June 29 has delivered a few unforgettable White Sox moments over the years, and the ledger runs from brutal pitching damage to a rare offensive explosion and one monster blast that briefly gave 2024 something to smile about.
Back in 1968, Detroit’s Jim Northrup did the damage in a 5-2 win over the White Sox by launching his third grand slam in the span of a week. Cisco Carlos carried a 2-1 lead into the third inning, but Northrup’s swing flipped the game and finished off the scoring.
Just five days earlier, Northrup had pulled off the unusual feat of hitting two grand slams in one game at Cleveland, and he wasn’t done there - on July 4, he added two more homers, though neither left the yard with the bases loaded. Over a nine-game stretch from June 24 through July 4, he hit .303/.368/.970 with three triples, five home runs and 19 RBIs.
The White Sox also had a rougher kind of history note tied to June 29 in the form of Ted Lyons and Tom Seaver. Seaver, who never wanted to leave the northeast, was hijacked by the White Sox as a free-agent compensation pick in 1984 and had to be cajoled by club ownership to even give the South Side a try.
Once he got there, though, Tom Terrific turned in two of the three best 39-or-older WAR seasons in team history, posting a 5.0 WAR at age 40, a 4.8 mark at age 41 by Ted Lyons, and Seaver’s 4.1 at age 39. Still, Seaver wanted one last run closer to home and asked to return to New England for his final MLB starts, a wish GM Ken Harrelson granted during a 2.5 WAR career finale split between Chicago and Boston.
Lyons, meanwhile, was versatile in the broadest sense of the word, appearing at every position on the diamond for the White Sox over 4 1/2 seasons and 497 games, but that flexibility didn’t translate into much production: just 1.7 WAR and a 78 OPS+ on the South Side.
Then came 1995, when the White Sox put together a wild one at County Stadium, outlasting the Brewers 17-13 behind a 22-hit barrage that pushed their winning streak to seven games. Robin Ventura was the centerpiece, going 5-for-6 with four singles and a solo homer in the top of the ninth, part of a night in which he scored four times and drove in three.
The game got chippy in the middle innings, which fit the mood of the Phil Garner Brewers and Terry Bevington White Sox, who plainly detested each other. After Ray Durham’s three-run homer gave Chicago a 13-6 edge in the sixth, Bill Wegman hit Ron Karkovice in the ribs with a 3-0 pitch, drawing an immediate ejection for Wegman and then Garner for arguing, with both benches spilling out.
And it only got stranger from there. With the White Sox ahead 17-10 in the ninth, Bevington brought in Rob Dibble, who had been walking nearly two batters an inning in garbage time.
Dibble’s first pitch sailed under pinch-hitter Pat Listach’s chin, and that was enough to set off an all-out brawl that ended with Dibble and Listach both tossed. The whole episode became even more bizarre later, when Dibble was released after a disastrous 16-game stretch with a 2.372 WHIP and 27 walks in 78 batters faced, then signed with Milwaukee - where his locker at County Stadium wound up right next to Listach’s.
In 2024, even as the White Sox were mired in one of the 15 worst starts in major league history, there were still a few thin bright spots. One of them came from Luis Robert Jr., who crushed a 470-foot home run to lead off the sixth inning and tie the game at three before the White Sox rolled past Colorado, 11-3. It was the fifth-longest homer ever hit at new Sox Park.
The one downside to that moment was the TV call, which didn’t help matters. As the source put it, it “might be the worst ever called in a professional game” - and “it was not John Schriffen ’s finest moment, and that’s saying something.”
In Other News...
White Sox Fans Wont Love Where Nick Madrigal Just Resurfaced
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Now Madrigal is trying to get back on track after a stint with the Angels, where he was the odd man out when the roster got healthier and he opted for free agency rather than accepting a minor league assignment. The Rays have parked him at Triple-A Durham for now, with a chance to earn a return to the majors, and his path will be worth watching for a White Sox club that has since moved on from the old draft-and-development approach that once made him such a central part of the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
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One name that keeps surfacing is Yordan Alvarez, a hitter who would instantly change the shape of Chicagos order if he ever became available. The complication is that Houston still controls him for two more years, and whether that changes may depend on how the Astros look over the next two weeks, which leaves the White Sox watching closely and waiting for the market to clarify itself. [Read more 🡒]
White Sox Face Defining First Pick Question As Draft Pressure Builds
Since Mike Shirley took over as scouting director in 2020, the White Sox have built a pretty clear draft identity: steer away from high school pitching, lean into hitters who get on base, and use the middle rounds to stock up on college arms who can move faster through the system. It has been a balanced approach overall, but with a definite lean toward college pitching when the board reaches those deeper stages, and recent names in the pipeline reflect that mix of strike-throwing upside and everyday offensive skill.
Now the real challenge arrives with the 2026 draft, where the White Sox will have to decide how much of that philosophy carries over when the stakes are highest. Their success in that class will hinge on how they use the first overall pick, a choice that could shape the organization for years and force a test of whether their established habits fit the player who might be available when they are on the clock. [Read more 🡒]
