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South Side Hit Men

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Posts posted by South Side Hit Men

  1. White Sox Right Fielder Appearances (2013 - April 30, 2023):

    1. 467 Avisail Garcia (2013 - 2018)
    2. 176 Adam Eaton (2016 & 2021)
    3. 122 Leury Garcia (2014 & 2017 - 2022)
    4. 108 Alex Rios (2013)
    5. 103 Gavin Sheets (2021 - 2023)
    6. 90 Adam Engel (2020 - 2022)
    7. 84 Davan Viciedo (2014)
    8. 81 Ryan Cordell (2018 - 2019)
    9. 66 Daniel Palka (2018 - 2019)
    10. 64 Moises Sierra (2014)
    11. 63 Andrew Vaughn (2021 - 2022)
    12. 51 Trayce Thompson (2015 & 2018)
    13. 43 Brian Goodwin (2021)
    14. 42 Nomar Mazara (2020)
    15. 33 John Jay (2019)
    16. 30 Charlie Tilson (2019)
    17. 29 JB Shuck (2015 - 2016)
    18. 28 Jordan Danks (2013 - 2014)
    19. 21 Oscar Colas (2023)
    20. 18 Alen Hanson (2017)
    21. 17 Willy Garcia (2017)
    22. 14 AJ Pollock (2022)
    23. 11 Jason Coats (2016)
    24. 11 Romy Gonzalez (2021 - 2023)
    25. 9 Casper Wells (2013)
    26. 9 Jake Lamb (2021)
    27. 9 Adam Haseley (2022 - 2023)
    28. 8 Danny Mendick (2021)
    29. 7 Rymer Liriano (2017)
    30. 7 Ryan Goins (2019)
    31. 4 Ryan LaMarre (2018)
    32. 4 Nicky Delmonico (2020)
    33. 3 Luis Gonzalez (2021)
    34. 3 Mark Payton (2022)
    35. 3 Eloy Jimenez (2023)
    36. 2 Adam Dunn (2014) 
    37. 2 Jacob May (2017)
    38. 2 Billy Hamilton (2021)
    39. 1 Dewayne Wise (2013)
    40. 1 Alejandro De Aza (2014)
    41. 1 Tyler Saladino (2016)
    42. 1 Jerry Sands (2016)
    43. 1 Yolmer Sanchez (2017)
    44. 1 Jarrod Dyson (2020)
  2. Final thoughts on Reinsdorf's quotes.

    1. Over 40 years of baseball ineptitude has proved your teams do well financially but not on the field. Not even talking 2nd-4th across The MLB, just across a pathetic 5 team division. Jerry's teams primary finish between 2nd and 4th, with as many last place finishes as division winners, all but one of the six not advancing in the playoffs.

    Current GM Years in Bold, current season TBD.

    Overall Reinsdorf Era:

    1. (12) 2nd Place
    2. (11) 3rd Place
    3. (7) 4th Place
    4. (6) 1st Place
    5. (5) 5th Place
    6. (1) 7th Place

    7 Team AL West Era: 

    1. (2) 1st Place (1983, 1993)
    2. (2) 2nd Place (1990, 1991)
    3. (4) 3rd Place (1981, 1982, 1985, 1992)
    4. (4) 5th Place (1984, 1986, 1987, 1988)
    5. (1) 7th Place (1989)

    5 Team AL Central Era:

    1. (4) 1st Place (2000, 2005, 2008, 2021)
    2. (10) 2nd Place (1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2010, 2012, 2022)
    3. (7) 3rd Place (1995, 2001, 2006, 2009, 2011, 20192020)
    4. (7) 4th Place (2007, 20142015201620172018, 2023)
    5. (1) 5th Place (2013)

     

    2. News flash Jerry, you are the "dumbest competitor".

     

    • Thanks 1
  3. 4 hours ago, bmags said:

    I also don't understand how they aren't performing way more churn among minor league FA and waivers. It was so clear that so many of the Charlotte staff last year couldn't be on the AA team of the Rays. 

