The White Sox released veteran infielder Josh Rojas following last week’s DFA, per the team’s transaction log at MLB.com. If and when Rojas clears release waivers, he’ll become a free agent who can sign with any team. A new club would owe him only the prorated league minimum for any time on its big league roster. The ChiSox will remain on the hook for the rest of the 31-year-old’s $3.5MM salary.
Signed to a one-year deal this past offseason, Rojas has had some past success in Arizona and Seattle but was hoping for a rebound at the plate after a pair of down seasons. He’s a steady defender at both second base and third base who hit .266/.345/.401 with the Diamondbacks in 2021-22 but was more of a glove-first, multi-position infielder with the M’s in 2023-24.
Rojas’ hopeful return to form with the South Siders never materialized. He missed two months with a fractured big toe and hasn’t shown his typical range or mobility in the field upon returning. He’s also struggled at the plate. Rojas took 211 turns at the plate with the Sox and slashed just .180/.252/.259. His average sprint speed, as measured by Statcast, fell from an already slightly below-average 27 ft/sec in 2024 to 26.2 ft/sec in 2025, landing him in the 21st percentile of big league position players.
It wouldn’t be a surprise to see any player see reduced speed, mobility and/or offensive production in the wake of a notable fracture in his foot. Unfortunately for Rojas, he’s suffered all three, and it’s now been three seasons since he last turned in a better-than-average offensive performance.
Recent struggles notwithstanding, Rojas is an experienced infielder who can handle multiple positions and, as recently as last year, was worth about two wins above replacement per both FanGraphs (1.9) and Baseball-Reference (2.2). A contending club isn’t going to look at him as a late-season savior, but playoff hopefuls in need of some infield depth could certainly take a minor league flier once he’s officially a free agent.
Rojas is technically controllable through the 2026 season via arbitration, but it’d take a pretty glaring turnaround — in short order — for a team to sign him, add him to the big league roster and then tender him a contract for the ’26 campaign. It’s far likelier, however, that Rojas will be a free agent this offseason and find a minor league deal with an eye toward better health and production next year.