1990s • April 18, 1991: The inaugural game of the ballpark. The White Sox were defeated by the
Detroit Tigers 16–0. Attendance: 42,191 • April 22, 1991:
Frank Thomas hits the first White Sox home run in new Comiskey Park as the Sox defeat the
Baltimore Orioles, 8–7, in the first night contest in the new ballpark. Attendance: (30,480) • September 27, 1993: White Sox clinch the American League West Division with a 4–2 victory against the
Seattle Mariners giving them their first postseason berth since 1983. Attendance: (42,116) • October 5, 1993: New Comiskey hosted its first ever playoff game, game 1 of the
1993 ALCS. The Sox lost to the
Toronto Blue Jays, 7–3. The park also played host to games 2 and 6 of the series, which the Sox lost, four games to two. Attendance: (46,246) • July 15, 1994:
Cleveland Indians player
Albert Belle was caught using a
corked bat and was confiscated and locked in the umpires' dressing room. During the game, the Indians sent relief pitcher
Jason Grimsley to retrieve the bat where Grimsley crawled from inside the
false ceiling with a flashlight in his mouth, took the bat, and replaced it with a bat used by
Paul Sorrento. By the 6th inning, a custodian noticed the bat was missing with ceiling tiles on the floor. After the game, umpire
Dave Phillips noticed the bat was stolen and contacted the Chicago police. The White Sox even threatened to press charges against whoever stole the bat. The AL ordered the Indians to return Belle's bat threatening to send the FBI before they dropped it and asked for the bat which the Indians would give back. The bat was sawed and found to be corked and Belle was suspended for 10 games before was reduced to 7 on an appeal. No one knew who stole the bat until 1999 when Grimsley admitted his participation to the New York Times. Attendance: (38,686) • September 14, 1997:
Carlton Fisk's number 72 was retired by the White Sox as the Sox played the
Cleveland Indians. The Sox would lose 8–3. Attendance: (32,485) • May 18, 1998:
Oakland Athletics Mike Blowers hits for the cycle against the White Sox in the A's 14–0 win. Blowers becomes the first player to hit for the cycle in the stadium and the second in franchise history to hit for the cycle. Attendance: (14,387) • July 6, 1999: White Sox
Chris Singleton hits for the cycle against the
Kansas City Royals. Singleton becomes the first White Sox player to hit for the cycle in the stadium and the fourth player in franchise history to hit for the cycle. The White Sox lost the game 8–7 in 10 innings. Attendance: (11,251)
2000s • April 27, 2000: White Sox
José Valentín hits for the cycle against the
Baltimore Orioles in the White Sox's 13–4 win becoming the 5th player in franchise history to hit for the cycle. Attendance: (13,225) • September 13, 2002: The
Rolling Stones, on their
Licks Tour, play the first-ever concert held in the stadium. • July 15, 2003: The stadium hosts the
74th MLB All-Star Game. The
first All-Star game was played at
Comiskey Park in 1933. Attendance: (47,609) • July 25, 2003: White Sox hall of famer
Frank Thomas hits his 400th career MLB homerun against the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays off of pitcher
Jorge Sosa becoming the 36th player in MLB history to do it. Attendance: (22,617) • September 13–14, 2004: the stadium hosts two games between the
Florida Marlins and the
Montreal Expos, due to
Hurricane Ivan in Florida. The Marlins sweep by scores of 6–3 and 8–6. The series would return to Florida to finish the last three games, with the Expos taking two. Game 1 attendance: (4,003). Game 2 attendance: (5,457) • August 7, 2005: A life-sized bronze statue of catcher
Carlton Fisk is unveiled on the center-field concourse behind section 164. The White Sox defeat the
Seattle Mariners 3–1. Attendance: (35,706) • October 5, 2005: The stadium hosted game 2 of the
2005 American League Division Series between the White Sox and the defending World Series champion
Boston Red Sox with the White Sox up 1–0 in the series. The Red Sox led the game 4–0 heading into the 5th when the White Sox answered with a 5 run inning including an error by former White Sox shortstop
Tony Graffanino when a ball hit by
Juan Uribe went through the legs of Graffanino which could've got the inning ending double play but allowed the inning to continue. The rally was capped off by a go-ahead three-run home run by
Tadahito Iguchi that won the game for the White Sox 5–4 and take a 2–0 series lead. The White Sox would win their next game in Boston to sweep the Red Sox and move on to the ALCS. Attendance: (40,799) • October 12, 2005: The stadium hosted game 2 of the
