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2012 Chicago White Sox season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Major League Baseball season

Major League Baseball team season
2012 Chicago White Sox
LeagueAmerican League
DivisionCentral
BallparkU.S. Cellular Field
CityChicago,Illinois
Record85–77 (.525)
Divisional place2nd
OwnersJerry Reinsdorf
General managersKenny Williams
ManagersRobin Ventura
TelevisionCSN Chicago
CSN+
WGN-TV andWGN America
WCIU-TV
(Ken Harrelson,Steve Stone)
RadioWSCR
(Ed Farmer,Darrin Jackson)
WNUA HD-2 (Spanish)
(Hector Molina, Billy Russo)[1]
← 2011Seasons2013 →
Phil Humber warming up in the visiting team'sbullpen atSafeco Field (now T-Mobile Park inSeattle) prior to a perfect pitching game on April 21, 2012.

The2012Chicago White Sox season was the club's 113th season inChicago and 112th in theAmerican League. On October 6, 2011,Robin Ventura was designated to be the new manager. This would be the White Sox's last winning season until 2020.

Offseason

[edit]

White SoxGMKenny Williams called the 2012 season a "rebuilding" year. In doing so, the Sox made some big moves in the offseason by trading away or letting big name free agents leave.Mark Buehrle became a free agent and decided to follow his former manager,Ozzie Guillén, and sign with theMiami Marlins. The White Sox closer during the 2011 season,Sergio Santos, was traded to theToronto Blue Jays. Left fielderJuan Pierre became a free agent and signed with thePhiladelphia Phillies. Power hitting right fielderCarlos Quentin, was traded to theSan Diego Padres. The White Sox did however sign or acquire young talent, including players likeJosé Quintana,Néstor Molina,Simón Castro,Pedro Hernández,Jhan Mariñez,Héctor Giménez,Damaso Espino,Erik Morrison andOsvaldo Martínez. The White Sox signed formerCub andIndian,Kosuke Fukudome, to be the team's fourth outfielder.

Offseason additions and subtractions

[edit]
SubtractionsAdditions
PlayersLHPMark Buehrle (signed withMarlins)
RHPSergio Santos (traded toBlue Jays)
RHPJason Frasor (traded toBlue Jays)
RHPJosh Kinney (signed withMariners)
CRamón Castro (free agent)
CDonny Lucy (retired)
INFOmar Vizquel (signed withBlue Jays)
OFJuan Pierre (signed withPhillies)
OFCarlos Quentin (traded toPadres)
OFLastings Milledge (signed withNPBTokyo Yakult Swallows)
LHPDonnie Veal* (Minor League free agent)
LHPJosé Quintana* (Minor League free agent)
LHPEric Stults** (Minor League free agent)
RHPNéstor Molina* (traded fromBlue Jays)
RHPSimón Castro* (traded fromPadres)
LHPPedro Hernández* (traded fromPadres)
RHPMyles Jaye* (traded fromBlue Jays)
RHPDaniel Webb* (traded fromBlue Jays)
LHPScott Olsen* (Minor League free agent)
RHPJhan Mariñez* (compensation fromMarlins)
CHéctor Giménez** (Minor League free agent)
CDamaso Espino** (Minor League free agent)
1BDan Johnson** (Minor League free agent)
2BErik Morrison* (Minor League free agent)
SSOsvaldo Martínez (compensation fromMarlins)
INFRay Olmedo** (Minor League free agent)
INF Corey Smith* (Minor League free agent)
OFDelwyn Young** (Minor League free agent)
OFKosuke Fukudome (free agent)
PersonnelManagerOzzie Guillén† (released)
Bench coachJoey Cora† (released)
Hitting coachGreg Walker (released)
Third base coachJeff Cox (released)
ManagerRobin Ventura
Bench coachMark Parent
Hitting coachJeff Manto
Third base coachJoe McEwing
†Player released during 2011 season
*Player spent entire 2011 season in Minor Leagues
**Player was non-roster invitee to Spring training (not on 40-man roster)

2012 top prospects

[edit]
#PlayerPositionTop 100 rankMLB rank2012 Starting team (level)
1Addison ReedRight-handed pitcher6692Majors
2Néstor MolinaRight-handed pitcher--AA
3Simón CastroRight-handed pitcher--AA
4Trayce ThompsonOutfielder--High A
5Jacob PetrickaRight-handed pitcher--High A
6Keenyn WalkerOutfielder--Low A
7Jhan MariñezRight-handed pitcher--AAA
8Tyler SaladinoShortstop--AA
9Juan SilverioThird baseman--High A
10Osvaldo MartínezShortstop--AAA

* According toBaseball America Top 100 Prospects[2]

* According to 2012 Prospect Watch[3]

* Top 10 White Sox prospects via Baseball America[4]

Transactions

[edit]

Regular season

[edit]

Season standings

[edit]

American League Central

[edit]
AL Central
TeamWLPct.GBHomeRoad
Detroit Tigers8874.54350‍–‍3138‍–‍43
Chicago White Sox8577.525345‍–‍3640‍–‍41
Kansas City Royals7290.4441637‍–‍4435‍–‍46
Cleveland Indians6894.4202037‍–‍4431‍–‍50
Minnesota Twins6696.4072231‍–‍5035‍–‍46


