2010 Chicago White Sox season

2010 Chicago White Sox
Major League affiliations
Location
Results
Record 88–74 (.543)
Divisional place 2nd
Other information
Owner(s) Jerry Reinsdorf
General manager(s) Kenny Williams
Manager(s) Ozzie Guillén
Local television CSN Chicago
CSN+
WGN-TV and WGN America
WCIU-TV
(Ken Harrelson, Steve Stone)
Local radio WSCR
(Ed Farmer, Darrin Jackson)
WRTO (Spanish)
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The 2010 Chicago White Sox season was the organization's 111th season in Chicago and 110th in the American League. The Sox opened the season against the Cleveland Indians at home on April 5 and closed the season also against the Indians at home on October 3. They finished the season with an 88–74 record, in second place in the American League Central, six games behind the division champions Minnesota Twins.

The interleague games that the Sox played were Chicago Cubs both at home and on the road since Sox and Cubs are crosstown rivals, Atlanta Braves and Florida Marlins at home, and Washington Nationals and Pittsburgh Pirates on the road. It was the fifth year in a row that the Sox competed against Pittsburgh as an interleague team besides the Cubs. Also it was the first time that Sox played the Washington Nationals since that franchise moved from Montreal following the 2004 season.

Offseason

Spring training

March

(9–16–5)

April

(3–0)

Regular season

Season standings

AL Central
W L Pct. GB Home Road
Minnesota Twins 94 68 .580 53–28 41–40
Chicago White Sox 88 74 .543 6 45–36 43–38
Detroit Tigers 81 81 .500 13 52–29 29–52
Cleveland Indians 69 93 .426 25 38–43 31–50
Kansas City Royals 67 95 .414 27 38–43 29–52

Record vs. opponents

Team BAL BOS CWS CLE DET KC LAA MIN NYY OAK SEA TB TEX TOR NL
Baltimore 9–9 4–3 3–3 5–5 2–4 6–0 3–5 5–13 3–7 3–6 7–11 6–4 3–15 7–11
Boston 9–9 1–6 4–4 3–3 4–3 9–1 3–2 9–9 4–5 7–3 7–11 4–6 12–6 13–5
Chicago 3–4 6–1 9–9 8–10 10–8 7–2 5–13 2–4 4–5 9–1 3–4 4–5 3–5 15–3
Cleveland 3–3 4–4 9–9 9–9 10–8 5–4 6–12 2–6 3–6 3–4 2–7 2–4 6–4 5–13
Detroit 5–5 3–3 10–8 9–9 10–8 6–4 9–9 4–4 3–3 3–5 1–6 3–6 4–4 11–7
Kansas City 4–2 3-4 9–10 8–10 8–10 3-7 5–13 3–5 3–6 5–4 4–4 2–7 3–3 8–10
Los Angeles 0–6 1–9 2–7 4–5 4–6 7–3 2–5 4–4 11–8 15–4 4–5 9–10 6–3 11–7
Minnesota 5–3 2–3 13–5 12–6 9–9 13–5 5–2 2–4 6–3 6-4 3–5 7–3 3–6 8–10
New York 13–5 9–9 4–2 6-2 4–4 5–3 4–4 4–2 9–1 6–4 8–10 4–4 8–10 11–7
Oakland 7–3 5–4 5–4 6–3 3–3 6–3 8–11 3–6 1–9 13–6 4–5 9–10 3–4 8–10
Seattle 6–3 3–7 1–9 4–3 5–3 4–5 4–15 4–6 4–6 6–13 2–7 7–12 2–3 9–9
Tampa Bay 11–7 11–7 4–3 7–2 6–1 4–4 5–4 5–3 10–8 5–4 7–2 4–2 10–8 7–11
Texas 4–6 6–4 5–4 4–2 6–3 7–2 10-9 3-7 4-4 10-9 12–7 2–4 3–7 14–4
Toronto 15–3 6–12 5–3 4–6 4–4 3–3 3–6 6–3 10–8 4–3 3–2 8–10 7–3 7–11

Detailed records

Opponent Home Away Total Pct. Runs scored Runs allowed
AL East
Baltimore Orioles 2–1 1–3 3–4 .429 27 20
Boston Red Sox 3–1 3–0 6–1 .857 32 21
New York Yankees 1–2 1–2 2–4 .333 33 42
Tampa Bay Rays 1–2 2–2 3–4 .429 24 43
Toronto Blue Jays 1–3 2–2 3–5 .375 42 40
8–9 9–9 17–18 .486 158 166
AL Central
Cleveland Indians 4–5 5–4 9–9 .500 80 86
Detroit Tigers 3–6 5–4 8–10 .444 89 94
Kansas City Royals 7–2 3–6 10–8 .556 96 78
Minnesota Twins 2–7 3–6 5–13 .278 83 98
16–20 16–20 32–40 .444 348 356
AL West
Los Angeles Angels 4–2 3–0 7–2 .778 38 20
Oakland Athletics 2–1 2–4 4–5 .444 29 38
Seattle Mariners 7–0 2–1 9–1 .900 58 26
Texas Rangers 1–2 3–3 4–5 .444 40 45
14–5 10–8 24–13 .649 165 129
Interleague
Atlanta Braves 3–0 0–0 3–0 1.000 15 8
Chicago Cubs 2–1 2–1 4–2 .667 27 17
Florida Marlins 2–1 0–0 2–1 .667 12 14
Pittsburgh Pirates 0–0 3–0 3–0 1.000 18 10
Washington Nationals 0–0 3–0 3–0 1.000 9 4
7–2 8–1 15–3 .833 81 53

