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Spare Parts: The pope gets a Nellie Fox bat

Paul Konerko Pope Leo XIV jersey

Cardinal Blase Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago, presents Paul Konerko with a jersey signed by Pope Leo XIV prior to a game against the Cleveland Guardians at Rate Field.

|(Patrick Gorski/Imagn Images)

Understanding that not everybody may be equally fascinated with the concept of a White Sox fan pope, we at Sox Machine try to limit dedicated posts to unique aspects that would be impossible to fathom if they happened a year earlier.

So far, we've reserved Pope Leo XIV posts for:

And even then, that last post was more about Ishbia speaking publicly for the first time as the presumptive next owner of the White Sox, rather than the gift, as the pope gets a lot of jerseys.

So the fact that CBS News correspondent Chris Livesay gave Pope Leo XIV a Nellie Fox bat that had been in the family during the pontiff's first foreign trip runs the risk of redundancy, but two things make it stand out.

First, there's the image of a pope holding a baseball bat, which is the stuff that had been reserved for parody.

Weirder still is that the pope's White Sox fandom is the second half of a story that begins with his appearance in Turkey, about which the newscast says "Pope Leo warned that the future of humanity is at stake, denouncing what he called the heightened level of conflict around the world." It doesn't seem like the White Sox shouldn't rate as nearly as significant a concern, and yet.

Spare Parts

Beyond the expected thrill of being named the hitting coach of the team he grew up rooting for, Derek Shomon's new job makes it easier on his family, as his 3-year-old son is working his way through therapy for cerebral palsy.

Dayan Viciedo, who turns 37 before next Opening Day, is returning to Yokohama for an 11th season in NPB. He's up to 1,001 games played in Japan, where he's hit .287/.352/.458 with 141 homers

Baltimore is among the most active teams early, as Mike Elias followed up trading for Taylor Ward by signing a closer for two years and $28 million.

Anthony Rendon is entering the final year of his seven-year, $245 million deal he signed with the Angels after the 2019 season. It's been a disaster for the last five seasons, during which Rendon has played a total of 205 games, and the sixth year might not happen.

  • James Fegan's Saturday radio appearances -- Sox Machine Podcast

James joined both Inside The Clubhouse on 670 AM The Score and White Sox Weekly on ESPN 1000 AM on Saturday. You can listen to both segments in the player below or in your podcast feed.

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