American League Wild Card

[edit]
Division winners
TeamWLPct.
New York Yankees9567.586
Oakland Athletics9468.580
Detroit Tigers8874.543
Wild Card teams
(Top 2 teams qualify for postseason)
TeamWLPct.GB
Texas Rangers9369.574
Baltimore Orioles9369.574
Tampa Bay Rays9072.5563
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim8973.5494
Chicago White Sox8577.5258
Seattle Mariners7587.46318
Toronto Blue Jays7389.45120
Kansas City Royals7290.44421
Boston Red Sox6993.42624
Cleveland Indians6894.42025
Minnesota Twins6696.40727

Record vs. opponents

[edit]
2012 American League record
Source:MLB Standings Grid – 2012
TeamBALBOSCWSCLEDETKCLAAMINNYYOAKSEATBTEXTORNL
Baltimore13–56–24–43–35–42–75–29–94–58–110–82–511–711–7
Boston5–136–25–35–54–30–64–35–131–85–49–92–67–1111–7
Chicago2–62–611–76–126–123–514–45–23–38–14–36–36–49–9
Cleveland4–43–57–1110–88–105–46–121–52–84–44–44–52–48–10
Detroit3–35–512–68–1013–55–510–84–64–31–55–23–74–211–7
Kansas City4–53–412–610–85–134–57–113–45–41–74–24–52–68–10
Los Angeles7–26–05–34–55–55–46–34–59–1011–81–910–94–412–6
Minnesota2–53–44–1412–68–1011–73–63–44–52–81–52–82–59–9
New York9–913–52–55–16–44–35–44–35–56–38–104–311–713–5
Oakland5–48–13–38–23–44–510–95–45–512–75–411–85–410–8
Seattle1–84–51–84–45–17–18–118–23–67–124–69–106–38–10
Tampa Bay8–109–93–44–42–52–49–15–110–84–56–45–414–49–9
Texas5–26–23–65–47–35–49–108–23–48–1110–94–56–314–4
Toronto7–1111–74–64–22–46–24–45–27–114–53–64–143–69–9
This box:


Detailed records and runs scored/allowed

[edit]
OpponentHomeAwayTotalPct.Runs scoredRuns allowed
AL East
Baltimore Orioles1–31–32–6.2503135
Boston Red Sox1–31–32–6.2502045
New York Yankees3–02–25–2.7143828
Tampa Bay Rays1–33–04–3.5712426
Toronto Blue Jays3–33–16–4.6004541
9–1210–919–21.475158175
AL Central
Cleveland Indians5–46–311–7.61112073
Detroit Tigers5–41–86–12.3336984
Kansas City Royals3–63–66–12.3335278
Minnesota Twins7–27–214–4.77811377
20–1617–1937–35.514364310
AL West
Los Angeles Angels2–11–43–5.3753036
Oakland Athletics2–11–23–3.5002622
Seattle Mariners5–13–08–1.8895538
Texas Rangers3–03–36–3.6674627
12–38–920–12.625157123
Interleague
Chicago Cubs1–23–04–2.6672720
Houston Astros1–20–01–2.3332220
Los Angeles Dodgers0–01–21–2.3331213
Milwaukee Brewers2–10–02–1.66797
St. Louis Cardinals0–01–21–2.33397
4–55–49–9.5007967

Season summary

[edit]

Composite inning summary

[edit]
1234567891011121314
Runs scored10564737610012669836070103
Runs allowed8075100507796606966111403

Opening Day lineup

[edit]
Alejandro De AzaCF
Brent Morel3B
Adam DunnDH
Paul Konerko1B
A. J. PierzynskiC
Alex RíosRF
Alexei RamírezSS
Dayán ViciedoLF
Gordon Beckham2B
John DanksP

Monthly summaries

[edit]

April

[edit]

The White Sox started the season with their new managerRobin Ventura. In Ventura's first game managed on April 5, the Sox lost 3–2 at Texas. Ventura didn't have to wait long for his first MLB victory as the next day the Sox won 4-3 thanks to a 9th-inning home run byAlex Ríos. Then the Sox lost their first series of the season by dropping the finale to theRangers 5–0. They went to Cleveland for a two-game series, but three games was scheduled to play, but one game was postponed due to rain. The Sox swept theIndians there. On April 13, the Sox played their first home game of the season against theTigers and won that game 5-2 and went on to take two out of three to win their first home series of the season. The Sox hosted theOrioles when they dropped three of four to finish their first homestand with a 3–4 record. Then they embark on their west coast trip for six games, three for each city. The Sox swept theMariners and lost two of three to theAthletics. On April 21 during the second game of the series in Seattle,Philip Humber threw the21st perfect game in MLB history with 96 pitches thrown with 9 strikeouts in the 4–0 win. In the final game of the series in Oakland on April 25,Paul Konerko hit milestone home run number 400. The Sox travelled back home to host theRed Sox and dropped their first three of a four-game set. The Sox avoided the sweep by beating the Red Sox 4–1 behind a great performance byGavin Floyd. Konerko had a great first month of the season as he batted .383 with 5 home runs and 15 RBI while winning Player of the Week from April 23 through April 29. The White Sox lost five of their last six games to close out April but finished the month with a record of 11-11 and outscored their opponents 85–82.