    Actually I do understand - the org is incredibly lazy.

    I remember Hostetler bragging about how stupid the prospect writer lists were and how he'd lie to them...but is there any org that seems to toe the value of the top 100 guys mroe than the sox? We rarely trade them, and we all remember Hahn's brilliant trades to grab Casey Gillaspie and a declining Blake Rutherford. It was 100% because they were on the last prospect handbook he had.

    The primary value the Sox ever derived from their minor league system since the Himes core and the Buehrle / Garland run was Kenny flipping the failed prospects for actual ML contributors.

  4. 1 hour ago, Bob Sacamano said:

    Well for one he can actually go down and play every day rather than sitting on the bench for half the games. That's at least something.

    Plus you get an extra controllable year, which was heavily debated over the past several months on SoxTalk.

    Gotta save Reinsdorf money when you can, though he’s not in this business to make money based on his comments yesterday.

    • Like 1
  5. 1 hour ago, EloyJenkins said:

    Haseley helps win last game in a number of ways....Sheets starts very next game. 

    And Grifol is good because???

    Sheets would never be on a roster of a legitimately contending team. Then again neither does “MVP” Haseley, who at least can field a baseball.

    I guess he is trying to steal three at bats and will swap in Hamilton or Haseley in the 6th/8th if the game is still meaningful.

  6. 52 minutes ago, The Mighty Mite said:

    I’ve despised this man since 1983 with the Harry Caray and Jimmy Piersall incident when on the night they clinched the 83 division he and Einhorn came on TV and trashed Harry and Jimmy, Reinsdork might be a billionaire but is also a classless asshole. Don’t bet against this creep screwing White Sox fans one more time when he sells the team to someone who will move the team to Nashville or Charlotte.

    I liked the original version better, he had more humanistic and likable qualities than the current version.

     

     

    • Haha 1
  7. 28 minutes ago, baseballgalaly said:

     

     

    That doesn’t excuse the White Sox starting 7-19, and in a position to sell, during a year they expected to contend for the American League Central crown despite slashing the payroll by $25 million. But it does inform it.

    When a team owner doesn’t demand or invest in a successful product, the front office has no pressure to deliver one. No courage is required to fall on a sword with a collapsable blade....

    “Accountability around here is not a problem,” Williams said. He’s absolutely correct. Not only is accountability not a problem — it’s not even a concern. Why would it be when you can over-promise and under-deliver with impunity?

    Williams is the second-longest tenured executive in Major League Baseball behind the Yankees’ Brian Cashman, who has 21 postseason appearances, four World Series titles and six pennants. No organization except the White Sox allows someone to run the show for this long without a damn good reason.

    • Like 1
  8. 30 minutes ago, Claudellsleptheretoo said:

    Is Leury Garcia still available?  Should I see the doctor if I yearn for his return even momentarily

    Welcome to Soxtalk.

    While Leury likely can no longer hit ML pitching consistently, he would provide value being able to cover multiple positions infield and outfield positions adequately defensively as a reserve player. He is much more valuable than Romy who can neither hit or field at the ML level.

    It’s doubtful Leury would return even if asked, as he is being paid $5.5M each of the next two seasons to stay home after he was hastily DFA’d with little to no reserve depth in the organization.

    Haseley can play all three of the OF positions and hopefully will remain up to help the pitching staff prevent 4-5 out innings due to sloppy play.

  9. 4 minutes ago, Tnetennba said:

    In case you haven’t noticed, they just lost 10 straight, are 13 games under, haven’t won a single series in the first month, and are a laughingstock.  I’m not trying to tell anyone how to be a fan, but anyone here “waving a white flag” or “screaming the sky is falling” is doing so with ample evidence to suggest this team is dead, dysfunctional, and going nowhere fast.  If you’d like to ignore the last 10 months or so of baseball this team has played, by all means.  But maybe don’t drag fans who see the big picture and have endured enough of this team’s bullshit. 

