
The South Siders swap for a sly southpaw
1900
After a meeting with the Chicago Orphans (Cubs), the way was cleared for Charles Comiskey to bring his team from St. Paul, Minn. to Chicago. They would set up shop on the South Side of the city, as required by the Orphans. (In truth, Comiskey was bringing the team to town regardless of whether the north siders approved. The meeting was set up in hopes of avoiding any conflicts.)
The White Sox (the Orphans also permitted use of their former moniker) would have immediate success, winning the 1900 (minor-league) pennant with a 82-53 record, beating Milwaukee by 4 1⁄2 games.
1931
The White Sox defeated the New York Giants, 11-6, in the first night game played between American or National League teams. The contest took place in front of 2,500 fans at Buff Stadium in Houston, under 235-kilowatt bulbs held aloft by six steel towers, each 120 feet high. The game was arranged only 11 days before it was played.
There were 23 total hits in the game, but the score was deadlocked 6-6 after nine innings. In the top of the 10th, Bill Cissell scored Willie Kamm with a single for the game-winning RBI. Luke Appling also clubbed a two-run double in the rally.
The Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues were the first major league team to play under lights, in 1930, hosting the Homestead Grays among other clubs.
1982
The White Sox swap pitchers Ross Baumgarten and Butch Edge to the Pirates for second baseman Vance Law and reliever Ernie Camacho.
Law would be a primary shortstop for the White Sox in 1982 before shifting almost exclusively to third base in 1983 and 1984. Compiling just 4.0 WAR over his three seasons with the White Sox, Law was nonetheless a consummate “glue” guy and was a key contributor to 1983’s 99-win club.
Baumgarten, a promising young southpaw from Highland Park, who had tallied up 6.1 WAR over the 1979 and 1980 seasons, was dealt away at the right time by the White Sox: He would pitch just 12 more games in the majors and be waived out of baseball before the 1983 season.
Ironically enough, Vance was just the first of two Laws the White Sox acquired in March 1982, as Rudy Law was brought in from the Dodgers on March 30.
1994
The Yankees dealt lefty reliever Paul Assenmacher to the White Sox for minor league hurler Brian Boehringer. Assenmacher had a solid, 0.9 WAR summer for the White Sox, tallying a 3.55 ERA/3.43 FIP in the truncated season ending in August. He signed as a free agent with Cleveland in 1995. Boehringer made his MLB debut in 1995 and was horrible: -1.2 WAR in just seven games. However, the righty would last in the majors until 2004, playing for four teams and compiling three seasons of at least 1.4 WAR.
1997
The White Sox suffered a major blow to their hopes for a championship when star third baseman Robin Ventura destroyed his ankle and lower leg in a compound fracture on a slide at home plate in a spring game against the Red Sox. The injury was so horrific that a woman sitting in the stands passed out when she saw the aftermath, caused by Ventura’s spikes catching in the wet, muddy ground. The result was that Ventura’s foot was pointed 180 degrees in the wrong direction.
The injury took place only 10 days before the season opener, and the Sox were left in a state of shock.
GM Ron Schueler announced that the team would be looking for a replacement — and then did nothing to fill the void by running out in-house options in Greg Norton and Chris Snopek (five homers and 36 RBIs over 105 games). The Sox stumbled out of the gate, with an 8-18 start.
Thankfully, after a rigorous rehabilitation process, Robin came back on July 24, to play in 54 games, and would continue his outstanding major league career after he left the White Sox as a free agent after the season.
2017
Coming off of a terrific half-season in the majors (2.4 WAR, 0.7 defensive WAR, seventh in Rookie of the Year voting) the White Sox signed ascendant star Tim Anderson to a six-year (2018-23), $25 million extension that could have extended to eight years and $51.5 million with club options. Jim Margalus had our South Side Sox coverage of the deal.
At the time, it was the biggest contract extension ever given a player with less than one year of MLB service (Anderson was called up on June 10, 2016).
Despite that, most observers immediately regarded this extension as a steal for the White Sox, and it certainly turned out so: 13.8 WAR for $25 million works out to a cut-rate, $1.8 million per WAR in a era where wins ran roughly $5 million per and open-market wins at an even higher rate. (Put another way, the White Sox could have picked up TA’s options in both 2024 and 2025 and without him playing a single game would have still “won” with this extension, at $3.7 million per WAR.)
In 2023, Anderson had a horrific season, both in the batter’s box and out, with a -2.0 WAR that ranks in a tie for the third-worst position player season (and tied for 11th worst among all players) in White Sox history. The White Sox did not pick up his option for 2024; Anderson signed in Miami but suffered another awful campaign.