2005 American League Championship Series between the White Sox and the
Los Angeles Angels with the Angels up 1–0 in the Series. The game was tied 1–1 in the bottom of the 9th inning with 2 outs. Angels pitcher
Kelvim Escobar struck out
A. J. Pierzynski when Pierzynski took a couple steps toward his dugout before he began to run to first base. Home plate umpire
Doug Eddings said it was a uncaught third strike and had to be thrown to first which no throw was made because they all thought the inning was over and Pierzynski was called safe and allowed the inning to continue. Replay appeared to show the ball to be caught cleanly by catcher
Josh Paul but replay review did not exist back then and the call stood. The White Sox would pinch run Pierzynski with
Pablo Ozuna. Ozuna would steal second before
Joe Crede would walk it off with a base hit off the left field wall and won the game for the White Sox 2–1 to tie the series at one game a piece. The White Sox would win their next three in Anaheim to advance to the World Series for the first time since
1959. Attendance: (41,013) • October 22, 2005: The
first ever World Series game in this stadium between the Chicago White Sox and the
Houston Astros. It was the White Sox's 5th World Series appearance, their first since
1959, and were looking to win their 3rd title in franchise history while it was the Houston Astros' first ever World Series appearance in the franchise's 44 year history.
Luis Aparicio throws the ceremonial first pitch, then is joined by 1959 World Series teammates
Jim Landis,
J. C. Martin,
Billy Pierce and
Bob Shaw on the field.
Josh Groban sings the national anthem.
Craig Biggio of the
Houston Astros is the game's first batter.
Jermaine Dye's first-inning home run off
Roger Clemens provides the game's first hit and run. The White Sox get their first World Series game victory since 1959, defeating the
Houston Astros 5–3. Among the people attending the game was Robert Prevost, who later became
Pope Leo XIV. Attendance: (41,206) • October 23, 2005: The stadium hosted game 2 of the 2005 World Series the following night between the White Sox and Astros. The White Sox were trailing the Astros 4–2 in the bottom of the 7th. The White Sox had the bases loaded for
Paul Konerko after the Astros brought in
Chad Qualls to help them get out of the jam. Konerko would hit a Grand Slam on the first pitch from Qualls to put the White Sox up 6–4. They would hold the lead until the 9th inning when closer
Bobby Jenks had a blown save and allowed Astros pinch-hitter
José Vizcaíno to tie the game on the first pitch with a 2 RBI single. In the bottom of the 9th, the Astros were attempting to force extra innings when
Scott Podsednik, who hit zero Home Runs during the regular season, hit a walk-off Home Run off
Brad Lidge to win the game for the White Sox 7–6 and take a 2–0 Series lead. It was the 14th walk-off home run in World Series history. The White Sox would win the next two games in Houston to win the World Series, their first since
1917. Attendance: (41,432) • October 28, 2005: After winning the 2005 World Series, the team's victory parade begins at U.S. Cellular Field, players boarding double-decker buses that travel north to downtown Chicago. A throng estimated at more than 200,000 celebrates the first
White Sox championship since 1917. • April 2, 2006: The Sox open the 2006 season with the unveiling of their
2005 World Series Championship banner on the left-center light tower. Three other banners are placed on the other light towers: One for the
1906 and
1917 World Series championships by the Sox on the far left tower. The one on the right-center tower is for all the team's American League Championships. The one on the far right is for all the division championships. The Sox defeat the
Cleveland Indians 10–4. Attendance: (38,802) • April 18, 2007:
Mark Buehrle tossed a
no-hitter against the
Texas Rangers with it being the first no-hitter in the stadium, the 16th in franchise history, and the first no-hitter in franchise history since
Wilson Álvarez in 1991. Attendance: (25,390) • September 16, 2007: Hall of famer
Jim Thome hits his 500th career homerun in walk-off fashion to win it 9–7 against the
Los Angeles Angels off of pitcher
Dustin Moseley. Thome became the first player in MLB history to hit his 500th career homerun in walk-off fashion and being the 23rd player in MLB history to join the