    It’s hard, because if you are attending or listening to / watching you naturally want the players and team to play well and win. While I feel it’s better long term for the team to collapse now for long term good, it’s still hard to root against the team during games.

    I stayed away from Soxtalk and following / listening to games once the off-season netted a mediocre LFer and scumbag pitcher.

    Came back last week due to the car wreck /record breaking futility of a start, a morbid curiosity of how bad this organization has become. Once they win a series, I’m backing away again until Hahn and or Jerry are gone and I can regain hope and pleasure from following the team on a regular basis.

    I created the “Sox Greatness thread” today to celebrate the great teams and players throughout the years. It’s how I’m coping with this season and beyond, watching old games and remembering the good times over the decades I’ve followed and cheered for the Sox.

     

  10. 3 minutes ago, baseballgalaly said:

     

    Apparently finishing in 4th place doesn't mean you had a bad year according to Jerry. 

     


    Fourth place carrot is the new second place carrot with the new 14 playoff team scam.

     

    No, playoff births with no realistic chance at a championship are not what “fans want”. Selling tickets to another failed season, 10th place pod / 14th wild card spot births is what YOU want.
     

     

    You should have bit your tongue before shoving Tony La Russa down everyone’s throat. Also, you have the wrong GM and you know it, and Hahn knows it and the entire world knows it.

     

     

  11. Jed Hoyer and Carter Hawkins the Cubs have put together a solid team, and it has paid dividends.

    Was impressed when Hoyer answered questions honestly the past few years and the FO looked at where they were weak and stepped up accordingly.

    Sox backloaded both 2023 FA acquisitions Benintendi ($8.6M on $15M AAV deal) and Clevinger ($4.0M 2024 mutual option).

    March/April bWAR and Payroll

    Team Totals:

    • Cubs 9.5 (4th) $184.2M (11th)
    • Sox -0.7 (29th) $181.1M (13th)

    Position Players:

    • Cubs 5.3 (7th) $92.0M
    • Sox -0.3 (29th) $85.0M

    Rotation:

    • Cubs 2.9 (5th) $62.3M
    • Sox 1.6 (15th) $46.0M

    Bullpen:

    • Cubs 1.3 (12th) $16.9M
    • Sox -1.9 (29th) $44.6M

    Net Buyouts / $ Transfers:

    • Cubs $13.0M (Primarily Hayward less Hosmer $ from SD)
    • Sox $5.5M (Leury)
  12. 12 minutes ago, FourEyesShottenhoffer said:

    Top 20 pitching seasons by WAR, post deadball era:

    #5 Gossage 1975 8.2

    What’s most amazing about your list is the fact Goose Gossage not only appeared on it but ranked 5th all time while solely pitching as a reliever.

    He pitched more innings than a large number of starters will in the current era.

    Rich Gossage 1975

    Age 23 - All Star Game

    Award Voting: 6th Cy Young & 17th MVP 

    • 8.2 bWAR
    • 62 Games
    • 0 Games Started
    • 141 2/3 Innings Pitched
    • 9-8 Decisions
    • 1.84 ERA
    • 1.193 Ratio
    • 26 Saves
    • 130 K / 70 BB (15 Intentional)
  13. 3 hours ago, FloydBannister1983 said:

    Wasn’t Thomas still at 1B in 1991?

    2 hours ago, Lip Man 1 said:

    Yes

    1991 Appearances by Frank Thomas:

    • 101 Designated Hitter
    • 56 First Base

    1991 White Sox Designated Hitter Appearances:

    • 101 Frank Thomas
    • 21 Bo Jackson
    • 19 Tim Raines
    • 13 Carlton Fisk
    • 8 Dan Pasqua
    • 6 Rodney McCray & Matt Merullo
    • 3 Warren Newson & Cory Snyder
    • 2 Joey Cora & Sammy Sosa
    • 1 Mike Huff

    bWAR team totals are for bWAR earned by the entire team in a season at the listed position. Frank Thomas had the most plate appearances at Designated Hitter for the Chicago White Sox in the years he is listed.

