·
The White Sox were established as one of
the eight AL charter franchises in 1901 as the Chicago White Stockings.
·
When then owner Charles Comiskey moved the
team in 1900 to Chicago from St. Paul they were called the Saints and decided
to adopt the old name of the Cubs. They shortened the name to the Sox after
four seasons.
·
They play their games at Guaranteed Rate
Field which is located in the South Side of Chicago, Illinois.
·
They have made the playoffs ten times with
five divisional titles.
·
They have won six AL Pennants and three
World Series Championship in 1906, 1917 & 2005.
Batting
Lineup:
1. SS
Luis Aparicio
2. 2B
Nellie Fox
3. RF
Harold Baines
4. DH
Frank Thomas
5. 1B
Paul Konerko
6. C Carlton Fisk
7. 3B
Robin Ventura
8. CF
Shoeless Joe Jackson
9. LF
Minnie Minoso
Starting Rotation:
1.
Red Faber
2.
Ted Lyons
3.
Ed Walsh
4.
Billy Pierce
5.
Mark Buehrle
Bullpen:
1.
Closer: Hoyt Wilhelm
4.
Keith Foulke
5.
Bobby Jenks
6.
Wilbur Wood
Bench:
OF-Carlos Lee
INF-Luke Appling
INF-Eddie Collins
Coaching
Staff:
Manager-Jimmy Dykes
Jimmy Dykes managed the
White Sox for thirteen seasons where he finished with the most wins with 899.
He guided them to third place three times, was a player manager for six of
those seasons and managed them in the minor leagues too. He made two All-Star appearances
while playing for them.
Bench Coach-Al Lopez
Al Lopez managed the
White Sox for eleven seasons where he finished with the second most wins with
840 and was elected into the Hall of Fame in 1977. He guided them to one AL Pennant
and became the VP due to medical reasons.
1B Coach-Ozzie Guillen
Ozzie Guillen managed the
White Sox for eight seasons where he finished with the third most wins with
678. He guided them to two divisional titles, one AL Pennant and one World
Series Championship in 2005. He won AL Manager of the Year once and played shortstop
for them for thirteen seasons where he made three All-Star appearances, won a
gold glove and won AL Rookie of the Year.
3B Coach-Tony La Russa
Tony La Russa managed the
White Sox for eight seasons where he finished with the fourth most wins with
522 and was elected into the Hall of Fame in 2014. He managed them in the minor
leagues, won AL Manager of the Year once and guided them to one divisional
title.
Hitting Coach-Jerry Manuel
Jerry Manuel managed the
White Sox for six seasons where he finished with the fifth most wins with 471. He
guided them to one divisional title and won AL Manager of the Year once.
Pitching Coach-Kid Gleason
Kid Gleason managed the
White Sox for five seasons where he finished with the ninth most wins with 392.
He guided them to one AL Pennant and pitched one season for them.
Bullpen
Coach-Fielder Jones
Fielder Jones managed the
White Sox for five seasons where he finished with the sixth most wins with 426.
He guided them to one AL Pennant and one World Series Championship in 1906. He
also was their player manager for five seasons and also was on one other AL
Pennant team.
There have been thirty
seven Hall of Fame players who have played for them at different points in their
respective careers. They have retired eleven numbers for players.
Frank Thomas spent
sixteen seasons for the White Sox as their greatest first basemen where he put
up numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected into the Hall of Fame
in 2014 and they retired his number 35. He made all five of his All-Star appearances,
won two AL MVPs, won all four of his silver sluggers, won one batting title,
first player to win two silver sluggers at two different positions, led the AL
in doubles once, led the AL in walks four times and was on one World Series Championship
team in 2005 while there. He also
finished as the franchise leader for many offensive categories in White Sox
history like having the highest offensive WAR, highest on base percentage,
slugging percentage, most runs scored, doubles, home runs, RBIs, walks and
extra base hits.
Nellie Fox spent fourteen
seasons in the infield for the White Sox as their greatest/longest tenured second
basemen where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected
into the Hall of Fame in 1997 and they retired his number 2. He made all fifteen
of his All-Star appearances, won all three of his gold gloves, won the 1959 AL
MVP, led the AL in triples once and led the AL in hits four times while there. He
also finished in the top 10 for many offensive categories in White Sox history like
having the most triples, second most at bats, plate appearances, hits, singles,
third most runs scored, games played, third highest defensive WAR, four most
doubles, total baes and fourth highest WAR for position players to name some.
