2006 season After leading the wild card race for much of the season, the White Sox faltered, losing 15 of 24 at the beginning of September to eliminate them from playoff contention, ending their chances of becoming the first repeat winner of the World Series since the New York Yankees in 1999 and 2000. They nonetheless finished with a 90–72 record, the season's best record by a non-playoff team. This was the first year a White Sox manager had led the AL All-Star squad since 1994, when Gene Lamont led the team. In addition to manager Ozzie Guillén, the White Sox had six representatives at the
77th All-Star Game at
PNC Park in
Pittsburgh, the most among any club: starting pitcher
Mark Buehrle, closer
Bobby Jenks, catcher
A. J. Pierzynski, first basemen
Paul Konerko and
Jim Thome, and right fielder
Jermaine Dye.
José Contreras was originally selected to pitch in the All-Star Game, but was replaced by
Francisco Liriano. Guillen removed Contreras from the roster after a 117-pitch performance in a 19-inning game against Boston on the last day before the All-Star Break. Pierzynski was the last White Sox to be named to the team after winning the year's
Final Vote, in which the fans select the 32nd and final player on both the AL and NL squads. Pierzynski is the second White Sox to be selected, following
Scott Podsednik's nomination in 2005. Dye competed in the 2006 CENTURY 21
Home Run Derby; he managed to hit 7 home runs in the first round, but
David Ortiz and
Ryan Howard both surpassed that total to knock Dye out of the competition. The White Sox drew 2,957,414 fans for an average of 36,511, third in the AL. There were a total of 52 sellouts, breaking the previous team record of 18. The White Sox also drew 75 crowds in excess of 30,000, another franchise record.
2007 season On April 18, Buehrle pitched a
no-hitter against the
Texas Rangers, 6–0. Buehrle's only blemish was a walk to
Sammy Sosa in the fifth, but Buehrle would promptly pick Sosa off during the next at-bat. Buehrle secured his spot in the MLB record books when he forced Rangers catcher
Gerald Laird to ground out to third baseman
Joe Crede at 9:14 P.M. CDT, sending the crowd of 25,390 at
U.S. Cellular Field into a frenzy. He would face the minimum of 27 batters using 106 pitches (66 strikes), with the one walk to Sosa and eight strikeouts.
Jermaine Dye hit a
grand slam and
Jim Thome added two solo homers in the history-making night. On July 6, the White Sox announced the signing of Mark Buehrle to a contract extension worth $56 million over four years. The move came after weeks of rumors of Buehrle possibly being traded. Overall, the White Sox season was hampered by injuries and a team-wide hitting slump. However, the season was not a complete failure with Mark Buehrle's no hitter, Jim Thome's 500th home run, and closer
Bobby Jenks 41 consecutive batters retired (tying Jim Barr's all-time record and breaking the American League record.) Jenks would later fall short of the all-time record when Kansas City Royal's player
Joey Gathright slapped a ground ball into left field just out of the reaches of third baseman
Josh Fields and shortstop
Juan Uribe. The White Sox finished the season fourth in their division with a 72–90 record, behind the
Cleveland Indians,
Detroit Tigers, and
Minnesota Twins.
2008 Season: Central champs again and a "blackout game" On July 31, the day of the trade deadline, the White Sox traded relief pitcher
Nick Masset and minor leaguer 2nd Baseman
Danny Richar for
Ken Griffey Jr. of the
Cincinnati Reds. On August 14,
Jim Thome,
Paul Konerko,
Alexei Ramírez, and
Juan Uribe combined to hit four consecutive home runs against the
Kansas City Royals off of pitchers
Joel Peralta and
Rob Tejeda, something that has only been done six other times in the history of
Major League Baseball. On September 29, 2008, Ramirez hit his fourth grand slam of the season, setting a major-league single-season record for a rookie, off of Detroit Tigers pitcher Gary Glover in an 8–2 White Sox victory to qualify the
White Sox for a
one-game playoff against the
Minnesota Twins for the AL Central title. This also broke the team record for most grand slams in a single season. On September 30, 2008, the White Sox won a tiebreaker 1–0 against the Minnesota Twins for the American League playoff spot after a diving catch from
Brian Anderson. A game saving throw to home plate from center-fielder Ken Griffey Jr. to catcher
A. J. Pierzynski on a flyout to keep
Michael Cuddyer from scoring would keep the Twins scoreless through the top of the 5th inning.
John Danks pitched on only three days rest and threw 103 pitches for 2 hits and no runs in eight innings.
Bobby Jenks would close the game with a perfect 9th. The only run of the game came from a
Jim Thome home run, the 541st of his career. This was the lowest scoring tiebreaker game in MLB history. The White Sox are also the only team in MLB history to beat three different teams on three consecutive days: the
Cleveland Indians,
Detroit Tigers, and
Minnesota Twins. They lost to the
Tampa Bay Rays in the
ALDS, 3 games to 1.
