our Rebuild Against a Playoff Team

March 6, 2026 | Camelback Ranch, Glendale, AZ | 2:05 PM CT | MLB Network, NBC Sports Chicago

The Chicago White Sox (63–99 last year) face the Arizona Diamondbacks (86–76, Wild Card team) in spring training today, and this is a perfect measuring stick for where our rebuild stands. They made the playoffs. We lost 99 games. They have Corbin Carroll, a bonafide superstar. We have Colson Montgomery, hoping to become one.

Zac Gallen is a legit ace. Drew Thorpe is trying to prove he deserves a rotation spot. Ketel Marte is a proven All-Star. Luis Robert Jr. is trying to stay healthy long enough to matter.

This is exactly the kind of matchup that shows you how far you have to climb. For White Sox fans who endured 99 losses, this game reveals whether our young core is actually progressing or if we’re still years away from competing.

Where the White Sox Stand (Still at Rock Bottom)

2025 Record: 63–99

Ninety-nine losses. We were historically terrible. The front office tore everything down, traded veterans for prospects, and committed to a painful rebuild that’ll take years to pay off.

Spring training has been about development. Has Colson Montgomery shown he’s ready? Does Drew Thorpe have major league stuff? Can Luis Robert Jr. stay on the field? These are the only questions that matter.

Key Players:

  • Luis Robert Jr. (CF): Elite talent when healthy—just needs to actually be healthy
  • Colson Montgomery (SS): Our top prospect, the entire rebuild hinges on him
  • Erick Fedde (SP): Veteran arm who mentors the young pitchers

Top Prospects:

  • Bryan Ramos (3B): Power bat trying to force his way onto the roster
  • Drew Thorpe (RHP): Gets a start today, needs to show he’s ready
  • Edgar Quero (C): Young catcher with offensive upside

Drew Thorpe gets another chance to prove himself today. Against a playoff-caliber Diamondbacks lineup, can he compete? Does he have the stuff to survive in the majors?

The Arizona Diamondbacks: Young, Exciting, and Winning

2025 Record: 86–76 (Wild Card)

Arizona made the playoffs last year with a young, dynamic roster. Corbin Carroll is already a superstar—30-30 guy with elite defense. Zac Gallen is one of the best pitchers in the National League. Ketel Marte provides veteran leadership and production.

Key Players:

  • Corbin Carroll (OF): Dynamic star, 30-30 potential, Gold Glove defense
  • Zac Gallen (RHP): Ace-level starter with elite command, getting the start
  • Ketel Marte (INF): Veteran All-Star who does everything well

Top Prospects:

  • Jordan Lawlar (SS): High-upside shortstop still developing
  • Druw Jones (OF): Elite defensive center fielder with Hall of Fame genes
  • Brandon Pfaadt (RHP): Developing starter with upside

The Diamondbacks are what we’re trying to become—young, exciting, and making the playoffs. They developed Carroll into a superstar. They built a sustainable winner. We’re hoping Montgomery becomes our version of that.

The Matchups That Actually Matter

Position White Sox Diamondbacks
Shortstop Colson Montgomery Jordan Lawlar
Center Field Luis Robert Jr. Corbin Carroll
Starting Pitcher Drew Thorpe Zac Gallen

Colson Montgomery vs Jordan Lawlar at Shortstop
Both are top shortstop prospects. Montgomery looks more ready right now. Lawlar has been hyped for years but hasn’t put it all together yet. This is a solid comparison between two high-upside young shortstops.

Luis Robert Jr. vs Corbin Carroll in Center Field
When healthy, Robert has elite talent. But Carroll is already a proven superstar who produces every single year. That consistency and durability is the difference between potential and production.

Drew Thorpe vs Zac Gallen on the Mound
Gallen is an established ace with pinpoint command and postseason experience. Thorpe is a prospect trying to earn a rotation spot. The gap is massive, and Thorpe’s about to find out what facing real competition looks like.

What the White Sox Need to See Today

Drew Thorpe Competes Against a Playoff Lineup
Arizona’s lineup made the playoffs. Thorpe needs to show he can compete with that level of talent. Three or four innings with command, confidence, and competitive at-bats would be progress.

Colson Montgomery Shows He’s Ready
Montgomery’s had a solid spring. Today, against a playoff team with Gallen on the mound, he needs to show he can compete with established major league talent. Quality at-bats, smooth defense, smart baserunning.

Luis Robert Jr. Stays Healthy
Just get through the game without injury. That’s all that matters with Robert at this point. If he can give us a full season, he’s a game-changer. If not, we’re stuck hoping Montgomery becomes our best player immediately.

Bryan Ramos Proves He Belongs
Ramos has power, but can he handle quality pitching from guys like Gallen? Show bat-to-ball skills and prove you’re ready for the majors.

Show Signs of Progress
Arizona made the playoffs. We lost 99 games. If we can compete for even five or six innings, that’s progress. If we get dominated start to finish, that’s concerning.

What Arizona Will Bring

Corbin Carroll will do something electric—a stolen base, a diving catch, maybe a homer. Zac Gallen will dominate with elite command and deceptive stuff. Ketel Marte will work professional at-bats and find holes.

The Diamondbacks’ playoff experience and young talent will test us. They know how to win, and it’ll probably show today.

White Sox Fan Prediction: We Get Handled

Final Score: Diamondbacks 7, White Sox 4

Zac Gallen dominates for five innings with eight strikeouts, making our hitters look completely overmatched. Drew Thorpe battles but gives up five runs in four innings—not terrible against a playoff lineup, but not competitive.

Colson Montgomery goes 1-for-3 with a single and looks overmatched at times against Gallen’s stuff. Luis Robert Jr. crushes a solo homer because that’s what he does when healthy, then exits as a precaution (of course).

Corbin Carroll goes 3-for-4 with a stolen base and makes a ridiculous catch. The Diamondbacks’ depth and playoff experience overwhelm us.

We show flashes. Montgomery has a moment. But it’s painfully clear they’re on a completely different level.

Why This Game Matters (Even Though We’re Losing)

The scoreboard doesn’t matter. But seeing our prospects compete against playoff-caliber talent does.

Can Drew Thorpe hold his own against an Arizona lineup that reached the postseason? Will Colson Montgomery show he can compete with Zac Gallen’s stuff? Can Luis Robert Jr. stay healthy?

The Diamondbacks represent what we’re trying to build—young, exciting, sustainable success. They developed Corbin Carroll into a star. They built a playoff team. We need to do the same.

We lost 99 games last year. Arizona made the playoffs. That’s not a gap—that’s a canyon. But spring training shows whether we’re moving in the right direction or if we’re still stuck at the bottom.

Go Sox!!! We can do it!