Harold Baines spent
fourteen seasons in the outfield for the White Sox as their greatest/longest
tenured right fielder where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that
got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 2019 and they retired his number 3. He
made four of his six All-Star appearances, won his only silver slugger while
there and was as coach for twelve seasons for them where he was on one World
Series Championship team in 2005. He also finished in the top 10 for many
offensive categories in White Sox history like having the third most home runs,
fourth most RBIs, extra base hits, fifth most at bats, doubles, total bases,
sixth most plate appearances and hits to name some.
Carlton Fisk spent
thirteen seasons behind the plate for the White Sox as their greatest catcher
where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected into the
Hall of Fame in 2000 and they retired his number 72. He made four of his eleven
All-Star appearances, won all three of his silver sluggers while there, has the
record for most hit and runs scored for catchers. He also finished with the
fourth most home runs, seventh most RBIs, extra base hits, seventh highest offensive
WAR, eight most total bases and tenth most games played in White Sox history.
Luis Aparicio spent ten
seasons in the infield for the White Sox as their greatest shortstop where he
put up numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected into the Hall of
Fame in 1984 and they retired his number 11. He made eleven of his thirteen
All-Star appearances, won AL Rookie of the Year, won seven of his nine gold
gloves and led the AL in stolen bases seven times while there. He also finished
in the top 10 for many offensive categories in White Sox history like having
the second highest defensive WAR, second most stolen bases, sixth most singles,
seventh most runs scored, seventh highest WAR for position players, eight most
hits, plate appearances and at bats to name some.
Red Faber pitched twenty
seasons for the White Sox where he put up numbers that speak for themselves
that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1964. He led the AL in ERA two
times, led the AL in innings pitched once, led the AL in complete games twice, led
the AL in games started and was on one World Series Championship team in 1917
while there. He also finished in the top 10 for many pitching categories in
White Sox history like having the highest WAR for pitchers, most games played,
second most innings pitched, games started, complete games and third most
strikeouts to name some.
Ted Lyons pitched twenty
one seasons for the White Sox where he put up numbers that speak for themselves
that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1955 and they retired his number
16. He made his only All-Star appearance, led the AL in wins twice, led the AL
in ERA once, pitched a no-hitter, led the AL in complete games twice, led the
AL in shutouts twice and led the AL in innings pitched twice while there. He manage them for three seasons too. He
also finished in the top 10 for many pitching categories in White Sox history
like having the most wins, innings pitched, complete games, games started,
second most games played and second highest WAR for pitchers to name some.
Ed Walsh pitched thirteen
seasons for the White Sox where he put up numbers that speak for themselves
that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1946. He led the majors in wins
once, led the AL in ERA twice, led the majors in strikeouts twice, pitched a
no-hitter, led the AL in innings pitched four times, led the AL in saves five
times, led the AL in shutouts three times, led the AL in complete games twice,
led the AL in games started three times, was on one World Series Championship
team in 1906 while there and has the lowest ERA in MLB history. He also finished
in the top 10 for many pitching categories in White Sox history like having the
lowest ERA, most shutouts, second most strikeouts, third most wins, innings
pitched, complete games and third highest WAR for pitchers to name some.
Luke Appling spent twenty
seasons in the infield for the White Sox as their second greatest/longest
tenured shortstop where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that got
him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1964 and they retired his number 4. He
made all seven of his All-Star appearances and won two batting titles while
there. He also finished in the top 10 for many offensive categories in White
Sox history like having the most games played, at bats, plate appearances, hits,
singles, highest WAR for position players, second highest offensive WAR, second
most runs scored, doubles, walks, third most RBIs and triples to name some.