    The Chicago White Sox never accumulated the most bWAR at First Base during Frank’s tenure with the team. In fact no position for the eight defensive hitting positions are represented since the replacement stadium was opened in 1991.

    There are links provided for each year of people have questions or are curious.

  14. The Sox are known for their shortstops, and I was surprised the White Sox never led the league at SS bWAR during any of Luke Appling and Luis Aparicio seasons.

    Not as surprised the Chicago White Sox as a team never had the best bWAR at RF, and Joe Jackson is the lone representative in LF. 

    Wilbur Wood does not get enough credit in the media and other avenues for his excellence on behalf of the White Sox over his career, including the fourth highest bWAR in White Sox history. Sox pitchers behind him include Cicotte, Pierce, Buehrle and Sale.

    • Like 1
  15. While trying to find a search function for win and series streaks, I came across team position performance leaders by bWAR. I thought it would be fun on this off day when we are basking in the sun of a White Sox victory to celebrate the times the Chicago White Sox lead the league either at a position, unit or entire team. This metric celebrates star players staying on the field and also quality backups.

    https://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/team_compare.cgi?request=1&year=2023&lg=MLB&stat=WAR

    Criteria for top individual listed: All Hitting Categories (Plate Appearances at position); Innings Pitched (All Pitchers), Starts (Starting Pitchers) or Relief Appearances (Relief Pitchers). and Team bWAR leader (Team, All Position Players, Entire Outfield).

    Chicago White Sox Individual Season Leaders:

    1. (4) 2B 2B 2B T/2B Eddie Collins; 2B 2B 2B 2B Nellie Fox; P P P RP Wilbur Wood
    2. (3) LH H T/H/LF Joe Jackson; P/SP P SP Thornton Lee
    3. (2) T T/P/SP Eddie Cicotte; SS SS George Davis; C C Carlton Fisk; 3B 3B Willie Kamm; DH DH Frank Thomas

    Chicago White Sox Team (Team bWAR leader listed)

    • 1919 41.7 (Eddie Cicotte 9.6)
    • 1917 50.9 (Eddie Cicotte 11.8)
    • 1916 43.8 (Joe Jackson 7.1)
    • 1915 53.1 (Eddie Collins 9.4)

    Pitching Staff - All Pitchers

    • 2010 24.6 (John Danks 213.0 IP 5.2)
    • 2005 26.0 (Mark Buehrle 236.7 IP 4.8)
    • 1975 24.2 (Jim Kaat 303.7 IP 7.7)
    • 1973 26.5 (Wilbur Wood 359.3 IP 7.6)
    • 1972 23.8 (Wilbur Wood 376.7 IP 10.7)
    • 1971 26.1 (Wilbur Wood 334.0 IP 11.7)
    • 1968 22.9 (Joe Horlen 223.7 IP 4.0)
    • 1963 22.1 (Gary Peters 243.0 IP 5.9)
    • 1952 21.5 (Billy Pierce 255.3 IP 7.3)
    • 1941 22.6 (Thornton Lee 300.3 IP 8.6)
    • 1939 22.0 (Thornton Lee 235.0 IP 4.1)
    • 1917 26.6 (Eddie Cicotte 346.7 IP 11.8)
    • 1910 22.7 (Ed Walsh 369.7 IP 11.1)

    Pitching Staff - Starting Pitchers

    • 2006 16.5 (Freddy Garcia 33 Starts 3.9)
    • 1941 20.8 (Thornton Lee 34 Starts 8.6)
    • 1938 19.1 (Thornton Lee 30 Starts 5.5)
    • 1917 23.4 (Eddie Cicotte 35 Starts 11.8)
    • 1913 23.3 (Jim Scott 38 Starts 7.6)

