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1991 Chicago White Sox season

1991 Chicago White Sox season

FieldValue
nameChicago White Sox
season1991
leagueAmerican League
divisionWest
ballparkNew Comiskey Park
cityChicago
record
divisional_place2nd
ownersJerry Reinsdorf
general_managersRon Schueler
managersJeff Torborg
televisionWGN-TV
SportsChannel Chicago
(Ken Harrelson, Tom Paciorek)
radioWMAQ (AM)
(John Rooney, Wayne Hagin)
WTAQ
(Frank Diaz, Chico Carrasquel)

SportsChannel Chicago (Ken Harrelson, Tom Paciorek) (John Rooney, Wayne Hagin) WTAQ (Frank Diaz, Chico Carrasquel) |}}

The 1991 Chicago White Sox season was the White Sox's 92nd season. They finished with a record of 87–75, good enough for second place in the American League West, 8 games behind of the first place Minnesota Twins, as the club opened the new Comiskey Park on April 18.

Offseason

  • November 30, 1990: Jerry Willard was released by the White Sox.
  • December 3, 1990: Buddy Groom was drafted from the White Sox by the Detroit Tigers in the 1990 minor league draft.
  • December 4, 1990: Shawn Hillegas and Eric King were traded by the White Sox to the Cleveland Indians for Cory Snyder and Lindsay Foster (minors).
  • December 12, 1990: Charlie Hough was signed as a free agent by the White Sox.
  • December 23, 1990: Iván Calderón and Barry Jones were traded by the White Sox to the Montreal Expos for Tim Raines, Jeff Carter and a player to be named later. The Expos completed the deal by sending Mario Brito (minors) to the White Sox on February 15.
  • March 18, 1991: Ron Coomer was signed as a free agent with the Chicago White Sox.
  • March 31, 1991: Joe Borowski was traded by the White Sox to the Baltimore Orioles for Pete Rose Jr.

Regular season

  • Frank Thomas led the Major Leagues in on-base percentage with .457. He became the 38th player in history to reach base at least 300 times in one season.

New Comiskey Park

View from the upper deck of new Comiskey Park
  • The White Sox started the season at new Comiskey Park. The park opened for the 1991 season, after the White Sox had spent 80 years at Comiskey Park. The new park was completed at a cost of US$167 million.
  • The stadium was the first new sports venue built in Chicago since 1929, when Chicago Stadium was built. It was also the first baseball-only park since Royals Stadium (now Kauffman Stadium) opened in 1973, and the last built before the recent wave of new "retro-classic" stadiums. However, a few design features from the old park were retained. Most notable among them is the "exploding scoreboard", which is a replica of the one installed by Bill Veeck at the old park in 1960.
  • Keeping up with tradition, after a White Sox player hits a home run, and eventually, at the beginning of all games, as well as after a White Sox victory, the scoreboard lights up in color and fireworks explode in the sky. The ballpark, as well as its entrance has several exterior arched windows. The Sox Shower, located in left-center field, is a place where fans can cool off during hot gamedays.
  • The first game at new Comiskey was on April 18, 1991, against the Detroit Tigers. Despite starting the season on the road with a 6–1 record, the White Sox lost the game by a score of 16–0.

First Game at New Comiskey

Scorecard

April 18, New Comiskey Park, Chicago, Illinois

Team123456789RHE
**Detroit**0061000000**16****19****0**
Chicago000000000**0****7****1**
**W**: Frank Tanana (1-1) **L**: Jack McDowell (2–1)
**HRs**: Cecil Fielder (1), Rob Deer 2 (1, 2), Tony Phillips (2), Umpires: HP–Steve Palermo, 1B–Mike Reilly, 2B–Larry Young, 3B–Rich Garcia. **Time** 3:11. **Attendance** 42,191.
Batting
**Detroit Tigers**ABRHRBI**Chicago White Sox**ABRHRBI
Phillips, dh, ss6243Raines, dh4010
Trammell, ss5342Johnson, cf4010
Tanana, p1000Ventura, 3b4020
Whitaker, 2b3230Thomas, 1b4010
Bernazard, 2b2010Fisk, c2010
Fielder, 1b3224Merullo, c2000
Bergman, 1b2000Sosa, rf4000
Incaviglia, lf3001Snyder, lf3000
Cuyler, cf2010Guillen, ss1000
Tettleton c, rf6212Grebeck, ph, ss2000
Deer, rf5224Fletcher 2b1000
Allanson, c0000Cora, ph,2b2010
Shelby, cf, lf5110McDowell, p0000
Fryman, 3b1200Drahman, p0000
de los Santos, 3b2000Patterson, p0000
Radinsky, p0000
Pall, p0000
Thigpen, p0000
**Totals**46161916**Totals**33070
Pitching
**Chicago White Sox**IPHRERBBSO
McDowell, L (2–1)2.256630
Drahman0.255510
Patterson2.275412
Radinsky1.010002
Pall1.010002
Thigpen1.000000
**Totals**8.0169937
**Detroit Tigers**IPHRERBBSO
Tanana, W (1-1)9.070003
**Totals**9.070003

