Konerko was traded twice during the 1998 calendar year, but once he reached Chicago, the first baseman found a home where he would excel for the next 16 years. Konerko had 439 home runs and 1,412 RBIs, had his No. 14 retired and had a concourse statue in his likeness dedicated at Guaranteed Rate Field.
In 1998, Albert Belle drove in 152 runs to break Zeke Bonura's single-season franchise record of 138 set in 1936.
Ted Lyons pitched his entire career with the Chicago White Sox. He is the franchise leader in wins and won 20 or more games three times (in 1925, 1927, and 1930).
Fox's best season came in 1959, when he batted .306, had an on-base percentage of .380, and led the AL in singles for a White Sox team that finished 94-60 and won its first AL pennant in 40 years.
In White Sox pitching history, Buehrle is fifth all-time in strikeouts, sixth in games started, and eighth in wins and innings pitched.
From 1951 to 1967, the White Sox had their longest period of sustained success, scoring a winning record for 17 straight seasons. Known as the "Go-Go White Sox" for their tendency to focus on speed and getting on base versus power hitting, they featured stars such as Minnie Miñoso, Nellie Fox, Luis Aparicio, Billy Pierce, and Sherm Lollar.
Although he started the 2015 season on the disabled list due to a foot injury, Chris Sale finished the year with a franchise record 274 strikeouts, beating the previous record of 269 strikeouts in a season set by Hall of Famer Ed Walsh in 1908.
La Russa went on to manage in six World Series (winning three) with the Oakland A's and St. Louis Cardinals, ending up in the Hall of Fame as the third-winningest manager of all time.
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