Eddie Collins spent twelve
seasons in the infield for the White Sox as their second greatest/second
longest tenured second basemen where he put up numbers that speak for themselves
that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1939. He led the AL in stolen
bases three times, led the AL in walks once, was on one World Series Championship
team in 1917 while there, he is the only player to play twelve seasons for two
teams, has the MLB record for sacrifice bunts, has the MLB record for second
basemen in career games, assists, total chances and is one of twenty nine
players to appear in four decades. He also finished in the top 10 for many
offensive categories in White Sox history like having the most stolen bases, second
highest on base percentage, batting average, third highest offensive WAR, third
highest WAR for position players, third most triples, walks, singles, fifth most
hits, runs scored and plate appearances to name some. Other notable infielders
in White Sox history have been Jack Fournier, Joe Kuhel, Eddie Robinson, Earl Torgerson, Carlos May, Jim Spencer, Adam Laroche, Ray Durham, Joey Cora, Jorge Orta, Bobby Knoop, Sandy Alomar Sr, Jackie Hayes, Buck Weaver, Chico Carrasquel, Ron Hansen, Bucky Dent, Jose Valentin, Juan Uribe, Omar Vizquel,
Alexei Ramirez, Bill Melton, Willie Kamm, Joe Crede, Pete Ward, Herbert Perry, Kevin Youkilis, two of their greatest manager Jimmy Dykes, Ozzie Guillen, active players Jose Abreu, Todd Frazier, Gordon Beckham, Hall of Famers
Jim Thome, Roberto Alomar and George Davis.
Hoyt Wilhelm was the White
Sox closer for six seasons where he put up numbers that speak for themselves
that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1985. He set the MLB record for consecutive
errorless games by a pitcher, broke the record for relief wins, games finished,
innings pitched and broke the all-time games pitched record while there. He
also finished with the second lowest ERA, fourth most games finished, fifth
most saves and ninth most games played in White Sox history.
Minnie Minoso spent twelve
seasons in the outfield for the White Sox as their greatest/longest tenured left fielder
where he made seven of his nine All-Star appearances, won two of his three gold
gloves, led the AL in triples twice, led the AL in hits once, led the AL in
doubles once, led the AL in stolen bases three times while there and they
retired his number 9. He was the first black player in White Sox history, the
first black Cuban in MLB history, was one of the first Hispanic players to make
an All-Star team, first player to get a hit after the age of fifty, second player
to appear in five decades and coached for them for three seasons. He also
finished in the top 10 for many offensive categories in White Sox history like
having the fourth highest offensive WAR, fifth highest WAR for position
players, fifth most extra base hits, RBIs, fifth highest on base percentage, sixth
most walks, triples, runs scored, seventh most doubles and total bases to name
some.
Shoeless Joe Jackson
spent six seasons in the outfield for the White Sox where he led the AL in
triples twice, was on two AL Pennant teams, was on one World Series
Championship team in 1917 while there and has third highest batting average in
MLB history. He also finished with the highest batting average, third highest
on base percentage, sixth most triples, eight highest slugging percentage and
tenth highest offensive WAR in White Sox history.
Paul Konerko spent
sixteen seasons in the infield for the White Sox as their second greatest first
basemen where he made all six of his All-Star appearances, won the Roberto
Clemente Award, won one ALCS MVP, was their captain for nine seasons, was on
one World Series Championship team in 2005 and they retired his number 14. He
also finished in the top 10 for many offensive categories in White Sox history
like having the most total bases, second most games played, home runs, RBIs, extra
base hits, third most at bats, plate appearances, hits, doubles, fourth most
singles, walks and runs scored to name some.
Robin Ventura spent ten
seasons in the infield for the White Sox as their greatest/longest tenured
third basemen where he made one of his two All-Star appearances, hit two grand slams in one game, only player to hit a grand slam in
both games of a doubleheader and won five of
his six gold gloves while there. He managed them for five seasons. He also
finished with the fifth most walks, sixth highest WAR for position players, seventh
most home runs, eighth most RBIs, eighth highest defensive WAR and eight highest
offensive WAR in White Sox history.
Billy Pierce pitched thirteen
seasons for the White Sox where he made all seven of his All-Star appearances, led
the AL in wins once, led the majors in ERA once, led the AL in strikeouts once,
led the AL in complete games three times while there and they retired his number
19. He worked a scout and color analyst for them. He also finished in the top
10 for many pitching categories in White Sox history like having the most
strikeouts, third most shutouts, games started, fourth most wins and innings
pitched to name some.
