Chicago White Sox | |||||
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2024 Chicago White Sox season | |||||
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Major league affiliations | |||||
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Current uniform | |||||
Retired numbers | |||||
Colors | |||||
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Other nicknames | |||||
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Major league titles | |||||
World Series titles (3) | |||||
AL Pennants (7) | |||||
WL Pennants (1) | |||||
AL West Division titles (2) | |||||
AL Central Division titles (4) | |||||
Wild card berths (1) | |||||
Front office | |||||
Principal owner(s) | Jerry Reinsdorf | ||||
General manager | Chris Getz | ||||
Manager | Will Venable | ||||
Website | mlb.com/whitesox |
The Chicago White Sox are an American professional baseball team based in Chicago. The White Sox compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) Central Division. The club plays its home games at Guaranteed Rate Field, which is located on Chicago's South Side. They are one of two MLB teams based in Chicago, alongside the National League (NL)’s Chicago Cubs.
The White Sox originated in the Western League, founded as the Sioux City Cornhuskers in 1894, moving to Saint Paul, Minnesota, as the St. Paul Saints, and ultimately relocating to Chicago in 1900. The Chicago White Stockings were one of the American League's eight charter franchises when the AL asserted major league status in 1901. The team, which shortened its name to the White Sox in 1904, originally played their home games at South Side Park before moving to Comiskey Park in 1910, where they played until 1990. They moved into their current home, which was originally also known as Comiskey Park like its predecessor and later carried sponsorship from U.S. Cellular, for the 1991 season.[4]
The White Sox won their first World Series, the 1906 World Series against the Cubs, with a defense-oriented team dubbed "the Hitless Wonders", and later won the 1917 World Series against the New York Giants. Their next appearance, the 1919 World Series, was marred by the Black Sox Scandal in which eight members of the White Sox were found to have conspired with gamblers to fix games and lose the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds. In response, the new Commissioner of Baseball, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, banned the players from the league for life. The White Sox have only made two World Series appearances since the scandal. The first came in 1959, where they lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers, before they finally won their third championship in 2005 against the Houston Astros. The 88 seasons it took the White Sox to win the World Series stands as the longest MLB championship drought in the American League, and the second longest in both leagues, to the Cubs' 108 seasons.
From 1901 to 2024, the White Sox have an overall win-loss record of 9,594–9,612–103 (.500).[5]
Drawing on the classic Yankees "pinstripes" uniforms, they adopted white jerseys with black pinstripes for home games, and utilized the silver and black color scheme for the away and alternate jerseys.
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