Justin Verlander’s announcement that 2026 will be his final season landed as one more pleasant note for White Sox fans in a year already giving them plenty to smile about.
Verlander said Wednesday that he’ll retire after next season, bringing the curtain down on a career that started more than 20 years ago and has piled up the kind of résumé that points straight to Cooperstown. He made his major league debut in 2005, the same year the White Sox won the World Series, and since then he’s collected nine All-Star selections, three Cy Young Awards, an MVP and two World Series titles.
For the White Sox, though, the bigger story has always been what Verlander did to them on the mound. He has faced Chicago 49 times, more than any opponent other than the Guardians, and the numbers are brutal: 23 wins, four complete games, 293 strikeouts and a 3.62 ERA. That kind of track record explains why his retirement news won’t exactly sting on the South Side.
His success against the White Sox wasn’t confined to his early years in Detroit, either. After being traded to the Astros in 2017, Verlander kept right on dealing, and his 2022 Cy Young run was the one that kept White Sox ace Dylan Cease from taking home the award after finishing second in the voting.
Even late in his career, Verlander was still turning in quality work. In 2025, at age 42, he posted a 3.85 ERA with the San Francisco Giants, and there was some speculation that he could have been a fit for the White Sox’s young pitching staff this season.
Instead, he went back to Detroit to finish where it all began, though injuries have already interrupted that plan. He has made just one start this season, and his latest setback was a hamstring strain suffered during a bullpen session only days before he was set to come off the injured list and face the White Sox in Detroit in June.
The Tigers are still hoping he can get healthy and help them in the second half as they try to stay in the American League race. Their recent surge has also added pressure on the White Sox and may have nudged Chicago out of a shrinking group of deadline sellers in the league.
Verlander’s prime is long gone, and he’s unlikely to rediscover it now. But he still wants to finish with meaningful innings and one more Tigers playoff push. For White Sox fans, the best part is simpler: they can appreciate the career and be glad they won’t have to keep seeing him on the mound.
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Mets Fans Wont Agree On This Freddy Peralta Trade Return
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For the White Sox, the discussion is less about whether they would like the pitcher and more about how much of the system theyd be willing to part with. The suggested package reaches into the lower half of Chicagos prospect list, and that is where the debate gets interesting, because deals like this usually hinge on whether a front office sees enough upside to justify giving up multiple young players for a name with plenty of value questions attached. [Read more 🡒]