    Pitching Staff - Relief Pitchers

    • 1975 12.0 (Rich Gossage 62 Relief Appearances 8.2)
    • 1968 10.9 (Wilbur Wood 86 Relief Appearances 5.4)
    • 1959 5.3 (Gerry Staley 67 Relief Appearances 2.5)
    • 1917 4.0 (Dave Danforth 41 Relief Appearances 3.3)
    • 1916 3.3 (Reb Russell 31 Relief Appearances 4.0)
    • 1915 3.5 (Red Faber 18 Relief Appearances 4.3)
    • 1907 1.4 (Doc White 11 Relief Appearances 4.3)

    Team Position Players

    • 1919 27.6 (Joe Jackson 5.8)
    • 1916 28.4 (Joe Jackson 7.1)

    Team Outfield

    • 1904 11.7 (Danny Green 4.2)

    Catchers

    • 1990 5.7 (Carlton Fisk 457 PA 4.9)
    • 1989 4.0 (Carlton Fisk 357 PA 3.3)
    • 1958 4.5 (Sherm Lollar 476 PA 3.7)
    • 1917 3.3 (Ray Schalk 328 PA 3.7)
    • 1904 3.4 (Billy Sullivan 396 PA 2.1)

    First Basemen

    • 1972 8.3 (Dick Allen 593 PA 8.6)
    • 1914 4.9 (Jack Fournier 331 PA 3.8)

    Second Basemen

    • 1965 6.2 (Don Buford 579 PA 6.9)
    • 1960 4.1 (Nellie Fox 683 PA 4.1)
    • 1959 6.1 (Nellie Fox 717 PA 6.1)
    • 1957 8.0 (Nellie Fox 718 PA 7.9)
    • 1955 5.1 (Nellie Fox 709 PA 5.1)
    • 1918 3.4 (Eddie Collins 312 PA 3.1)
    • 1917 5.0 (Eddie Collins 462 PA 5.1)
    • 1916 7.0 (Eddie Collins 532 PA 7.0)
    • 1915 9.3 (Eddie Collins 543 PA 9.4)

    Third Basemen

    • 1926 5.2 (Willie Kamm 556 PA 5.1)
    • 1923 4.7 (Willie Kamm 587 PA 4.6)

    Shortstops

    • 1964 7.7 (Ron Hansen 665 PA 7.7)
    • 1904 7.2 (George Davis 627 PA 7.2)
    • 1902 5.8 (George Davis 556 PA 5.9)

    Leftfielders

    • 1920 7.2 (Joe Jackson 410 PA 7.5)
    • 1916 6.3 (Joe Jackson 439 PA 7.1)

    Centerfielders

    • 1977 5.8 (Chet Lemon 627 PA 5.9)
    • 1926 6.3 (Johnny Mostil 677 PA 6.4)
    • 1908 5.0 (Fielder Jones 656 4.7)

    Designated Hitters

    • 2003 3.6 (Frank Thomas 545 PA 4.3)
    • 1994 3.5 (Julio Franco 447 PA 3.0)
    • 1991 5.2 (Frank Thomas 460 PA 7.0)
    • 1989 3.3 (Harold Baines 301 PA 2.6)
    • 1981 2.7 (Greg Luzinski 440 PA 2.7)

    Pinch Hitters

    • 1996 1.7 (Lyle Mouton 19 PA 1.1)
    • 1995 1.6 (Warren Newson 21 PA 0.6)
    • 1991 2.0 (Matt Merullo 45 PA -0.1)
    • 1965 2.0 (Smoky Burgess 77 PA 0.8)
    • 1957 1.9 (Ron Northey 39 PA  -)
    • Thanks 2
  16. The First Streak ends at twenty-nine with a White Sox win on Tuesday (7-22), or will continue to thirty-one games with a loss (8-23). The remaining two series streaks depend on results of the scheduled three game series with Minnesota.