500 home run club as well as the first and only to do it in a White Sox uniform. Attendance: (29,010) • April 8, 2008: The Illinois Sports Facilities Authority unveil the first environmentally friendly permeable paving parking lot to be used by a Major League sports facility in parking lot L. • April 11, 2008: The White Sox dedicate their new brick plaza to the 2005 World Series Champions and their fans. The Sox are defeated by the
Detroit Tigers 5–2. Attendance: (26,094) • May 7, 2008: Minnesota Twins
Carlos Gómez hits for the cycle for the first time in his career against the White Sox in the Twins' 13–1 win. Gómez became the 8th player in franchise history and the third youngest player in MLB history to hit for the cycle. Attendance: (21,092) • July 20, 2008: A life-sized bronze statue of
Harold Baines is unveiled on the center-field concourse behind section 105. The Sox are defeated by the
Kansas City Royals 8–7 and
Jim Thome of the Sox collects his 2,000th career hit. Attendance: (32,269) • August 14, 2008: White Sox hit
four consecutive home runs against the Kansas City Royals with the batters being
Jim Thome,
Paul Konerko,
Alexei Ramírez, and
Juan Uribe off of
Joel Peralta and
Rob Tejeda. It was the 6th time in MLB history that an MLB team hit four consecutive home runs and the first time its ever happened in franchise history. Attendance: (32,788). • September 29, 2008: White Sox came into a big game. If the White Sox won, they force an AL Central tiebreaker game against the
Minnesota Twins the next day. The White Sox won the game 8–2 against the Detroit Tigers with rookie Alexei Ramírez hitting a go-ahead grand slam in the 6th. It was Ramírez's fourth grand slam of the season setting a single season record for most grand slams hit in a season by a rookie. Attendance: (35,923) • September 30, 2008: U.S. Cellular Field hosted the
2008 American League Central tie-breaker game between the Minnesota Twins and the Chicago White Sox. The game decided who would win the American League Central and would face the
Tampa Bay Rays in the
American League Division Series. White Sox fans were encouraged to wear all black at the game to show their support which they would do. The game was a pitching duel between
John Danks of the White Sox and
Nick Blackburn of the Twins until the 7th when Jim Thome hit a go-ahead home run off of Blackburn to give the White Sox a 1–0 lead. The game would end on a diving catch by White Sox outfielder
Brian Anderson and the White Sox won 1–0 and clinched the AL Central Division. The White Sox would lose to the eventual American League champion Tampa Bay Rays in four games in the ALDS. Attendance: (40,354) • January 20, 2009: The White Sox display a banner outside of Gate 6 to honor White Sox fan
Barack Obama's presidential inauguration. • July 23, 2009: The
first perfect game and second no-hitter at U.S. Cellular Field and the 18th perfect game in MLB history.
Mark Buehrle strikes out six batters and records 11 ground ball outs to get a perfect game against the
Tampa Bay Rays. The perfect game included an amazing play by White Sox outfielder
DeWayne Wise, who came in as a defensive replacement, where he robbed a home run from
Gabe Kapler in the top of the 9th. It is the second no-hitter of Buehrle's career, the last occurring on April 18, 2007, against the
Texas Rangers. It was also the franchise's second perfect game with the last one being
Charlie Robertson in 1922. He is the first player since
Hideo Nomo to throw multiple no-hitters, and the first to throw a perfect game since
Randy Johnson of the
Arizona Diamondbacks did it May 18, 2004, against the
Atlanta Braves at
Turner Field. In a remarkable coincidence, Buehrle's first no-hitter was 2 hours and 3 minutes and Buehrle's second was just as long. Another coincidence was home plate umpire (#56, same as Buehrle's)
Eric Cooper who called both Buehrle's no-hitters. Yet another coincidence is that
Ramón Castro, who caught for Buehrle, wears the No. 27 on his jersey, the number of consecutive outs needed for a perfect game. It was also Cooper's third no-hitter called with his first one with
Hideo Nomo on April 4, 2001. Attendance: (28,036) • August 2, 2009:
New York Yankees Melky Cabrera hits for the cycle against the White Sox in their 8–5 win becoming the 14th player in franchise history to hit for the cycle. Attendance: (36,325)
2010s • August 29, 2010: The
White Sox host
Frank Thomas Day at the ballpark against the
New York Yankees. Thomas's jersey is retired, along with his image posted on the legends' wall in left-center field next to
Billy Pierce on his left and
Carlton Fisk on his right, and also right under "The Catch" logo. Yankees defeat the Sox 2–1. Attendance: (39,433) • May 3, 2011:
Minnesota Twins pitcher
