HBD Bill Melton
Happy 69th Birthday to my former #WhiteSox teammate & friend Bill Melton @CSNChicago View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dick Allen (@dickallen_15)
Happy 69th Birthday to my former #WhiteSox teammate & friend Bill Melton @CSNChicago View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dick Allen (@dickallen_15)
Happy Birthday to my good friend & former #WhiteSox teammate Rich “Goose” Gossage #HallOfFame View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dick Allen (@dickallen_15)
Today is the 42nd anniversary of the famous “chilli-dog” walk-off HR #WhiteSox View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dick Allen (@dickallen_15)
Happy Birthday to @whitesox Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio #Venezuela #GoGoSox View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dick Allen (@dickallen_15)
For those of you that had not heard the news… our friend Ed Herrmann passed away on Sunday morning. It is with a heavy heart we ask you to pray for his family as they prepare for his funeral on January 6th. As he did with everything he faced on and off the baseball diamond,…
As we begin this Thanksgiving holiday week, want to give thanks for and ask that you remember our friend Ed Herrmann. Hoggy continues to fight cancer and his family continues to comfort and love him. Barbara, Ed’s wife, has done a remarkable job in keeping his friends and supporters up to date with his condition…
Ten days ago we posted a special birthday story in honor of former White Sox teammate Ed “Hoggy” Herrmann. As many of you know, Ed has been battling cancer since 2009. This year, he spent his 67th birthday laying in an intensive care room and fighting off a nasty infection. Today, we are pleased to share…
Ed Herrmann was a great teammate and a key contributor to that memorable 1972 White Sox team. He had a solid major league career posting double digits in HRs for five straight seasons, earning a spot on the 1974 AL All Star team, throwing out 42 base runners in a single season, and catching Larry…
126 years ago today, Joe Jackson was born in Pickens County, South Carolina. He was the oldest son of a dirt poor sharecropper named George. A formal education was a luxury the Jackson family couldn’t afford, leaving Joe without the ability to read or write. Instead he started working in a local textile mill as…