    All three streaks have been updated to include all games and series played by the Chicago White Sox since the advent of Divisional Play. If someone can provide a source and link to automatically years prior to 1969, I will included these seasons as well.

    Tony La Russa was involved in six of the eighteen streaks noted below, the most of any manager. Also of note, the 1970 White Sox played a half a season without winning a series. Would love to know if that is the longest streak in the history of MLB.

    White Sox Active Losing Streaks for Tuesday, May 2, 2023. Current streak tied for third all time.

    1. Most consecutive games without a winning streak (2+ wins) in Chicago White Sox History (1969-Current):

    • (Thirty-eight 11-27) August 7 - September 16, 1984 (74-88 Tony La Russa): [8/1 vs. Boston; 8/3-6 at Milwaukee & 8/7 at New York] 11-27 [9/17-19 at Minnesota].
    • (Thirty-eight 11-27) July 10 - August 20, 1980 (70-90 Tony La Russa): [7/6 vs. Oakland DH] 11-27 [8/21-23 vs. Toronto].
    • (Thirty 7-23) September 8 - 30, 1973 (77-85 Chuck Tanner+ April 5 - 16, 1974 (80-80 Chuck Tanner): [8/31-9/2 vs. California; 9/3-4 vs. Texas & 9/6-7 at Minnesota] 7-23 [4/17 at Oakland & 4/19 vs. Kansas City].
    • (Thirty 8-22) October 5, 2022 (81-81 Tony La Russa+ March 30 - April 29, 2023 (8-21 Pedro Grifol): [10/2 at San Diego & 10/3-4 vs. Minnesota] 8-22 [TBD].
    • (Thirty 8-22) May 17 - June 16, 1970 (56-106 Don Gutteridge): [5/11-12 at Detroit & 5/15-16 & vs. Kansas City] 8-22 [6/17 vs. New York & 6/19 at Oakland].
    • (Twenty-nine 6-23) May 23, 2007 - June 26, 2007 (72-90 Ozzie Guillen): [5/20 at Chicago & 5/21-22 vs. Oakland] 6-23 [6/25-6/28 at Tampa Bay].

    2. Most consecutive series losses in Chicago White Sox History (1969-Current): Current streak tied for first all time.

    • (Eight 6-19) April 3 - 30, 2023 (8-21 Pedro Grifol): vs. San Francisco 1-2; at Pittsburgh 1-2; at Minnesota 1-2; vs. Baltimore 1-2; vs. Philadelphia 1-2; at Tampa Bay 0-3; at Toronto 0-3; vs. Tampa Bay 1-3.
    • (Eight 5-21) May 28 - June 24, 2007 (72-90 Ozzie Guillen): at Minnesota 0-3; at Toronto 1-3; vs. New York A. L. 1-3; vs. Houston 1-2; at Philadelphia 0-3; at Pittsburgh 1-2; vs. Florida 1-2; vs. Chicago N.L. 0-3.
    • (Eight 5-21) June 1 - 28, 1987 (77-85 Jim Fregosi): at Texas 1-2; at California 1-3; at Oakland 0-3; vs. Minnesota 1-3; at Seattle 0-3; at Minnesota 1-2; vs. Seattle 1-2; vs. California 0-3.

    3. Most consecutive winless series in Chicago White Sox History (1969-Current): Current streak tied for seventh all time.