May

[edit]

The White Sox started the month of May losing two of three against the Indians, losing two of three to the Tigers and then lost adoubleheader in Cleveland on May 7. The Sox then came back and won the next two games against Cleveland to split the four games series. The White Sox came home from May 11–15, they lost two of three to theRoyals and split a two-games series with the Tigers. Then the White Sox travelled to Los Angeles for a two games series against theAngels. The Sox lost the first game of the series and at that point, through May 16, the White Sox had an overall record of 17-21 and were four and a half games back from the first place Indians. The Sox then beat the Angels in the second game and split the two-game series. The Sox then came back to Chicago for a road series against theCubs atWrigley Field for theCrosstown Classic. In the first game of the series,Paul Konerko hit a home run in his first at bat off ofJeff Samardzija. The next time Konerko came up, Samardzija hit Konerko in the face with a pitch and knocked him out for the rest of the series. Samardzija stated that it was not intentional and a breaking ball just got away from him. A few innings later, Sox pitcher Philip Humber threw a pitch behind the Cubs first basemanBryan LaHair. Both teams were warned and no other problems came about during the series. The Sox went on the sweep the Cubs winning 2–1, 7-4 and 6–0. It was the third time the White Sox had sweep the Cubs and the second time they did it at Wrigley Field. The Sox then lost the first game of a three games series against theTwins. The Sox took the next two games against the Twins to win the series. The Sox then swept the Indians at home by the scores of 9–3, 14-7 and 12–6. The Sox then traveled to Tampa Bay to face theRays for three games. On May 28, in the first game of that series, the Sox won 2–1 asChris Sale struck out 15 Rays which tied him withEddie Cicotte,Ed Walsh andJim Scott for second most strikeouts in a single game in franchise history.Jack Harshman holds the team record with 16 strikeouts in a single game. The Sox swept the Rays and finished the month on an 8-game winning streak and won 12 of their last 13 games to finish the month of May. The White Sox went from four and a half games back on May 17 to first place and a game and a half over the Indians by the end of the month. The Sox finished the month with a good record of 18-11 and outscored their opponents 156–122.

June

[edit]

The Sox started the month winning two of three against theMariners and then losing two of three against theBlue Jays. The White Sox then went into theirinterleague play part of the season. The Sox started interleague play by facing theAstros. The Astros won the first and third game to win the series. The Sox then traveled toSt. Louis to face the defending World Series ChampionCardinals where the Sox won the first game of the series and then lost the next two. The White Sox then traveled toLos Angeles to take on theDodgers. At the time the Sox played Los Angeles, the Dodgers had the best record in baseball at 40–24. The Sox managed only one win during the three-game series and the Sox went back home after a 2-4 road trip. The Sox then faced their Crosstown rivals for the second time this season. The White Sox lost the first two games to the Cubs but avoided a sweep by winning the final game of the series, 7–0. The Sox then fell out of first place for the first time since May 28. The Sox wrapped up interleague play by winning two of three against theBrewers to finish the interleague season at 9-9. On June 24, during the final game against the Brewers, the White Sox acquiredKevin Youkilis and cash from theRed Sox forBrent Lillibridge andZach Stewart. The White Sox then finished the month on the road winning two of three against the Twins and winning two of three against theYankees. A rare occurrence happened during the second game against the Yankees. Going into the top of the ninth inning, the White Sox led the Yankees 10–7. The Yankees hadCory Wade on the mound for the third inning in a row. He had already given up two runs in the seventh and then gave up four more in the 9th while only recording one out. Yankees manager,Joe Girardi, decided to let outfielderDeWayne Wise pitch because the teams bullpen had been so over used the past few days. Wise had not pitched since his sophomore year of high school. Wise is well known by White Sox fans by making "The Catch" that preservedMark Buehrle's perfect game in 2009. Wise then went on to retirePaul Konerko on a fly ball to center field and gotAlex Ríos to ground out to finish out the 9th. The Sox finished the month of June with a record of 13–14, but outscored their opponents 124–116.

July

[edit]

The White Sox started the month losing the final game of a four-game series against the Yankees. The Sox then swept the two-time defending American League Champion Rangers and took two of three against the Blue Jays. In the opener of the series against the Rangers, the Sox scored a season high 19 runs. The Sox then went into the All-Star break with a three-game lead over the Indians. They were well represented at theAll-Star Game with four players making the squad (Adam Dunn,Paul Konerko,Jake Peavy andChris Sale). The Sox then came out of the break taking two of three against the Royals. The Sox then hit a rough patch which saw them lose 6 of their next 7 games. They lost three of four against the Red Sox and then were swept in Detroit by the Tigers. On July 21, the Sox acquired RHPBrett Myers from theHouston Astros and cash for minor league prospects RHP Matthew Heidenreich and LHP Blair Walters. Also on the same date, the Sox fell out of first place for the first time since June 23. After sweeping the Twins at home, the Sox took the division lead back from the Tigers. On July 28, the Sox acquired LHPFrancisco Liriano from theMinnesota Twins forEduardo Escobar andPedro Hernández. The Sox took two of three in Texas and then finished the month splitting two games in Minnesota. On July 31, the Sox stated thatJohn Danks would have season ending surgery on his shoulder. The White Sox finished the month with a record of 14-11 (8–1 at home) and outscored their opponents 124–108.

