Today in White Sox History: August 8
The Hit Men go ham
1914
The White Sox purchased the contract of outfielder Oscar “Happy” Felsch from Milwaukee for $19,000. Felsch, an outstanding glove man and hitter, would become part of history with his participation in the 1919 Black Sox scandal.
1976
With the White Sox in last place and going nowhere, owner Bill Veeck pulled out another wacky promotion: For the first time, a major league team played a game wearing shorts, as the Sox beat the Royals, 5-2, at Comiskey Park.
The White Sox would wear shorts two other times, both against the Orioles, on August 21 and 22.
Their record in the three games was 2-1; maybe they should have worn them more often, because they finished the season with 97 losses!
No other big-league team has worn shorts since.
1977
He was arguably the best manager in the history of the franchise, and Al Lopez took his place in the Hall of Fame on this day.
Lopez managed the Sox from 1957 to 1965, coming over after Cleveland fired him. He also managed Chicago in parts of the 1968 and 1969 seasons.
Lopez compiled 840 wins and a winning percentage of .564. He won the 1959 AL pennant, had three consecutive seasons from 1963 to 1965 where the Sox averaged 96 wins — the best three-year stretch in franchise history — and had five second-place finishes.
He worked a game through his assistant coaches, and emphasized fundamentals; if a player didn’t perform, he didn’t play, period.
And on the field on this day, the White Sox recorded their 10th two-homer game of the season, setting a franchise mark. In fact, in this 5-4 win over the expansion Seattle Mariners at Comiskey Park, the South Siders clubbed three, starting with Lamar Johnson to open scoring in the first with a two-run shot, then with Oscar Gamble’s homer to give the White Sox another lead at 4-3 leading off the seventh inning.
The final blow came with one out in the bottom of the ninth in a 4-4 game, as Johnson clubbed a solo shot to win it and improve the White Sox to 64-44.
The White Sox would set a franchise mark, since broken, with 192 homers in 1977.
1994
With time running out for labor peace, Sports Illustrated put Frank Thomas on the cover along with future White Sox outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. The headline read, “Top Guns. Frank Thomas and Ken Griffey Jr. Two powerful reasons to keep playing ball.”
The plea would fall on deaf ears, as baseball shut down the following week, eventually ending the season.
2021
The White Sox put on a show for a national TV audience on Sunday Night Baseball by pounding the Cubs, 9-3, and sweeping the weekend series at Wrigley Field. The Sox jumped out early, hammering three first-inning home runs from Tim Anderson, Eloy Jiménez and Andrew Vaughn. It was the first time the White Sox hit three first-inning home runs on the road in franchise history. Jiménez was 3-for-4 with two runs scored, five RBIs and a pair of home runs against his old organization.