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2024

Today in White Sox History: November 4

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The White Sox parted ways with Tim Anderson, who suffered a shocking tailspin in production in 2023, one year ago today. | Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty Images

The South Side says goodbye to TA

1959

White Sox pitching standout and central Black Sox World Series fixer Lefty Williams died in Laguna Beach, Calif.

Williams had just six games under his belt (1913-14) with the Detroit Tigers when the White Sox bought him out of the Pacific Coast League, where he’d spent 1915 killing it with the Salt Lake City Bees (33-12, 2.84 ERA in 418 2⁄3 innings pitched). Almost immediately he took on a regular load with the White Sox, averaging 287 2⁄3 innings pitched in his four full White Sox seasons (discounting 1918, part of which was spent in the shipyards as World War I service).

His numbers, though amazing by today’s standards, were average in pre-Live Ball times (for example, his career 3.13 ERA is actually just a 99 ERA+, a step below average). Still, in his two true, full-time starter seasons (1919 and 1920), Williams ran up 9.0 WAR, on the brink of All-Star level play — and at 27 years old, several peak seasons could still have been on the board for Lefty.

However, that all changed, as Williams lost a record three World Series games in 1919 and was unquestionably the player with the biggest impact on the thrown Series. While Williams had a -0.58 WPA for the series that was matched by Swede Risberg, his -24.38% cWPA far outpaced anyone else on the roster; in traditional numbers, the starter went 0-3 with a 6.61 ERA and eight walks against four Ks.

After his suspension by Charles Comiskey and subsequent banishment from baseball in 1921, Williams barnstormed and drank, often at the same time. He we worked in landscaping, and unlike co-conspirator Chick Gandil, never spoke of or professed his innocence over the Black Sox scandal.


1965

“El Señor,” manager Al Lopez, resigned his position with the White Sox for health reasons. Perhaps the greatest manager in franchise history, Lopez had nine winning seasons in his nine full-time years as manager. He won the 1959 American League pennant, and was coming off of back-to-back-to-back 90 or more-win seasons in 1963, 1964 and 1965. The Sox averaged 96 wins per season during that time span, and those seasons remain the strongest three-season stretch in team history. Lopez’s 840 wins are second-most all-time for the White Sox. His 11 years managing in Chicago combined with six in Cleveland earned him induction into the Hall of Fame as a manager in 1977.

Eddie Stanky would be named to replace Lopez on December 14, but Lopez would come back to manage the White Sox in 1968 ... replacing Stanky.


2012

Legendary Chicago Bulls announcer and Chicago native Jim Durham passed away in Tomball, Texas. Durham broadcasted play-by-play for the White Sox in 1988-89 and was a national baseball voice for ESPN Radio from 1998 to 2012.

Durham’s most memorable broadcasting call was for “The Shot” by Michael Jordan that upset the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 5 of the first round of the playoffs in 1989:

The inbounds pass comes in to Jordan. Here’s Michael at the foul line, the shot on Ehlo ... GOOD!

(Johnny Kerr: THE BULLS WIN! THEY WIN!)

They upset the Cleveland Cavaliers! Michael Jordan hits it at the foul line!

(Kerr: WOOOH!)

101-100! 20,273 in stunned silence here in the [Richfield] Coliseum. Michael Jordan with 44 points in the game hit the shot over Craig Ehlo. What tremendous heroics we have had in Game 5, from both teams, what a spectacular series this has been. In my days in the NBA, 16 years, this is the greatest series I’ve ever seen!


2023

After an utterly dismal 2023 season of -2.0 WAR that ranked in a tie for third-worst ever in White Sox history among position players, Tim Anderson was released. The club bought him out for $1 million rather than commit to Tim’s $14 million option for 2024.

Anderson left the White Sox with 16.2 WAR for his career, ranking 39th all-time among hitters and as the ninth-best shortstop in club history. He was Chicago’s first round choice in 2013, and matriculated to the majors just three years later. His natural shyness quickly gave way to a motormouth personality that tended to get under the skin of opponents. Anderson was a two-time All-Star, won one Silver Slugger, and finished seventh in 2020 MVP voting while in Chicago.

The gamble taken by the White Sox did pay off, as Anderson signed a one-year deal with Miami and had an even worse season in 2024, sucking -1.5 WAR from the Marlins in just 63 games played.

As it stands — it seems unlikely that Anderson will see the major leagues again — Anderson’s closest career comp, with a 93.7% similarity score, is Alexei Ramírez, who Anderson replaced at shortstop for the White Sox.




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