August

[edit]

On August 3, the Sox brought back DeWayne Wise, who was released from the Yankees on July 30. The Sox started August by beating the Twins 3–2 to secure their series win in Minnesota. Then the Sox had a nine-game homestand as they hosted the Angels, Royals, and the eventual AL West Champion A's. The Sox took two out of three from the Angels, two games went into extras where each club won one. The Sox lost two of three from the Royals and bounced back to win two of three from Athletics. The Sox lost the first game of the series in Toronto via walk-off in extras, and then the Sox went on to win last three in a row to finish the series winning three of four. That was the first series win in Toronto since 2006. The Sox went to KC where they were swept in a three-game set, but not without a historical moment. During the second game of the series on August 18,Adam Dunn hit his 400th career home run. With Konerko also hitting his milestone number 400 back in April, they became the first pair of teammates to hit 400th home runs in the same season in MLB history. The Sox came back home to face the eventual AL East Champion Yankees for three games and the eventual last place finish in AL West Mariners for three games. The Sox swept the mighty Yankees and Mariners to secure their perfect 6-0 homestand. In the opener of the series against the Mariners, the Sox were up five runs going to the ninth inning only to give up six runs to blow that comfortable lead. Then in the home half of the ninth inning, the Sox scored two runs to take the lead back and win it on a walk-off single byPaul Konerko that center fielderMichael Saunders missed the flyball against the wall. The Sox traveled to their tough seven-game road trip to Baltimore and Detroit that stretches into September. Not surprisingly, the Sox lost three out of four in Baltimore and lost the first game in Detroit to close out the month with a respectable record of 16-12 and outscored their opponents 128–118.

September/October

[edit]

The Sox opened September by losing final two games of the series in Detroit. They were swept in Detroit for the second consecutive time. The Sox hosted the ten-game homestand that was actually reduced to nine because of a rainout. The Sox took two of three from Minnesota but in the only loss of that series, Sox pitching allowed a season high 18 runs. Also in that game, DeWayne Wise pitched for the second time in his career as he pitched a scoreless ninth, he induced a double play and a flyout. The Sox proceeded to host three games to Kansas City when they dropped two of three including one in the extras. The Sox won the opener of the series against Detroit 6–1 thanks to the performance byJosé Quintana. The Sox went on to lose two in a row against Detroit. The Sox supposed to play one more game to complete the four-game set but it was rained out and made up on a day that was supposed to be an off day for both clubs. It was scheduled forChris Sale to battleJustin Verlander if not for a rainout but instead it was Quintana versusDoug Fister for a makeup game. Before the make up game after the rainout, the Sox swept the Twins in Minnesota. In the fifth inning of that makeup game, Sox trailed 4–3,Dayán Viciedo grounded into what would otherwise have been a routine double play to end the inning, but Detroit second basemanOmar Infante threw away past first basemanPrince Fielder and two runs scored. The Sox went on to win the makeup game 5–4 after neither clubs scored runs after that play. They went right back on the road trip after just one game at home. They traveled down to Kansas City where they won the first game and lost the last two and went west to L.A. where they were swept by Angels. They went back home to play for seven games, three against the Indians and four against the Rays. They won the opener of the series against the Tribe and then lost the last two to close out that series. After the loss of that finale game, the Sox were not in first place for the first time since July 23. The Sox went on to lose three of four to the red-hot Rays. The playoff hopes for Sox had been diminishing fast as they lost 10 out of their last 12 games, dropping their elimination number to just one as they enter the 10th month of the year. It is now a must situation when the Sox must sweep the Indians and Tigers must get swept in Kansas City, both clubs were playing the final three games of the season. In the opener of the series in Cleveland, the Sox won 11–0, but Tigers also won 6–3, thus eliminating Sox from going to the playoffs. Anyway, the Sox dropped the second game of the series 4–3 on a walk-off single byJason Donald in the 12th inning. The Sox won the final game of the season by beating the Indians 9–0. The Sox finished September/October with a 13–18 record, but they still outscored their opponents 130–128. They finished 2012 campaign at 85–77, three games back of theDetroit Tigers. The Sox spent 126 days in first place.