    • (Twenty-five 26-54) May 15 - August 4, 1970  (56-106 Don Gutteridge0-17-8: vs. Kansas City 2-2; vs. California 1-2; vs. Oakland 0-4; at Kansas City 1-2; at Boston 1-2; at Washington 1-2; at New York 1-2; at Milwaukee 0-1; vs. Boston 1-1; vs. Washington 1-3; vs. New York 1-1; at Oakland 1-3; at California 1-3; vs. Minnesota 2-2; vs. Oakland 0-3; at Minnesota 1-2; at Milwaukee 2-3; at Kansas City 1-3; vs. Detroit 0-3; vs. Baltimore 1-2; at Cleveland 1-2; at Detroit 2-2; at Baltimore 1-1; vs. Cleveland 2-2; vs. Kansas City 1-1.
    • (Fifteen 14-32) June 30 - August 20, 1980 (70-90 Tony La Russa) 0-11-4: vs. California 1-3; vs. Oakland 2-2; vs. Baltimore 1-1; vs. New York 0-3; at Texas 1-2; at Milwaukee 1-2; at Kansas City 1-3; vs. Texas 2-2; vs. Milwaukee 1-1; vs. Kansas City 1-2; at Baltimore 0-3; at Boston 1-2; at New York 1-2; vs. Boston 0-1; vs. Cleveland 1-3.
    • (Thirteen 12-27) August 7 - September 16, 1984 (74-88 Tony La Russa) 0-10-3: at New York 2-2; vs. Milwaukee 0-3; vs. Texas 1-2; vs. Toronto 1-2; at Texas 1-2; at Kansas City 1-3; at Toronto 1-1; vs. Toronto 0-1; vs. Kansas City 1-2; vs. Oakland 2-2; vs. California 1-2; at Oakland 1-2; at California 0-3.
    • (Twelve 10-20) September 24 - 29, 1996 (85-77 Terry Bevington) + April 1 - 30, 1997 (80-81 Terry Bevington) 0-7-5: vs. Kansas City 1-1; at Minnesota 1-2; at Toronto 1-1; vs. Detroit 1-2; vs. Toronto 0-2; at Detroit 1-2; at Texas 0-2; vs. Baltimore 1-1; vs. New York A.L. 1-3; at Baltimore 1-1; at New York A.L. 1-2; vs. Texas 1-1.
    • (Ten 5-23) July 3 - August 6, 2017 (67-95 Ricky Renteria) 0-9-1: at Oakland 1-2; at Colorado 1-2; vs. Seattle 0-3; vs. Los Angeles N.L. 0-2; at Kansas City 0-3; at Chicago N.L. 1-1; vs. Chicago N.L. 0-2; vs. Cleveland 1-2; vs. Toronto 1-2; at Boston 0-4.
    • (Nine 8-21) March 30 - April 30, 2023 (8-21 Pedro Grifol0-8-1: at Houston 2-2; vs. San Francisco 1-2; at Pittsburgh 1-2; at Minnesota 1-2; vs. Baltimore 1-2; vs. Philadelphia 1-2; at Tampa Bay 0-3; at Toronto 0-3; vs. Tampa Bay 1-3.
    • (Nine 6-22) May 25 - June 24, 2007 (72-90 Ozzie Guillen) 0-8-1: vs. Tampa Bay 1-1; at Minnesota 0-3; at Toronto 1-3; vs. New York A. L. 1-3; vs. Houston 1-2; at Philadelphia 0-3; at Pittsburgh 1-2; vs. Florida 1-2; vs. Chicago N.L. 0-3.
    • (Nine 11-20) August 11 - September 9, 1979 (73-87 Tony La Russa) 0-5-4: vs. Toronto 2-2; at Baltimore 1-2; at Boston 2-2; at Milwaukee 1-3; vs. Baltimore 0-2; vs. Boston 1-1; vs. Milwaukee 2-2; at California 1-3; at Oakland 1-3.
    • (Nine 6-14) April 20 - May 18, 1976 (64-97 Paul Richards) 0-5-4: at New York 0-2vs. Boston 0-1; vs. Milwaukee 0-2; vs. Detroit 1-1; at Baltimore 1-1; at Detroit 1-2; at Texas 1-1; at Kansas City 1-3; vs. California 1-1.
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