White Sox
The 2005 World Series winners reunited Saturday, with Paul Konerko receiving a gift from famous fan Pope Leo XIV.
Jenks’ 2005 teammates remembered him as someone special Friday, reuniting just a week after his death at age 44.
Twenty years on from a championship, details get blurred as stories only get better. But it’s right on the money to say the Sox never would’ve won it all had they not remade their roster in a tone-shifting manner.
Buehrle was the tarp-sliding, beer-drinking, between-the-legs-flipping life of the party during his dozen years with the Sox. Now he’s immortalized on the Rate Field concourse forever.
In this week’s “Polling Place,” we also asked if NASCAR’s Chicago Street Race should continue.
It has been a rough trio of outings for Schultz, the top-ranked left-handed pitching prospect in baseball, since his promotion. He has an 11.91 ERA.
Rain washed away the scheduled series opener Thursday between the White Sox and Guardians. The teams will play a split doubleheader Friday.
Stuck choosing at No. 10, but with two picks in the first 44, the Sox are hoping to nab a pair of players who can become the next stars of their rebuilding project.
“I’ll say this today just like I did 20 years ago,” Rooney said, “that it’s about the guys on the field. It’s their game, it’s their team. I’m just the broadcaster.” But Rooney isn’t just a broadcaster.
The veteran right-hander got sick in the dugout but recovered superbly to lower his ERA to 1.56.
The center fielder is tuning out the noise as he tries to recover his All-Star form with the trade deadline approaching.
The game was on by 1:22 p.m. Scattered rain was still in the forecast.
Robert also made two impressive running catches in his first action since June 26.
The game was stopped amid a downpour, and it was called off to give the Blue Jays the 6-1 win.
A double-play combination that can help spirit the Sox out of the abyss, through the wilderness and toward something brighter? Um, maybe.
The recent promotions of Kyle Teel and Colson Montgomery mean it’s time for the Sox to stock up on blue-chip batting prospects.
The prized rookie shortstop went 0-for-3 with a walk and a strikeout in his first major-league game in Chicago. But he’s not overthinking it.
Tributes are sure to keep pouring in for the flame-throwing World Series closer throughout the Sox’ 2005 reunion weekend that starts Friday.
The prized shortstop prospect notched his second career RBI but also got picked off first base.
The Rule 5 Draft pick is the Sox’ first rookie All-Star since Jose Abreu in 2014 and the team’s first rookie pitcher to make the Midsummer Classic.