Mark Buehrle pitched twelve
seasons for the White Sox where he made four of his five All-Star appearances,
won three of his four gold gloves, pitched a perfect game, pitched a no-hitter,
led the AL in games started twice, led the AL in innings pitched twice while
there and they retired his number 56. He also finished in the top 10 for many
pitching categories in White Sox history like having the fourth most strikeouts,
games started, sixth most wins, seventh most innings pitched and seventh
highest WAR for pitchers to name some. Other notable starters in White Sox history
have been Eddie Cicotte, Doc White, Thornton Lee, Jack McDowell, Joe Horlen,
James Shields, Jake Peavy, Gary Peters, Frank Smith, Sad Sam Jones, Eddie Lopat, Joe Dobson, Virgil Trucks, Tommy John, Jim Kaat, Jerry Koosman, Dick Donovan, Juan Pizarro, LaMarr Hoyt, Wilson Alvarez, Charlie Hough, Jerry Reuss,
Bartolo Colon, Jon Garland, Freddy Garcia, Jose Contreras, Javier Vazquez,
active pitchers Chris Sale, Edwin Jackson, Jose Quintana, Hall of Famers Early Wynn and Tom Seaver.
Magglio Ordonez spent
eight seasons in the outfield for the White Sox as their second greatest/second longest tenured right fielder where he made four of his six All-Star
appearances and won two of his silver sluggers while there. He also finished
with the third highest slugging percentage, fifth most home runs, seventh most
extra base hits, tenth most RBIs and tenth highest batting average in White Sox
history.
Carlos Lee spent six
seasons in the outfield for the White Sox as their second greatest left fielder
where he would average 25 home runs-90 RBIs in a season while there. He also finished with
the tenth most home runs in White Sox history. Other notable outfielders in
White Sox history have been Chet Lemon, Ralph Garr, Jermaine Dye, Ken Berry,
Rip Radcliff, Ron Kittle, Albert Belle, Scott Podsednik, Juan Pierre, Al Smith,
Carlos Quentin, Mike Kreevich, Thurman Tucker, Tommie Agee, Jim Landis, Lance Johnson,
Mike Cameron, Chris Singleton, Darrin Jackson, Carl Everett, Aaron Rowand, Alex Rios, Shano Collins, Wally Moses, Pat Kelly, Richie Zisk, Sammy Sosa, Greg Luzinski, George Bell, Jose Canseco, Adam Dunn, Mark Kotsay, Manny Ramirez, one of their greatest managers Fielder Jones, active players Avisail Garcia, Melky Cabrera, Hall of Famers Larry Doby, Al Simmons, Harry Hooper and Tim Raines.
AJ Pierzynski spent eight
seasons behind the plate for the White Sox as their second greatest catcher where
he made one of his two All-Star appearances, caught a no-hitter, won his only
silver slugger and was on one World Series Championship team in 2005 while
there. Other notable catchers in White Sox history have been Ron Karkovice, Luke Sewell, Mike Tresh, Sherm Lollar, Duane Josephson, Ed Herrmann, Brian Downing, Sandy Alomar and Hall of Famer Ray Schalk.
Bobby Thigpen was the
White Sox closer for eight seasons where he made his only All-Star appearance, led
the AL in saves once, had the MLB record of 57 saves in a season and won reliever of the year once while there. He worked
as minor league coach and major league coach for them. He also finished with
the most saves, games finished and seventh most games played in White Sox
history.
Roberto Hernandez was the
White Sox closer for seven seasons where he made one of his two All-Star appearances
while there. He also finished with the second most games finished and third most
saves in White Sox history.
Keith Foulke was the
White Sox closer for six seasons where he was on one divisional title team
while there. He also finished with the fourth most saves and fifth most games
finished in White Sox history.
Bobby Jenks was the White
Sox closer for six seasons where he made both of his All-Star appearances and
was on one World Series Championship team in 2005 while there. He also finished
with the second most saves and third most games finished in White Sox history.
Wilbur Wood was the White
Sox closer and starter for twelve seasons where he all three of his All-Star appearances,
led the AL in wins twice, led the AL in games appeared three times, led the AL
in games started four times, led the AL in games finished twice and led the AL
in innings twice while there. He also finished in the top 10 for many pitching categories
in White Sox history like having the third most games played, fourth highest
WAR for pitchers, fifth most strikeouts, innings pitched, wins and ninth most
saves to name some. Other notable relievers in White Sox history have been Matt Thornton, Terry Forster, Octavio Dotel, JJ Putz, Scott Linebrink, Scott Radinsky, Dustin Hermanson, Clint Brown, Turk Lown, Bob Locker, Lerrin Lagrow,
Ed Farmer, Bob James, Bob Howry, Neal Cotts, Cliff Politte, Luis Vizcaino,
Damaso Marte, Jesse Crain, active players Addison Reed, Boone Logan, David Robertson and Hall of Famer Goose Gossage.
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