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Today in White Sox History: July 30

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Baltimore Orioles Ron Hansen...
On this day 56 years ago, Ron Hansen recorded one of the most rare plays in baseball. His punishment? Getting traded back to the White Sox three days later. | SetNumber: X6955

Triple plays are rare ... unassisted, almost unheard of

1933

Never had two White Sox hitters had days like this on the same afternoon. Sox outfielder George “Mule” Haas reeled off eight hits in 12 at bats in a sweep of a doubleheader with the St. Louis Browns. If that wasn’t enough, his teammate and All-Star outfielder Al Simmons, went 7-for-12. The Sox would win, 8-7, in 10 innings, and then 15-2.


1955

With the White Sox in a three-way tie for first place, pitcher Dick Donovan had an appendicitis attack. At the time, Donovan was 13-4 with a 2.64 ERA. He didn’t return until late August, and went 2-5 the rest of the season. The Sox fell out of contention after his illness, and ended the season at 91-63, good for third place.

Donovan pitched for the White Sox from 1955-60, winning 73 games.


1962

White Sox starting pitcher Ray Hebert, who would eventually win 20 games on the season, was named as a last-minute replacement for the All-Star Game. Hebert got the win, pitching three innings, as the AL beat the NL, 9-4, at Wrigley Field. In his three innings of work, Herbert allowed only three singles — two of the infield variety.

Herbert was joined on the team by Luis Aparicio and Jim Landis.


1968

Former White Sox shortstop Ron Hansen accomplished the first unassisted triple play since 1927. With runners on first and second the bottom of the first, Cleveland’s Joe Azcue lined out to Hansen, and with the hit-and-run play on, Hansen stepped on second base for a second out to double off Dave Nelson and tagged Russ Snyder, who ran right into the out. It was the 13th unassisted triple play in MLB history — and it would be another 40 years before another one was recorded.

The triple-outs in one play didn’t help Hansen’s woebegone Senators, however, as they lost on the road, 8-1.

Three days later, Hansen was traded back to the White Sox for Tim Cullen. The two players had been dealt for one another just five months earlier.


1977

It was the brightest moment for eventual Comeback Player of the Year Eric Soderholm. In a nationally-televised game on NBC, before a full house at Comiskey Park, Soderholm blasted a three-run home run in the last of the seventh inning to put the Sox ahead in a key game they’d end up winning, 6-4. The shot came off of Kansas City’s Doug Bird, a sidearmer and one of the toughest relief pitchers in baseball.

Soderholm finished 1977 with 25 home runs, 67 RBIs and a .280 batting average.

Also in this game, the White Sox surpassed one million fans (1,001,388) before August for the first time in team history; at 1,657,135, this club would end up setting the all-time season attendance mark at Comiskey Park.


1995

So this is what a good teammate does? In a game at Baltimore, DH John Kruk (who had un-retired in May to take a White Sox contract offer), decided to retire just as quickly. Kruk singled in the first inning, raising his average to .308, then went back to the clubhouse, packed his bags and left the game for good.

He did this before the game ended, mind you, then told certain reporters it was no fun DH’ing on a losing team that “didn’t have any heart.”


2003

In a game at Kansas City, Sox infielder José Valentín homered in the second, third and fifth innings of a 15-4 win. José went 3-for-5 with five RBIs. One of his home runs was a three-run shot.

Switch-hitting home runs in one game has happened 11 times in White Sox history — and Valentín is responsible for three of them. He is also the only player in White Sox history to switch-hit home runs as part of a three-homer game.


2021

Capping off a wild 24 hours at the trade deadline, the White Sox showed they were all-in for a playoff run, acquiring three players: relief pitchers Ryan Tepera and Craig Kimbrel from the Cubs, and second baseman César Hernández from Cleveland.

It only took minor league pitchers to secure Tepera (Bailey Horn) and Hernández (Konnor Pilkington), but Kimbrel cost the White Sox a pretty penny: former No. 4 overall pick Nick Madrigal and relief pitcher Codi Heuer. Losing a pair of highly-regarded young players was difficult, but getting Kimbrel should have given the team a chance to have not only the best starting rotation in the American League but also the best bullpen — a throwback to the 1950’s and 60’s, when the franchise usually had that.

Unfortunately it did not work out, as Kimbrel lost his effectiveness pitching in non-closing roles and Hernández basically dropped off the face of the Earth.

In the offseason Hernández’s contract option would not be picked up. Kimbrel saw his option (controversially) renewed at $16 million, then was traded late in Spring Training to the Dodgers for outfielder AJ Pollock. Tepera, who was the only effective trade acquisition of the trio, signed a free agent deal with the Angels.

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