2009 season , April 2009 's perfect game, July 23, 2009 During the 2009 offseason the White Sox declined a team option for
Ken Griffey Jr. The White Sox also let
Joe Crede become a free agent, who went on to sign with the
Minnesota Twins, and signed closer
Bobby Jenks to a one-year contract, avoiding arbitration. Pitcher
Bartolo Colón was signed as a
free agent on January 15. On June 4, the White Sox called up 2008 number one draft pick (eighth overall), shortstop
Gordon Beckham. It took Beckham only 364 days to reach the Major Leagues, as he was drafted on June 5, 2008. On June 9, the White Sox called up another number one draft pick (2007, 25th overall), left-handed pitcher
Aaron Poreda. The end of the season was marked by the end of former World Series-winning manager
Ozzie Guillén, who departed a few days before the end of the regular season, eventually signing as manager with the
Florida Marlins. Shortly after the 2011 season, the White Sox announced former third baseman
Robin Ventura as their new manager, succeeding interim manager
Don Cooper.
2012 season On April 21,
Philip Humber threw the third
perfect game in franchise history against the
Seattle Mariners at
Safeco Field in
Seattle, Washington, as the Chicago won 3–0. It was the 21st perfect game in
MLB history. The White Sox were leading the
Central Division until the last weeks of the season where they lost many games and ended up 3 games behind the eventual AL Champions, the
Detroit Tigers. Their final record was 85–77.
2013 season The Sox had the coldest
opening day in 106 years, equalling the April 18, 1907 record of . However, the White Sox finished last in the AL Central and had the second worst record in the American League, losing 99 games – their first season losing more than 95 games since 1976.
2014 season In 2014, the White Sox had a 73–89 record and finished fourth in the AL Central. First baseman
José Abreu was named the American League
Rookie of the Year, winning the team
triple crown with a .317 batting average, 36 home runs and 107 RBIs.
2015 season The White Sox had an aggressive offseason following the 2014 season, signing free agents
David Robertson and
Melky Cabrera to multi-year contracts and trading for pitcher
Jeff Samardzija. However, the acquisitions seemed to have little effect on the team's performance, as they finished the 2015 season in fourth place with a 76–86 record.
2016 season The White Sox began the 2016 season on a strong note, leading the American League with a 23–10 record on May 9. The success did not last, however, as the White Sox finished with a 78–84 record and again placed fourth in the AL Central. Robin Ventura resigned as the team manager after the season. He was replaced by
Rick Renteria.
2017 season: Start of the rebuild In the 2017 offseason, the White Sox began to trade players for prospects. On December 6, 2016, the White Sox traded starting pitcher
Chris Sale to the Boston Red Sox for outfielder
Luis Alexander Basabe, pitcher Víctor Díaz, pitcher
Michael Kopech, and infielder
Yoán Moncada. The following day, they traded outfielder
Adam Eaton to the Washington Nationals for pitchers
Dane Dunning,
Lucas Giolito, and
Reynaldo López. During the season on July 13, 2017, the White Sox traded starting pitcher
José Quintana to the Chicago Cubs for pitcher
Dylan Cease, infielder Bryany Flete, outfielder
Eloy Jiménez, and utility player Matt Rose. In 2017, the White Sox fell to 67–95 and again finished fourth in the AL Central. José Abreu led the American League with 343
total bases.
2018 season 2018 was the worst season for the Chicago White Sox since 1970, as they finished with a 62–100 record and placed fourth in the AL Central for the fifth year in a row.
2019 season In 2019, the White Sox finished third in the AL Central, their highest position since 2012, with a 72–89 record. José Abreu led the American League with 123 RBIs.
2020 Season: Back in the playoffs In 2020, the White Sox went all in after a long rebuild. They signed big-time free agents like catcher
Yasmani Grandal, pitchers
Dallas Keuchel and
Gio González, and
Edwin Encarnación. The team finished second in the AL Central with a record of 35–25 in the
pandemic-shortened season and clinched a playoff spot for the first time since 2008. The Sox unfortunately lost in the
Wild Card Series against the
Oakland Athletics 2 games to 1.
José Abreu won the American League MVP award, becoming the fourth player in White Sox history to do so.
2021 season: Central Division champs again and back to back playoff appearances During the 2020–21 offseason, the White Sox fired manager
Rick Renteria and brought back
Tony La Russa to take his place. La Russa had not managed a team since 2011 and became the oldest person to manage an MLB team at the age of 76. During the offseason, the White Sox made some more big moves. They traded for
Texas Rangers starting pitcher
Lance Lynn and signed arguably the best closer in the league in
Liam Hendriks to a four year, $54M contract. On June 6, La Russa won his 2,764th game as a manager, surpassing
John McGraw for second on the all-time managerial wins list. On August 12, the White Sox played in the first
Field of Dreams game in
Dyersville, Iowa against the
New York Yankees. The White Sox won the game 9–8 on a
walk-off home run by
Tim Anderson. On September 23, the White Sox clinched the American League Central Division for the first time since 2008 while also clinching back-to-back postseason berths for the first time in franchise history. Overall in 2021, the White Sox had a record of 93–69, their first 90 win season since 2006. The White Sox lost the
ALDS to the
Houston Astros in four games.