Game log

[edit]
Legend
 White Sox win
 White Sox loss
 Postponement
BoldWhite Sox team member
2012 White Sox game log
April (11–11) – Home (4–7) – Road (7–4) – 85 R.S. 82 R.A.
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceTimeRecordGBBox
1April 6@Rangers2–3Lewis (1–0)Danks (0–1)Nathan (1)49,0852:240–1−1box
2April 7@Rangers4–3Thornton (1–0)Nathan (0–1)Santiago (1)47,8672:361–1−1box
3April 8@Rangers0–5Matt Harrison (1–0)Floyd (0–1)45,3682:501–2−2box[dead link]
4April 9@Indians4–2Sale (1–0)Tomlin (0–1)Santiago (2)9,4732:422–2−1½box
April 10@IndiansPostponed (rain); rescheduled May 7 (game 1)−2
5April 11@Indians10–6Danks (1–1)Masterson (0–1)9,0723:043–2−1box
6April 13Tigers5–2Peavy (1–0)Scherzer (0–1)Santiago (3)38,6762:554–2−½box
7April 14Tigers5–1Floyd (1–1)Wilk (0–1)33,0252:445–2box
8April 15Tigers2–5Porcello (1–0)Sale (1–1)25,1433:065–3−½box
9April 16Orioles4–10(10)Strop (1–1)Stewart (0–1)13,7323:325–4−1½box
10April 17Orioles2–3Chen (1–0)Danks (1–2)Johnson (5)11,2672:445–5−2½box
11April 18Orioles8–1Peavy (2–0)Hunter (1–1)13,8182:376–5−2½box
12April 19Orioles3–5Hammel (2–0)Floyd (1–2)Johnson (6)11,8363:086–6−2½box
13April 20@Mariners7–3Sale (2–1)Noesí (1–2)19,9472:457–6−2box
14April 21@Mariners4–0Humber (1–0)Beavan (1–2)22,4722:178–6−1½box
15April 22@Mariners7–4Danks (2–2)Millwood (0–1)Santiago (4)19,9752:569–6−½box
16April 23@Athletics4–0Peavy (3–0)Colón (3–2)10,5742:2310–60box[dead link]
17April 24@Athletics0–2Milone (3–1)Floyd (1–3)Balfour (5)11,1842:2710–70box
18April 25@Athletics4–5(14)Miller (1–0)Santiago (0–1)13,0323:5610–80box
19April 26Red Sox3–10Doubront (1–0)Humber (1–1)Tazawa (1)20,2663:0310–9−½box
20April 27Red Sox3–10Bard (2–2)Danks (2–3)20,4142:4710–10−1box
21April 28Red Sox0–1Lester (1–2)Peavy (3–1)Aceves (5)20,0572:4410–11−1box
22April 29Red Sox4–1Floyd (2–3)Beckett (2–3)Thornton (1)22,8112:5811–11−1box
May (18–11) – Home (8–6) – Road (10–5) – 156 R.S. 122 R.A.
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceTimeRecordGBBox
23May 1Indians7–2Sale (3–1)Jiménez (2–2)15,2122:4112–110box
24May 2Indians3–6Smith (1–0)Ohman (0–1)Perez (8)15,1922:4612–12−1box
25May 3Indians5–7Masterson (1–2)Danks (2–4)Perez (9)17,3142:4012–13−2box
26May 4@Tigers4–5Valverde (2–0)Thornton (1–1)33,6152:4912–14−3box
27May 5@Tigers3–2Jones (1–0)Valverde (2–1)Reed (1)42,4042:4713–14−2box
28May 6@Tigers1–3Porcello (3–2)Axelrod (0–1)Valverde (5)39,5583:1013–15−3box
29May 7@Indians6–8McAllister (1–0)Humber (1–2)Hagadone (1)9,1962:5013–16−4box
30May 7@Indians2–3Smith (2–1)Thornton (1–2)Sipp (1)10,4832:3613–17−5box
31May 8@Indians5–3(10)Santiago (1–1)Perez (0–1)Reed (2)11,3043:0314–17−4box
32May 9@Indians8–1Peavy (4–1)Gómez (2–2)11,2852:3315–17−3box
33May 11Royals5–0Floyd (3–3)Paulino (1–1)19,1292:4316–17−2½box
34May 12Royals0–5Hochevar (3–3)Sale (3–2)20,0662:4616–18−2½box
35May 13Royals1–9Mendoza (2–2)Thornton (1–3)22,6363:2116–19−2½box
36May 14Tigers7–5Stewart (1–1)Putkonen (0–2)Reed (3)23,5383:0117–19−2½box
37May 15Tigers8–10Balester (2–0)Ohman (0–2)Dotel (1)21,4733:4217–20−3½box
38May 16@Angels2–7Williams (4–1)Floyd (3–4)39,0272:2517–21−4½box
39May 17@Angels6–1Sale (4–2)Wilson (4–4)30,7863:1018–21−4½box
40May 18@Cubs3–2Thornton (2–3)Samardzija (4–2)Reed (4)34,9372:3419–21−3½box
41May 19@Cubs7–4Danks (3–4)Dempster (0–2)40,2282:5120–21−3½box
42May 20@Cubs6–0Peavy (5–1)Maholm (4–3)38,3742:5721–21−2½box
43May 22Twins2–9Walters (2–1)Floyd (3–5)20,0262:2321–22−3½box
44May 23Twins6–0Sale (5–2)Diamond (3–1)20,0642:2822–22−3½box
45May 24Twins11–8Jones (2–0)De Vries (0–1)20,1673:1323–22−3½box
46May 25Indians9–3Quintana (1–0)Gómez (3–3)21,3713:0224–22−2½box
47May 26Indians14–7Peavy (6–1)Lowe (6–3)27,1512:3925–22−1½box
48May 27Indians12–6Floyd (4–5)Jiménez (5–4)22,1823:1326–22−½box
49May 28@Rays2–1Sale (6–2)Moore (1–5)Reed (5)22,2272:3427–22−½box
50May 29@Rays7–2Humber (2–2)Shields (6–3)13,7352:4528–22box
51May 30@Rays4–3Jones (3–0)Cobb (2–1)Reed (6)13,3692:5829–22+1½box
June (13–14) – Home (7–8) – Road (6–6) – 124 R.S. 116 R.A.
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceTimeRecordGBBox
52June 1Mariners7–4Crain (1–0)Kelley (0–2)Reed (7)19,1682:4830–22+1½box
53June 2Mariners8–10(12)Wilhelmsen (2–1)Reed (0–1)Iwakuma (2)26,2004:1630–23+1½box
