Right-hander Serathony Domínguez and the Chicago White Sox finalize $20 million, 2-year contract
Domínguez, with 40 career saves and postseason experience, joins the White Sox bullpen to strengthen their late-inning closing role, under a $20 million, two-year contract.
- On Thursday, the Chicago White Sox finalized a two-year contract with right-hander Seranthony Domínguez that includes a $12 million mutual option for 2028 and a $2 million buyout.
- General manager Chris Getz said the Sox expect Domínguez to serve as their closer due to his experience and ability to retire hitters from both sides.
- Domínguez's career numbers show 360 strikeouts in 306 innings and he pitched in 12 games during the 2025 postseason, helping the Toronto Blue Jays reach the World Series.
- To make room on the 40-man roster, the Sox designated infielder Bryan Ramos for assignment, reshaping the bullpen that includes right-handers Grant Taylor and Jordan Leasure ahead of spring training workouts scheduled Feb. 10 and Feb. 15.
- With payroll flexibility after the Robert Jr. trade, the club called Domínguez the top remaining reliever on the market and reports first surfaced Friday.
12 Articles
12 Articles
‘He’s going to be finishing a lot of games for us’: Chicago White Sox finalize deal with Seranthony Domínguez
The Chicago White Sox Chicago on Thursday finalized a two-year deal with reliever Seranthony Domínguez and announced their 22 nonroster invitees to spring training camp.
Right-hander Serathony Domínguez and the Chicago White Sox finalize $20 million, 2-year contract
Right-hander Seranthony Domínguez and the Chicago White Sox have finalized a $20 million, two-year contract. Domínguez gets $7 million this year and $10 million in 2027.
Chris Getz Signals The White Sox Have More Moves In The Works
About a week after news broke that the White Sox signed Seranthony Dominguez to a two year deal, the White Sox officially announced that signing today. By all indications, it appears that Dominguez was the first step to spending the money saved from trading Luis Robert Jr. to the Mets. The White Sox have never been big spenders, so there have been some doubts as to whether the rest of that money would actually be spent. However, times may be cha…
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