White Sox GM Chris Getz keeps mistakenly saying ex-Met Luisangel Acuna is a switch hitter in viral clips

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It looks like the Mets won the Luis Robert Jr. trade, maybe even in the eyes of the team they traded with to get him.

When the Mets acquired the center fielder from the White Sox last month, they gave up promising infielder Luisangel Acuña, known for his defense and speed.

But on at least four different occasions since the trade, Chris Getz, the White Sox president and general manager, publicly referred to Acuña as a “switch hitter.”

A montage of White Sox GM Chris Getz talking about trading for former Mets INF Luisangel Acuna:

Getz goes on to mention Acuna is a switch hitter several times.

David Stearns ROBBED Chicago….

H/T @Sam_Phalen
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— SleeperMets (@SleeperMets) February 12, 2026

The only problem is that Acuña is not a switch hitter. He only hits from the right side.

As Roundtable Sports’ Sam Phalen noted on X, formerly known on Twitter, Getz called Acuña a switch hitter four separate times in different sessions with media members.

Of course, Acuña would be valued more highly if he did, in fact, hit from both sides of the plate.

But over the course of his professional career, including in the minors and winter ball, there’s no record of the 23-year-old ever having a left-handed at-bat.

Luisangel Acuña hitting an RBI go-ahead double during a New York Mets game.Luisangel Acuna is strictly a right-handed batter. Robert Sabo for NY Post

The Mets acquired Acuña, the brother of Atlanta star Robert Acuña Jr., from the Texas Rangers prior to the trade deadline in 2023 in exchange for Max Scherzer. 

They swapped him — along with 22-year-old minor league right-hander Truman Pauley — this offseason for Robert, who is penciled in as the Mets’ center fielder after consecutive poor seasons in Chicago.

And it’s likely another strike for Getz with the White Sox, since he’s been running the team since August 2023 and Chicago went on to lose an MLB-record 121 games the following season and 102 last year — although they are expected to be better this year.

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