2022 season: Regression Before the
lockout, the White Sox signed
Kendall Graveman on November 30, 2021, to a three-year, $24M contract. After the lockout ended, the Sox signed pitchers
Joe Kelly (two year, $17M) and
Vince Velasquez (one year, $3M) on March 14, 2022. The next day, they signed second baseman
Josh Harrison to a one-year $5.5M contract. They picked up Craig Kimbrel's option months before and on April 1, the Sox traded Kimbrel to the
Los Angeles Dodgers for outfielder
A. J. Pollock. On April 3, the Sox traded catcher
Zack Collins to the
Toronto Blue Jays for catcher
Reese McGuire. The White Sox were not able to improve themselves with these transactions, however, as they finished the 2022 season with a record of 81–81, finishing second in the AL Central division.
2023 season: More regression On October 3, 2022, with 3 games left in the regular season, White Sox manager Tony La Russa announced he was stepping down as manager due to health concerns. On November 1, 2022, the White Sox hired Kansas City Royals bench coach
Pedro Grifol as their next manager. During the offseason, they signed pitcher
Mike Clevinger to a one year, $12 million contract and outfielder
Andrew Benintendi to a franchise record five year, $75 million contract. But the new management hires and signings never panned out as the 2023 White Sox season was a disaster. The White Sox started the first month of the season with a record of 8-21. At that point, fans began calling for ownership to sell the team and a White Sox fan called the local
ESPN 1000 radio show hosted by
Tom Waddle and Marc Silverman and went on a nearly 7 minute long rant about the team. By the all-star break, the White Sox were 38-54 and were the 3rd worst team in the AL with underperformance and injuries plaguing the team. By late July, the White Sox began a
fire sale in which they traded many key players for prospects. On July 26, they traded pitchers
Lucas Giolito and
Reynaldo López to the
Los Angeles Angels. On July 28, they traded pitcher
Kendall Graveman to the
Houston Astros and pitchers
Lance Lynn and
Joe Kelly to the
Los Angeles Dodgers. On August 1 they traded pitcher
Keynan Middleton to the
New York Yankees and infielder
Jake Burger to the
Miami Marlins. On August 22, the White Sox fired general manager Rick Hahn and executive vice president Kenny Williams after the team was 49–76 by the time of their firings. The White Sox promoted assistant general manager
Chris Getz as the new Senior Vice President and general manager. The White Sox finished the season with their 5th 100 loss season in franchise history with a record of 61–101.
2024 season: Most losses in the modern era In 2024, the White Sox started the season with the worst record through their first 25 games at 3–22, tying them with the
2003 Detroit Tigers and the
2022 Cincinnati Reds behind the
1988 Baltimore Orioles who went 2–23 through their first 25 games while also making MLB history by getting shutout 8 times in their first 22 games. The team also had three losing streaks of 10 or more games, including breaking two franchise records for losing streaks with a 14-game losing streak from May 22 to June 6 and a 21-game losing streak after the All-Star break from July 10 to August 5, tying a AL record with the 1988 Orioles. The White Sox broke the MLB record for the most losses by the All-Star break as they were a league worst 27–71 by the All-Star break. On August 8, manager Pedro Grifol, bench coach
Charlie Montoyo, 3rd base coach
Eddie Rodríguez, and assistant hitting coach Mike Tosar were all fired after the team was 28–89. Grifol ended his manager tenure with a record of 89–190. The White Sox appointed baserunning coach
Grady Sizemore as interim manager. From July 6 to September 3, the White Sox were 5–45, the worst 50-game span for a major league team since the
1916 Philadelphia Athletics. On August 17, the White Sox were officially eliminated from playoff contention becoming the earliest to be eliminated since the divisional era began in 1969, a record that was previously held by the
2018 Baltimore Orioles. On September 1, the White Sox lost their 107th game, breaking their franchise record for most losses in a season they'd held since
1970. On September 27, the White Sox lost their 121st game of the season, surpassing the
1962 Mets for the
most losses in modern MLB history. The White Sox finished the season with a record of 41–121, the worst record in the modern era of Major League Baseball and the 5th worst win percentage in the modern era of Major League Baseball with a win percentage of .253 putting them behind the
1904 Washington Senators (.252), the 1962 New York Mets (.250), the
1935 Boston Braves (.248), and the 1916 Philadelphia Athletics (.235).
2025 season On October 31, 2024, White Sox hired former Texas Rangers associate manager
Will Venable as their new manager. The season was the White Sox's 125th Anniversary season with them doing special giveaways during the season and was the 20th Anniversary of the 2005 World Series championship. The team did a special 2005 World Series reunion weekend on the weekend of July 11–13 with special pre-game ceremonies taking place. The first one was
Mark Buehrle getting a statue on the 11th. Then a pre-game ceremony on the 12th with the entire team minus
Bobby Jenks, who died 8 days prior from stomach cancer, with
Paul Konerko throwing the ceremonial first pitch to
A. J. Pierzynski. And ended with starting pitchers Mark Buehrle,
Jon Garland,
Freddy García, and
José Contreras each throwing out the first pitch on the 13th in honor of the four former World Series champions pitching complete games in the
2005 American League Championship Series. ==See also==