Francisco Liriano throws a no-hitter against the White Sox. It was the Twins' 7th no-hitter in franchise history and the first no-hitter in franchise history since
Eric Milton in 1999. Attendance: (20,901) • July 31, 2011: The White Sox unveil a replica statue of
Frank Thomas on the outfield concourse behind section 160. The White Sox lose to the
Boston Red Sox 5–3. Attendance: (28,278) • April 25, 2014: White Sox rookie
José Abreu would break the MLB rookie record for the most home runs in the month of March–April with 9 home runs hit in the first month of the season as he hit two home runs in the game against the
Tampa Bay Rays including a walk-off grand slam in the bottom of the 9th to win the game 9–6 and break the record that was previously shared by
Kent Hrbek in 1982,
Carlos Delgado in 1994, and
Albert Pujols in 2001. Attendance: (17,210) • September 27, 2014:
Paul Konerko is honored before the game for his retirement from baseball. A statue of him is unveiled on the left-field concourse next to
Frank Thomas' Statue. Konerko was the last member of the 2005 Champion White Sox left on the team at the time of his retirement. The Sox defeat the
Kansas City Royals 5–4. Attendance: (38,160) • September 28, 2014: Paul Konerko would play his final Major League game. Konerko would start on first base before he would be taken out of the game at the start of the top of the 6th by
Andy Wilkins. Konerko would walk off the field for the last time with a 2 minute standing ovation from the White Sox crowd. The White Sox would lose to the Royals 6–4. Attendance: (32,266) • May 23, 2015:
Paul Konerko's number 14 is retired by the White Sox with a pregame ceremony. He became the 10th player to have his number retired by the White Sox. The White Sox were defeated by the
Minnesota Twins 4–3. Attendance: (38,714) • June 24, 2017:
Mark Buehrle's number 56 is retired by the White Sox with a pregame ceremony. Buehrle becomes the 11th player in White Sox history to have a retired number. The White Sox were defeated by the
Oakland Athletics 10–2. Attendance: (38,618) • September 9, 2017: White Sox
José Abreu hits for the cycle against the
San Francisco Giants in the White Sox's 13–1 win becoming the 6th player in franchise history to hit for the cycle. Attendance: (17,688) • September 2, 2018: White Sox host Hawk Harrelson day to honor their announcer
Ken Harrelson in his final year of commentating. The White Sox would beat the
Boston Red Sox 8–0. Attendance: (30,745) • September 23, 2018: White Sox announcer Ken Harrelson would call his final game as a broadcaster. White Sox would lose to the
Chicago Cubs 6–1. After the game, teams and fans from both sides gave Hawk one final standing ovation and a tip of the cap as a thank you. Attendance: (39,449)
2020s • August 16, 2020: White Sox hit four consecutive home runs against the
St. Louis Cardinals with the batters being
Yoán Moncada,
Yasmani Grandal,
José Abreu, and
Eloy Jiménez off of pitcher
Roel Ramírez, who was making his MLB debut that day. It was 10th time in MLB history a team hit four consecutive home runs and the second time in franchise history. Attendance: No in–person attendance due to
COVID-19 pandemic. • August 25, 2020: White Sox pitcher
Lucas Giolito throws a no-hitter against the
Pittsburgh Pirates. The no-hitter was the 19th in White Sox history. Attendance: No in–person attendance due to COVID-19 pandemic. • September 17, 2020: White Sox clinch a playoff berth for the first time since 2008 with a 4–3 win against the Minnesota Twins. Attendance: No in–person attendance due to COVID-19 pandemic. • April 14, 2021: White Sox pitcher
Carlos Rodón pitched a no-hitter against the
Cleveland Indians. Rodón had a perfect game going into the 9th and got the first out with an amazing stretch play by José Abreu before he hit
Roberto Pérez in the foot ending his chances of a perfect game. Rodón retired the next two batters he faced completing the 20th no-hitter in franchise history. Attendance: (7,148) Limited in–person attendance due to COVID-19 pandemic. • May 25, 2021: Long time Major League Baseball umpire
Joe West umpired his 5,376th game passing
Bill Klem for most games ever umpired. Attendance: (16,380) Limited in–person attendance due to COVID-19 pandemic. • June 6, 2021: White Sox manager
Tony La Russa won his 2,764th game as manager passing
John McGraw for second on the
All-time manager wins list. Attendance: (20,068) Limited in–person attendance due to COVID-19 pandemic. • July 31, 2021: White Sox catcher