Season summary

General

  • Games played: 162
  • Record: 88–74
  • Winning percentage: .543
  • Rank: 2nd
  • Games behind: 6.0
  • Biggest lead: 3.5 games (last on July 20)
  • Farthest behind: 12.0 games (last on September 22)
  • Most games over .500: 17 (last on September 6)
  • Most games under .500: 9 (last on June 8)
  • Longest winning streak: 11 (June 15 to 26)
  • Longest losing streak: 8 (September 14 to 21)
  • Series record: 25–24–3
  • Series sweep: 10–4
  • Longest game: 12 innings (May 7 vs. Blue Jays)
  • Shortest game: 6 innings (October 2 vs. Indians)

Records

  • Home: 45–36
  • Road: 43–38
  • Day: 31–18
  • Night: 57–56
  • Open: 86–72
  • Dome: 2–2
  • Grass: 84–70
  • Turf: 4–4
  • vs. RHP: 68–54
  • vs. LHP: 20–20
  • vs. East division teams: 17–18
  • vs. Central division teams: 32–40
  • vs. West division teams: 24–13
  • vs. American League teams: 73–71
  • vs. National League teams: 15–3
  • vs. winning teams (>.500): 26–32
  • vs. tying teams (.500): 12–15
  • vs. losing teams (<.500): 50–27
  • April: 9–14
  • May: 13–14
  • June: 18–9
  • July: 18–8
  • August: 14–15
  • September: 14–13
  • October: 2–1
  • First half: 49–38
  • Second half: 39–36
  • Sunday: 12–14
  • Monday: 9–4
  • Tuesday: 13–12
  • Wednesday: 13–12
  • Thursday: 12–9
  • Friday: 14–10
  • Saturday: 15–13

Scoring

  • Runs scored: 752
  • Runs allowed: 704
  • Pythagorean record: 86–76
  • Runs scored per game: 4.64
  • Runs allowed per game: 4.35
  • Blowout games: 23–20
  • One-run games: 28–21
  • 9-inning games: 81–64
  • Extra-inning games: 6–10
  • Shortened games: 1–0
  • Walk-off wins: 3
  • Walk-off losses: 7
  • Comeback victories: 44
  • Blown leads: 34
  • Shutouts: 11
  • Shutouts by opponent: 5
  • 10+ runs scored: 9
  • 10+ runs allowed: 9
  • Most runs scored: 15 (June 9 vs. Tigers and July 11 vs. Royals)
  • Most runs allowed: 13 (May 23 vs. Marlins and August 15 vs. Tigers)

Composite inning summary

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Runs scored 82 77 66 90 99 102 83 81 60 3 9 0
Runs allowed 85 70 85 80 75 82 89 66 56 5 8 3

Opening Day lineup

  1 Juan Pierre LF
15 Gordon Beckham 2B
20 Carlos Quentin RF
14 Paul Konerko 1B
  7 Mark Kotsay DH
51 Alex Ríos CF
12 A. J. Pierzynski C
23 Mark Teahen 3B
10 Alexei Ramírez SS
56 Mark Buehrle P

Summaries by month

April

2010 White Sox Opening Day.

On the Opening Day, the White Sox shutout the Cleveland 6–0. On that day, Mark Buehrle made an astounding play when he hurried and picked up a ball with his glove in foul territory and quickly underthrew backwards with his glove to Paul Konerko, who caught the ball with his bare hand to force out Lou Marson in the fifth inning for the second out. On April 12 at Blue Jays, the Sox snapped their ten-game losing streak in Rogers Centre and took the first victory since June 1, 2007, beating the Blue Jays 8–7 in 11 innings. In the next two games, Carlos Quentin hit the White Sox's first grand slam of the season, beating the Jays 11–1. The Sox split the four-game series with Blue Jays. On April 16–18, the Sox got swept by the Indians in Cleveland for the first time since May 30 to June 2, 2003. On April 23 against the Mariners, Andruw Jones hit two home runs on his 33rd birthday including his walk-off home run which made it 7–6. On the next day, in the top of the ninth inning, Casey Kotchman hit a soft ground ball down the right field line and a fan reached over and pick up the ball with his bare hand in foul territory. This is a fan interference ground rule double which two men scored from first and second making it 4–2 Mariner lead. Then in the bottom frame, the Sox scored three runs via two home runs, one by Paul Konerko (solo shot) and a walk-off by Alex Ríos (two-run homer), which made it 5–4. On the next day, White Sox swept the Mariners at a score of 3–2 with Paul Konerko's GW home run in the eighth inning. Paul Konerko broke the franchise record for most home runs hit during the month of April with 11. However the Sox finished the month with a not-so good record of 9–14.

