Baseball
Add news
News

Today in White Sox History: August 30

0 2
A game on this day, 69 years ago, a 2-for-4 effort by the legendary Minnie Miñoso, marked the last of his career-longest, 23-game hit streak. | SetNumber: X2762

Minnie keeps hitting; Trader Lane gets mad

1941

White Sox pitcher Johnny Humphries had his string of 35 consecutive scoreless innings snapped on a home run by Chet Laabs of the Browns in the second inning. St. Louis won that afternoon going away, 10-1. Humphries threw three consecutive shutouts going into the Browns game, and had started his scoreless streak back on July 19 with some relief work.


1949

The White Sox organized and celebrated “Jackie Hayes Night” at Comiskey Park. Hayes was a fine second baseman who suddenly lost his sight due to glaucoma.

After a shower one afternoon, Hayes felt as if he had soap in his right eye. The next day his vision was blurry, and the club sent him back to Chicago for treatment. “I thought it was just a cinder in there at first,” he said, “but specialists all over town have looked me over and they say it’s an infection somewhere else settling in my eye. All I know is, I can’t see very well, and it’s getting no better.”

It never did. Hayes visited 10 doctors and received several diagnoses — infection, inflammation, cataract — but no relief. Incredibly, before he completely lost his sight, he played 18 games in the 1940 season, when he eyesight began to go bad and he hit .195. He literally closed his right eye when batting!

Hayes would become the first major-leaguer to wear a batting helmet in a game, as well.


1955

The good news was that the White Sox beat the Red Sox, 7-5, in front of 41,166 at Comiskey Park to move into first place in the American League. The bad? Sherm Lollar was ejected from the game by home plate umpire Larry Napp, and GM Frank Lane, incensed by the decision, ran down from the press box and into the box seats to berate supervisor of umpires Cal Hubbard and AL president William Harridge. Commissioner Ford Frick fined Lane $500 (close to $6,000 today) and ordered him to apologize.

The episode frayed nerves in the owner’s box, as Dorothy Comiskey and son, Chuck, were forced to smile through the episode despite knowing that Lane was on his way out (Chuck was chomping at the bit to take over the team, despite Lane getting a seven-year contract just the previous season).

Less controversial in the win, Minnie Miñoso went 2-for-4 with a double, the final hits of a 23-game hitting streak, fourth-best in club history.


1959

The Sox sealed a huge, four-game sweep of their closest pursuers in the American League by beating Cleveland in front of 66,586 fans at Municipal Stadium, 6-3 and 9-4. Early Wynn and Barry Latman picked up the wins. The wins increased the South Side lead to 5½ games in and basically ended any suspense as to who was going to win the 1959 American League pennant.

An oddity came in the nightcap, when Latman’s sacrifice fly in the second inning scored both Johnny Romano and Al Smith! Latman hit a long drive caught at the fence by Cleveland’s Rocky Colavito (who’d join the Sox in 1967) which scored Romano easily — but Smith never hesitated, and slid safely before third baseman George Strickland could even make a throw.

Sportswriter Gordon Cobbledick of the Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote that it was time for the Sox to “Go-Go home …”

The White Sox won 15 of 22 games from Cleveland in 1959, outscoring the team, 100-76.

Upon returning to Chicago, 10,000 fans greeted the White Sox at Midway Airport, anticipating a pennant win.


1970

In the midst of a season that would see the team lose more games (106) than any White Sox club ever, the South Siders were trounced, 21-11, in the opener of a doubleheader at Comiskey Park. By the middle of the third, the Red Sox already led, 13-2. Future White Sox hurler Ken Brett earned the win.

However, the White Sox did rally to as close as 13-10. With the score 14-11 in the eighth inning and thus a save situation, another future White Sox, Sparky Lyle, relieved Brett with a runner on first. Lyle finished the game with five outs of scoreless ball, while Boston rallied to the eventual final score — create an odd linescore where a save was awarded in an 11-run win!

George Scott, Reggie Smith, and Mike Andrews all had four hits and four RBIs in the game, which represented the 10th time in history Boston had scored 20 or more runs. The White Sox were paced by three hits apiece from Ed Herrmann and Bob Spence.


1981

The White Sox dealt three prospects to the Twins for pitcher Jerry Koosman: The three were “Bambi” Mesa, Ron Perry and Randy Johnson (no, not THAT Randy Johnson, this Randy Johnson was a utility player who appeared in 12 games for the White Sox in 1980). It was a small deal pulled off by GM Roland Hemond that turned out to have big implications in future years. Koosman was like a second pitching coach, tutoring young Sox hurlers. He’d start games, pitch long relief and be a situational lefthander in his two-plus years on the South Side. He’d win 23 games and save five more overall in his time in Chicago.


1983

Carlton Fisk, one of the fastest catchers in baseball history, hit an inside-the-park home run off Dave Stewart of the Rangers at Comiskey Park. His drive struck the top of the wall in left-center field and bounded back towards the infield. While the Texas outfielders were tracking the ball down, Fisk circled the bases. The Sox won that night, 5-0.


1990

Ron Karkovice — not the fastest catcher to ever play the game (although he amazingly had 10 steals in 1992!) — hit an inside the park grand slam off of the Twins’ David West at Minnesota.

With the bases loaded in the fourth inning, Karkovice hit a line drive just over shortstop that rolled to the wall in left-center. Outfielder Dan Gladden was picking the ball up when he started to slip and fall. As he did so, he tossed the ball towards outfielder John Moses to try to start a relay, except that Moses wasn’t looking for it and the ball rolled towards center field. By the time the Twins tracked it down, Karkovice and all the runners had scored. It was the difference in a 4-3 win.


2004

White Sox outfielder Joe Borchard hit the longest home run ever at the current White Sox Park. He drove a pitch from Philadelphia’s Brett Myers, a future Sox pitcher, an estimated 504 feet to right field, smacking off the wall at the back of the bleacher seats. It was part of a 9-8 White Sox win.

At the time he was drafted in the first round in 2000, Borchard got the largest bonus ever handed out by the franchise: $5.3 million.


2010

As part of a 21-hit assault on Cleveland, Alex Ríos went 5-for-6 with four RBIs in a 10-6 win in 11 innings. Ríos was stopped just a triple short of the cycle, putting up a homer, double and two singles.

On that same day, the White Sox made a successful waiver claim of Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Manny Ramírez, who would join the club on September 1. The slugger would muster just two extra-base hits in 24 games down the stretch, failing to produce the spark that would help Chicago catch the first-place Twins.

Comments

Комментарии для сайта Cackle
Загрузка...

More news:

Read on Sportsweek.org:

Other sports

Sponsored