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White Sox in the Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame: No. Player Position Tenure Notes 15: Dick Allen: 1B/3B: 1972–1974: 11: Luis Aparicio: SS: 1956–1962, 1968–1970: 4, 5, 8: Luke Appling: SS: 1930–1943, 1945–1950 — Harry Caray: Broadcaster: 1971–1981: 44: Phil Cavarretta: 1B/OF: 1954–1955: Elected mainly on his performance with ...
List of Chicago White Sox award winners and league leaders References. This page was last edited on 19 July 2022, at 14:38 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
The Chicago Cubs are the crosstown rivals of the White Sox, a rivalry that some made fun of prior to the White Sox's 2005 title because both of them had extremely long championship droughts. The nature of the rivalry is unique; with the exception of the 1906 World Series , in which the White Sox upset the favored Cubs, the teams never met in an ...
His 3.66 ERA for the season is the highest to win a Cy Young Award in MLB history. [6] He pitched a complete game victory over the Baltimore Orioles in the first game of the 1983 American League Championship Series, giving up only one run on five hits with no walks. [7] [8] The White Sox faltered in 1984, as Hoyt's record fell to 13–18 with a ...
Jake Mintz & Jordan Shusterman talk about the White Sox finally snapping their 21-game losing streak, give a check in to the major end-of-year awards and remember the late Billy Bean and the ...
The award was originally known as the J. Louis Comiskey Memorial Award, after the Chicago White Sox owner of the 1930s. In 1987, it was renamed the Jackie Robinson Award, in honor of the 40th year since Robinson broke the baseball color line.
After hitting the 100-loss mark on Aug. 25 in just their 131st game, the White Sox appear destined to set an all-time major league record for the most losses in a single season. Chicago entered ...
Marion led the White Sox for two-plus seasons, finishing third in the American League each time, before he stepped down at the end of 1956. In 1958, Marion purchased the Double-A minor league Houston Buffaloes from the Cardinals, and successfully moved the team to the Triple-A level under the Chicago Cubs farm system. [5]