Vasil a wizard? His 'magic' might be working for White Sox

May 2nd, 2026

This story was excerpted from Scott Merkin’s White Sox Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

SAN DIEGO – is a pitcher, although the White Sox right-hander currently is sidelined for the 2026 season as he rehabs his way back from Tommy John surgery.

Vasil also considers himself Batman, as verified by the mask hanging in his clubhouse locker at Rate Field. But now Vasil is … a wizard?

Stay with me on this one, as it needs a little explaining.

This story first broke when Vasil appeared on the Baseball Isn’t Boring show with Rob Bradford. A bunch of White Sox players were talking among themselves recently, and Vasil brought up the possibility of casting spells on the other team.

Fellow reliever Jordan Leasure presented him with the needed wand the following day. That wand is now with Vasil at Petco Park, as he showed me prior to Friday’s 8-2 win over the Padres, basically because the White Sox are 4-0 since its arrival.

“Amazon,” said Leasure with a smile, when asked how the wand arrived so quickly. “It was like 20 bucks. I don’t even remember.”

“I guess I’m some sort of a wizard now in my free time,” Vasil said. “I might be some kind of witch. I might have some witchcraft in there. I might have some magic, I don’t know.”

Maybe the world has underestimated the 26-year-old from Boston. Sure, he was a successful jack of all trades on the mound for the 2025 White Sox, posting a 5-3 record, and a 2.50 ERA over 47 games and 101 innings pitched. He was in competition for the ’26 starting rotation before suffering the setback on March 14 after 3 2/3 scoreless innings hurled against the Dodgers.

There’s little doubt his on-field work has been missed and highly valued. But Vasil might have special powers well beyond his six-pitch mix. It’s the sort of special powers mere mortals can’t totally comprehend.

He’s Batman. He’s a knock-off Harry Potter. Most importantly, he’s helping this team win.

“No, no, He’s still there. It’s just he’s in his cave right now,” said Vasil when asked if Batman had been replaced. “He’s at home right now. But right now, I’m a little bit of a wizard. I also might have some kind of disorder where I think I’m multiple people at one time. I haven’t figured it out yet.”

“A lot of it is just for him to be able to fire up the team, get something going. It’s a long season,” said Leasure, who referred to Vasil as a “very good storyteller.” “It’s easy to kind of put your head down and go through the motions, but when you have something fun going on, it makes it a lot more fun.”

Those people who don’t feel Vasil has had an impact on this team’s 15-17 record this season, even without throwing a pitch, don’t know much about Vasil’s personality. Let’s put the wand aside for a moment -- even with fear of retribution from Vasil’s mystical forces -- and focus on why White Sox players and coaches wanted Vasil with them all season as he went through rehab work.

“We just had a pitchers meeting and Vas is an active participant,” manager Will Venable said. “In the dugout before the game, he’s actively getting the guys going and just is a great source of energy for our club.

“Really, all day long. So, that’s why we kept him around. We know the impact he has on our players and on our coaches. He has been great.”

Is Vasil also a little eccentric, a little crazy, in the best sort of way?

“Yeah, like baseball crazy,” a smiling Venable said. “He’s a great baseball guy.”

“Realistically, it’s everyone else on the field. Whatever it takes for anyone to believe, to get it done, why not?” said Vasil, revealing a behind-the-scenes look at the true root of his magic. “I like to think that I can sometimes try to just hope for something good to happen so much that it happens.”