1991 Opening Day lineup

  • Tim Raines, DH
  • Lance Johnson, CF
  • Robin Ventura, 3B
  • Frank Thomas, 1B
  • Carlton Fisk, C
  • Cory Snyder, LF
  • Sammy Sosa, RF
  • Ozzie Guillén, SS
  • Scott Fletcher, 2B
  • Jack McDowell, P

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Notable transactions

  • April 3, 1991: Bo Jackson was signed as a free agent by the White Sox.
  • April 12, 1991: Danny Heep was signed as a free agent by the White Sox.
  • April 13, 1991: Steve Lyons was released by the White Sox.
  • May 18, 1991: Magglio Ordóñez was signed as an amateur free agent by the White Sox.
  • July 12, 1991: Mike Huff was selected off waivers by the White Sox from the Cleveland Indians.
  • July 14, 1991: Cory Snyder was traded by the White Sox to the Toronto Blue Jays for Shawn Jeter and a player to be named later. The Blue Jays completed the deal by sending Steve Wapnick to the White Sox on September 4.

Roster

Chicago White Soxborder=2}}; text-align: center;"1991 Chicago White Sox
Chicago White Soxborder=2}}; text-align: center;"**Roster**
**Pitchers**

Player stats

= Indicates league leader

Batting

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Base on balls; SO = Strikeouts; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases

PlayerGABRH2B3BHRRBIBBSOAVGSB
Esteban Beltre, SS8601000011.1671
Joey Cora, 2B1002283755230182021.24118
Carlton Fisk, C1344604211125018743286.2411
Scott Fletcher, 2B9024814511011281726.2060
Craig Grebeck, 2B, 3B, SS10722437631636313840.2811
Ozzie Guillén, SS154524521432033491138.27321
Mike Huff, OF51971426411151218.2683
Bo Jackson, DH2371816403141225.2250
Lance Johnson, CF1595887216114130492658.27426
Ron Karkovice, C7516725411305221542.2460
Ron Kittle, 1B174779002759.1910
Rodney McCray, OF17722000002.2861
Matt Merullo, C, 1B, DH8014083210521918.2290
Warren Newson, OF711322039504252834.2952
Dan Pasqua, 1B, OF, DH1344177110822518666286.2590
Tim Raines, LF1556091021632065508368.26851
Sammy Sosa, RF, CF116316396410110331498.20313
Cory Snyder, OF, 1B50117102240311641.1880
Frank Thomas, DH, 1B15855910417831232109138112.3181
Robin Ventura, 3B, 1B15760692172251231008067.2842
Don Wakamatsu, C183127000016.2260
**162****5594****758****1464****226****39****139****722****610****896****.262****134**

Pitching

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts

PlayerWLERAGGSSVIPHRERHRBBK
Wilson Álvarez323.51109056.147262292932
Jeff Carter015.2552012.0887152
Brian Drahman323.23280030.221121141418
Tom Drees0012.274007.1101010462
Wayne Edwards023.86130023.122141022012
Alex Fernandez9134.5134320191.2186100961690145
Ramón García445.401615078.1795047133340
Roberto Hernández107.8093015.0181513176
Greg Hibbard11114.3132290194.019610793235871
Charlie Hough9104.0231290199.116798892194107
Jack McDowell17103.4135350253.221297961984191
Donn Pall722.41510071.059221972340
Ken Patterson302.83430163.248222053632
Mélido Pérez875.254981135.211149471552128
Scott Radinsky552.02670871.153181642549
Bobby Thigpen753.496703069.2633227104647
Steve Wapnick011.806005.0211041
**87****75****3.79****162****162****40****1478.0****1302****681****622****154****626****923**

Awards and honors

  • Frank Thomas – Major League Baseball Leader, On-Base Percentage (.457) All-Star Game
  • Jack McDowell, pitcher, reserve
  • Carlton Fisk, catcher, reserve
  • Ozzie Guillén, shortstop, reserve

Farm system

References

References

  1. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/w/willaje01.shtml Jerry Willard] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  2. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/g/groombu01.shtml Buddy Groom] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  3. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/h/hillesh01.shtml Shawn Hillegas] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  4. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/h/houghch01.shtml Charlie Hough] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  5. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/r/raineti01.shtml Tim Raines] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  6. "Ron Coomer Stats".
  7. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/r/rosepe02.shtml Pete Rose, Jr.] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  8. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/j/jacksbo01.shtml Bo Jackson] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  9. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/h/heepda01.shtml Danny Heep] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  10. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/l/lyonsst01.shtml Steve Lyons] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  11. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/o/ordonma01.shtml Magglio Ordóñez] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  12. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/h/huffmi01.shtml Mike Huff] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  13. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/s/snydeco02.shtml Cory Snyder] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  14. Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., ''The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball''. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 1997
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