54June 3Mariners4–2Sale (7–2)Millwood (3–5)23,0622:4531–23+2½box
55June 5Blue Jays5–9Romero (7–1)Humber (2–3)23,1072:4431–24+1½box
56June 6Blue Jays0–4Morrow (7–3)Quintana (1–1)25,6722:5031–25box
57June 7Blue Jays4–3Reed (1–1)Cordero (1–3)25,7432:5032–25+1½box
58June 8Astros3–8Rodríguez (5–4)Floyd (4–6)22,4523:0932–26box
59June 9Astros10–1Sale (8–2)Lyles (1–2)22,8802:4433–26+1½box
60June 10Astros9–11Harrell (6–4)Humber (2–4)Myers (15)20,3983:0133–27box
61June 12@Cardinals6–1Quintana (2–1)Wainwright (5–7)40,9722:4034–27+1½box
62June 13@Cardinals0–1Lynn (10–2)Peavy (6–2)Motte (12)40,0452:2434–28+1½box
63June 14@Cardinals3–5Westbrook (5–6)Floyd (4–7)Motte (13)43,4642:3534–29+1½box
64June 15@Dodgers6–7Belisario (2–0)Thornton (2–4)Jansen (11)40,4323:0034–30box
65June 16@Dodgers5–4Humber (3–4)Billingsley (4–5)Reed (8)45,2103:1435–30+1½box
66June 17@Dodgers1–2Belisario (3–0)Thornton (2–5)53,5042:5435–31+1½box
67June 18Cubs3–12Garza (3–5)Stewart (1–2)33,2152:4935–32box
68June 19Cubs1–2Wood (1–3)Peavy (6–3)Mármol (4)30,2822:4135–33−½box
69June 20Cubs7–0Floyd (5–7)Wells (1–2)32,3112:4336–33−½box
70June 22Brewers0–1(10)Greinke (8–2)Crain (1–1)Axford (13)22,7982:2236–34−1½box
71June 23Brewers8–6Crain (2–1)Veras (3–3)Reed (9)30,3373:3137–34−½box
72June 24Brewers1–0(10)Bruney (1–0)Parra (0–2)26,5453:1538–34box
73June 25@Twins1–4Liriano (2–7)Peavy (6–4)Burton (2)35,6593:0138–35box
74June 26@Twins3–2Floyd (6–7)Hendriks (0–5)Reed (10)35,1022:4139–35+1½box
75June 27@Twins12–5Sale (9–2)Blackburn (4–5)36,5392:4840–35+2½box
76June 28@Yankees4–3Santiago (2–1)Robertson (0–2)Reed (11)44,0412:5441–35+2½box
77June 29@Yankees14–7Quintana (3–1)Phelps (1–3)44,2653:2442–35+3½box
78June 30@Yankees0–4Kuroda (8–7)Peavy (6–5)46,8952:2542–36+2½box
July (14–11) – Home (8–1) – Road (6–10) – 124 R.S. 108 R.A.
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceTimeRecordGBBox
79July 1@Yankees2–4Hughes (9–6)Floyd (6–8)Soriano (18)48,3242:4842–37+1½box
80July 3Rangers19–2Sale (10–2)Oswalt (2–1)30,1832:5843–37+2box
81July 4Rangers5–4(10)Reed (2–1)Adams (1–3)30,2713:2244–37+2box
82July 5Rangers2–1Quintana (4–1)Harrison (11–4)Reed (12)21,2882:0945–37+2box
83July 6Blue Jays4–2Peavy (7–5)Laffey (0–1)Reed (13)27,1292:3146–37+3box
84July 7Blue Jays2–0Floyd (7–8)Romero (8–4)Thornton (2)25,3992:2547–37+3box
85July 8Blue Jays9–11Frasor (1–1)Axelrod (0–2)Janssen (12)27,1903:4847–38+3box
July 10:All-Star Game (NL Wins)0–8CainVerlander40,9332:59box
86July 13@Royals9–8(14)Axelrod (1–2)Teaford (1–3)32,7445:2348–38+3box
87July 14@Royals3–6Hochevar (7–8)Peavy (7–6)Broxton (22)24,9982:5648–39+3box
88July 15@Royals2–1Sale (11–2)Mendoza (3–6)Reed (14)25,7142:5249–39+3½box
89July 16@Red Sox1–5Padilla (3–0)Séptimo (0–1)38,3342:4049–40+2½box
90July 17@Red Sox7–5Humber (4–4)Lester (5–7)Reed (15)37,7713:0650–40+3½box
91July 18@Red Sox1–10Doubront (10–4)Hernández (0–1)37,3672:5050–41+2½box
92July 19@Red Sox1–3Aceves (1–6)Thornton (2–6)38,4132:4750–42+1½box
93July 20@Tigers2–4Verlander (11–5)Peavy (7–7)Valverde (18)44,5722:4750–43box
94July 21@Tigers1–7Porcello (7–5)Sale (11–3)42,8882:1150–44−½box
95July 22@Tigers4–6Turner (1–1)Humber (4–5)Benoit (2)41,2813:0050–45−1½box
96July 23Twins7–4Floyd (8–8)Liriano (3–10)Reed (16)37,7882:4851–45−1box
97July 24Twins11–4Jones (4–0)Fien (1–1)34,7153:0852–450box
98July 25Twins8–2Peavy (8–7)Blackburn (4–6)32,2613:0953–450box
99July 27@Rangers9–5Sale (12–3)Darvish (11–7)47,6383:3154–45+1½box
100July 28@Rangers5–2Humber (5–5)Harrison (12–6)47,5802:4155–45+2½box
101July 29@Rangers0–2Feldman (5–6)Floyd (8–9)Nathan (21)46,7442:3855–46+1½box
102July 30@Twins6–7Perkins (2–1)Myers (0–5)35,0183:0855–47+1½box
103July 31@Twins4–3Thornton (3–6)Gray (5–1)Reed (17)36,4242:4156–47+2½box
August (16–12) – Home (11–4) – Road (5–8) – 128 R.S. 118 R.A.
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceTimeRecordGBBox
104August 1@Twins3–2Peavy (9–7)Diamond (9–5)Reed (18)34,8232:4957–47+2½box
105August 3Angels8–6(10)Thornton (4–6)Takahashi (0–3)32,0603:3558–47+2½box
106August 4Angels5–6(10)Jepsen (2–1)Thornton (4–7)Frieri (13)28,5713:2658–48+1½box
107August 5Angels4–2Jones (5–0)Isringhausen (3–2)Reed (19)30,2022:5859–48+1½box
108August 6Royals4–2Sale (13–3)Mendoza (5–8)Reed (20)30,0972:1760–48+1½box
109August 7Royals2–5Chen (8–9)Peavy (9–8)Holland (2)27,1942:3460–49box