Seby Zavala became the first player in MLB history to hit his first three career home runs in the same game. The White Sox lost to the Cleveland Indians 12–11. Attendance: 35,866 • October 10, 2021: Guaranteed Rate Field hosted its first playoff game since 2008 with game 3 of the
2021 American League Division Series with the
Houston Astros facing the White Sox with the Astros taking a 2–0 series lead and looking for a sweep. The game went back and forth in the first four innings with the White Sox scoring first in the first inning before the Astros answered with 5 of their own in the next two innings and took a 5–1 lead in the third. The White Sox answered with a 5 spot in the bottom of the third with home runs by Yasmani Grandal and
Leury García to take a 6–5 lead. The Astros tied it in the fourth before the White Sox answered with a 3 spot in the bottom of the fourth and eventually won the game 12–6 to force game 4 which they would lose. Attendance: (40,288) • May 9, 2022:
Cleveland Guardians' Josh Naylor became the first player in MLB history to hit two three-run home runs or grand slams in the ninth inning or later and the first player to have at least eight RBI in the eighth inning or later the same game. Naylor led a ninth inning comeback where the Guardians were down 8–2 to the White Sox where they rallied off 2 runs before Naylor came up to bat and crushed a game-tying grand slam. Naylor appeared in the top of 11th where the game was tied 9–9 and Naylor hit a go-ahead three run home run to give the Guardians a 12–9 win. Attendance: (17,168). • April 30, 2023: The White Sox were trailing 9–5 to the
Tampa Bay Rays in the bottom of the 9th and came back and won 12–9 with a 7 run inning that was capped off by a walk–off three–run home run by
Andrew Vaughan. The win snapped a 10–game losing streak. Attendance: (17,049) • May 29, 2023: White Sox closer
Liam Hendriks appeared in his first Major League game since defeating cancer after he was diagnosed with
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma on January 8 that same year. Hendriks was greeted with a standing ovation from the crowd at the park. Hendriks went through one inning and only gave up two runs in the White Sox 6–4 loss to the
Los Angeles Angels. Attendance: (23,599) • August 25, 2023: Three spectators were injured by a stray bullet. The suspect "reportedly snuck the gun in past metal detectors hiding it in the folds of her belly fat." A post-game concert was supposed to be held after the game for the
I Love the 90s Tour with singers
Vanilla Ice,
Rob Base, and
Tone Loc to perform but that was cancelled for the reasoning being "technical issues." Attendance: (21,906) • July 10, 2024: The stadium's first
immaculate inning would occur as White Sox pitcher
Michael Kopech would throw an immaculate inning against the
Minnesota Twins while also picking up a save to preserve the White Sox 3–1 victory in the first game of a doubleheader. Kopech became just the second White Sox pitcher in franchise history to throw an immaculate inning and the first since
Sloppy Thurston in 1923. Attendance: (13,607) • July 11, 2025: A life-sized bronze statue of
Mark Buehrle is unveiled in the right field concourse in Section 105. It was the start of the teams' 20th Anniversary World Series reunion weekend. The White Sox would beat the
Cleveland Guardians 5–4 in 11 innings. Attendance: (25,084) • July 12, 2025: A pre-game ceremony was held in honor of the 20th Anniversary of the White Sox's
2005 World Series championship with every member from the championship team except for closer
Bobby Jenks, who died 8 days before the ceremony from stomach cancer. It also had a special jersey that was gifted to
Paul Konerko by Chicago Cardinal
Blase Cupich that was signed by world famous White Sox fan
Pope Leo XIV with the Jersey having the #14 that Konerko wore with Konerko and Leo's name on the back of the jersey. The ceremony also had a special tribute to the late closer Bobby Jenks. Konerko would throw out the ceremonial first pitch to catcher
A. J. Pierzynski. The White Sox would lose to the Cleveland Guardians 6–2. Attendance: (21,785) • August 15–16, 2025: The
Savannah Bananas and the Firefighters of
Banana Ball came to Rate Field for two nights. The two nights combined for an attendance of more than 80,000 people. The Bananas had former White Sox players and
2005 World Series champions
A. J. Pierzynski,
Mark Buehrle, and
Paul Konerko with Pierzynski and Konerko taking at bats and Buehrle pitching as well as Pierzynski being the catcher and also invited former World Series winning manager
Ozzie Guillén to be the first base coach and also be a part of one of the Bananas' dance routines. ==White Sox record at home==