110August 8Royals1–2Guthrie (4–12)Quintana (4–2)Holland (3)25,1512:3760–50box
111August 10Athletics4–3Myers (1–5)Neshek (1–1)25,0412:5361–50+1box
112August 11Athletics7–9Cook (5–2)Thornton (4–8)Balfour (8)26,6863:3861–51+1box
113August 12Athletics7–3Sale (14–3)Colón (9–9)25,1062:5362–51+2box
114August 13@Blue Jays2–3(11)Delabar (3–1)Séptimo (0–2)16,8283:0562–52+2box
115August 14@Blue Jays3–2Quintana (5–2)Álvarez (7–10)Reed (21)18,9192:3163–52+2box
116August 15@Blue Jays9–5Floyd (9–9)Romero (8–10)20,1192:3964–52+2box
117August 16@Blue Jays7–2Liriano (4–10)Laffey (3–4)19,8552:3465–52+2½box
118August 17@Royals2–4Mendoza (7–8)Sale (14–4)Holland (5)22,1692:3165–53+1½box
119August 18@Royals4–9Chen (9–10)Peavy (9–9)23,8582:5965–54+1½box
120August 19@Royals2–5Holland (6–3)Crain (2–2)22,4012:4365–55+1½box
121August 20Yankees9–6Myers (2–5)Logan (4–2)Reed (22)27,5613:4466–55+2box
122August 21Yankees7–3Liriano (5–10)Nova (11–7)24,2472:3767–55+2box
123August 22Yankees2–1Sale (15–4)Hughes (12–11)Reed (23)26,3192:2768–55+2box
124August 24Mariners9–8Reed (3–1)Wilhelmsen (4–3)25,0583:0069–55+2½box
125August 25Mariners5–4Jones (6–0)Beavan (8–8)Reed (24)27,5623:1570–55+2½box
126August 26Mariners4–3(7)Jones (7–0)Millwood (4–11)23,1462:2271–55+2½box
127August 27@Orioles3–4Strop (5–2)Myers (2–6)Johnson (40)10,9553:0671–56+2box
128August 28@Orioles0–6Tillman (7–2)Sale (15–5)12,8412:3071–57+2box
129August 29@Orioles8–1Axelrod (2–2)Saunders (6–11)13,0982:5172–57+3box
130August 30@Orioles3–5Britton (4–1)Quintana (5–3)Johnson (41)10,1412:3172–58+3box
131August 31@Tigers4–7Dotel (5–2)Peavy (9–10)Valverde (27)36,7213:1072–59+2box
September/October (13–18) – Home (7–10) – Road (6–8) – 130 R.S. 128 R.A.
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceTimeRecordGBBox
132September 1@Tigers1–5Scherzer (15–6)Liriano (5–11)40,0593:1772–60+1box
133September 2@Tigers2–4Verlander (13–7)Sale (15–6)Valverde (28)42,1922:5272–610box
134September 3Twins4–2Santiago (3–1)Deduno (5–3)Reed (25)21,6763:0073–61+1box
135September 4Twins9–18Diamond (11–6)Quintana (5–4)15,6983:2473–62+1box
136September 5Twins6–2Peavy (10–10)Walters (2–3)17,3362:4074–62+1box
137September 7Royals5–7Herrera (2–2)Reed (3–2)Holland (12)26,6603:0274–63+1box
138September 8Royals5–4Sale (16–6)Chen (10–12)Reed (26)26,2272:4875–63+2box
139September 9Royals1–2(10)Herrera (3–2)Myers (2–7)Holland (13)19,3563:3075–64+2box
140September 10Tigers6–1Quintana (6–4)Porcello (9–12)30,2872:5476–64+3box
141September 11Tigers3–5Fister (9–8)Peavy (10–11)Valverde (29)26,5043:1576–65+2box
142September 12Tigers6–8Scherzer (9–8)Floyd (9–10)Valverde (30)30,6673:2576–66+1box
September 13TigersPostponed (rain); rescheduled September 17+1
143September 14@Twins6–0Sale (17–6)Vásquez (0–2)30,7292:4877–66+1box
144September 15@Twins5–3Liriano (6–11)Deduno (6–4)Thornton (3)36,3082:3978–66+1box
145September 16@Twins9–2Peavy (11–11)Diamond (11–8)31,7222:5579–66+2box
146September 17Tigers5–4Jones (8–0)Fister (9–9)Reed (27)29,1303:0780–66+3box
147September 18@Royals3–2Floyd (10–10)Hochevar (8–14)Reed (28)14,4202:1281–66+3box
148September 19@Royals0–3Chen (11–12)Sale (17–7)Holland (14)15,1202:5181–67+2box
149September 20@Royals3–4Holland (7–4)Crain (2–3)14,7102:4181–68+2box
150September 21@Angels2–6Santana (9–12)Peavy (11–12)39,3262:3281–69+1½box
151September 22@Angels2–4Haren (12–11)Quintana (6–5)Frieri (20)41,4402:4881–70box
152September 23@Angels1–4Weaver (19–4)Floyd (10–11)36,5462:3981–71+1box
153September 24Indians5–4Myers (3–7)Pestano (3–3)Veal (1)20,2062:3782–71+1box
154September 25Indians3–4Kluber (2–4)Liriano (6–12)Perez (37)13,7972:3582–720box
155September 26Indians4–6Sipp (1–2)Thornton (4–9)Perez (38)20,1663:4482–73−1box
156September 27Rays2–3Peralta (2–6)Myers (3–8)Rodney (46)18,6303:1182–74−2box
157September 28Rays3–1Floyd (11–11)Hellickson (9–11)Reed (29)25,2643:0883–74−1box
158September 29Rays4–10Moore (11–11)Sale (17–8)Archer (1)26,5593:1983–75−2box
159September 30Rays2–6Price (20–5)Quintana (6–6)26,8313:0683–76−3box
160October 1@Indians11–0Santiago (4–1)Kluber (2–5)14,7563:0284–76−3box
161October 2@Indians3–4(12)Seddon (1–1)Thornton (4–10)10,0153:2384–77−3box
162October 3@Indians9–0Floyd (12–11)Huff (3–1)18,0932:5085–77−3box

Roster

[edit]
2012 Chicago White Sox
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches

Player stats

[edit]

Stats through October 3, 2012

Batting

[edit]

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
Gordon Beckham, 2B1515256212324016604089.2345
John Danks, P1300000000.0000
Jordan Danks, OF506712151014616.2243
Alejandro De Aza, CF1315248114729695047109.28126
Adam Dunn, DH, 1B, LF151539871101904196105222.2042
Eduardo Escobar, 3B, SS, 2B378714184103923.2072
Tyler Flowers, C, 1B521361929607131256.2132
Kosuke Fukudome, OF244126100489.1710
Héctor Giménez, C51115000103.4550
Orlando Hudson, 3B, 2B511371027332171224.1973
Philip Humber, P2501000102.2000
Dan Johnson, DH, 1B142288103693.3640
Paul Konerko, 1B, DH1445336615922026755683.2980
Brent Lillibridge, OF, 1B, 3B486310111002426.1757
José López, 3B152325100016.2170
Brent Morel, 3B3511314202005736.1774
Ray Olmedo, 3B, 2B, SS2041810200109.2440
Jake Peavy, P2510000103.0000
A. J. Pierzynski, C1354796813318427772878.2780
José Quintana, P2300000013.0000
Alexei Ramírez, SS158593591572449731677.26520
Alex Ríos, RF1576059318437825912692.30423
Chris Sale, P1200000002.0000
Dayán Viciedo, LF14750564129181257828120.2550
DeWayne Wise, OF45163204271522940.25812
Kevin Youkilis, 3B, 1B8029247698115463769.2360
Team Totals16255187481409228292117264611203.255109

Pitching

[edit]

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
Dylan Axelrod225.47147051.056323182140
Brian Bruney100.001001.0000022
Jesse Crain232.44510048.029141352360
John Danks345.7099053.257353472330
Gavin Floyd12114.2929290168.016684802263144
Deunte Heath004.503002.0111111
Pedro Hernández0118.001104.01288312
Philip Humber556.4426160102.01137473234485
Nate Jones802.39650071.267191943265
Francisco Liriano325.401211056.254343473258
Jhan Mariñez000.002002.2200021
Brett Myers343.12350034.23013124921
Will Ohman026.41320026.22319196513
Brian Omogrosso002.57170021.020663918
Jake Peavy11123.3732320219.019188822749194
José Quintana663.7625220136.11426257144281
Addison Reed324.756202955.057302961854
Chris Sale1783.0530290192.016766651951192
Hector Santiago413.33424470.1542626104079
Leyson Séptimo025.02210014.18883614
Zach Stewart126.00181030.041262010416
Eric Stults002.702106.2622044
Matt Thornton4103.46740365.063272541753
Donnie Veal001.38240113.05220419
DeWayne Wise000.001001.0100010
Team Totals85774.02162162371445.213656766461865031246

Farm system

[edit]
See also:Minor League Baseball
LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAACharlotte KnightsInternational LeagueJoel Skinner
AABirmingham BaronsSouthern LeagueBobby Magallanes
AWinston-Salem DashCarolina LeagueTommy Thompson
AKannapolis IntimidatorsSouth Atlantic LeagueJulio Vinas
RookieBristol White SoxAppalachian LeaguePete Rose Jr.
RookieGreat Falls VoyagersPioneer LeagueRyan Newman

References

[edit]
  1. ^Gonzales, Mark (March 28, 2012)."Sox name announcers for Spanish radio broadcasts".Chicago Tribune.
  2. ^"2012 Top 100 Prospects". BaseballAmerica.com. February 21, 2012. RetrievedJune 6, 2012.
  3. ^"2012 Prospect Watch".MLB.com. RetrievedJune 6, 2012.
  4. ^Rogers, Phil (January 12, 2012)."Chicago White Sox top 10 prospects". BaseballAmerica.com. RetrievedJune 6, 2012.
  5. ^"Sox sign Wells to minor league deal".Official website of the Chicago White Sox. April 6, 2012. Archived fromthe original on November 3, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2018.
  6. ^"Sox acquire Castro".NBC Sports. April 10, 2012.
  7. ^"Padres claim Stults from White Sox".SB Nation. May 17, 2012.
  8. ^"White sign 2B Orlando Hudson".Chicago Sun-Times. May 20, 2012.
  9. ^Merkin, Scott."White Sox acquire Youkilis from Red Sox".MLB.com. RetrievedJune 24, 2012.
  10. ^McTaggart, Brian."Astros ship Myers to White Sox for prospects".MLB.com. RetrievedJuly 21, 2012.
  11. ^"White Sox Acquire Francisco Liriano". Archived fromthe original on June 16, 2013. RetrievedJuly 29, 2012.

External links

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