May

On May 7 against the Toronto Blue Jays at home, J. J. Putz allowed a three-run home run to Álex González in the twelfth inning which made it 7–4 for the White Sox loss. Two days later against the same team, Bobby Jenks blew his save for allowing Fred Lewis a three-run home run which made it 8–7 Toronto lead. Sox lost three-out-of-four at home against the Toronto Blue Jays while the Sox split the series in Toronto last month. On May 11, the Sox opened the two-game series at the new Target Field and took the victory 5–2 over Minnesota, but the next day lost 3–2. On May 21 against the Florida Marlins in first interleague play, the Sox took the victory 8–0 as Alexei Ramírez had 5 RBIs with two-run double and three-run homer. Two days later, the Sox suffered a big shut-out loss 13–0 to the Marlins on Sunday. The Sox finished the month with a record of 13–14.

June

On June 13 against the Cubs at Wrigley Field, Gavin Floyd pitched a no-hitter through 6.2 innings before allowing a double to Alfonso Soriano and then the next batter scored Soriano by Chad Tracy's RBI single. The opposing pitcher Ted Lilly didn't allow a hit through 8+ innings before allowing a single to Juan Pierre. Later that inning, the bases were loaded, so it would have golden opportunities for Sox to score some runs, but failed. The Sox failed to sweep the Cubs as they lose 1–0 with one hit for Sox and three hits for Cubs. From June 12–20, they went eight straight games without hitting home runs, their longest since 1989, which they went nine straight homerless games. However, during their homerless streak, the Sox went 7–1, thanks to their starting pitching. During their span, the Sox have won six straight without hitting home runs for the first time since 1942. Then on June 22 against the Atlanta Braves, Carlos Quentin blasted a 3-run homer in the fourth inning, snapping their 8-game homerless streak in a 9–6 seventh straight win. For the Braves, they snapped their 42-game winning streak when scoring five or more runs, dating back to last season. From June 15–24, the Sox went three-consecutive three-game sweeps for the first time in franchise history. They swept the Pittsburgh Pirates and Washington Nationals on the road, and Atlanta Braves at home. They have won eleven in a row for the first time since June 1961, which they have won twelve in a row. The Sox finished the month with an awesome 18–9 record.

July

On July 5–8, the Sox got their four-game sweep over the Los Angeles Angels for the first time since 2005 when they swept the Astros in the World Series. On July 11 against the Kansas City Royals, Andruw Jones hit his 400th career home run in third inning, 46th player in major league history to accomplish this feat. Also the Sox hit five home runs in the game, including four in third inning, tying their franchise history, including two back-to-backs. The Sox swept the Royals with a 15−5 victory and finished with a perfect homestand 7–0. From June 8 until the All-Star break, the Sox were 25–5, their best in MLB. On June 8, the Sox were 24–33 and 9½ games out of the first place. Just 40 days later, the Sox were 50–41 and were in first place by 1½ games over the Detroit Tigers. On July 18 against the Minnesota Twins at Target Field, the Sox led 6–3 going into the bottom of the ninth inning. Then the Twins scored four runs without getting anybody out and suffering Sox their first walk-off loss of the season. Just three days later, the Sox suffered another walk-off loss, this time in extra innings at Seattle Mariners. The Sox scored one run in the top 11 and then Mariners came back with two in the bottom 11. One day after that defeat by Mariners, manager Ozzie Guillén was considering J. J. Putz to replace Bobby Jenks as a closer after blowing his save twice over his last three appearances. On July 23, Mark Buehrle celebrated one-year anniversary of his perfect game by taking a complete game victory over the Oakland Athletics in Oakland. He allowed 1 earned run, 4 hits, 0 walk and 2 strikeouts. From July 26–29, the Sox swept the four-game series over the Seattle Mariners for the first time since 1994 and finished the season series versus the Mariners 9–1 and outscoring them 58–26. The Sox finished the month with an overall record of 18–8 and incredible 12–1 at home.

August

On August 3, the White Sox played a split doubleheader at Detroit Tigers, which the Sox won 12–2 in afternoon game and lost 7–1 in night game. The afternoon game was a made-up game from May 17. The next day, Edwin Jackson made his White Sox debut against his former teammate, in which he had 7.0 IP, 9 H, ER, BB, 6 K. Jackson took his first win with the White Sox since moving from Arizona against Armando Galarraga, whose perfect game was lost by the blown call by an umpire on June 2. Jackson threw a no-hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in St. Petersburg on June 25. Also on the same day, Chris Sale, who was the White Sox's 13th overall pick in the 2010 Major League Baseball draft, was added to the roster as a relief pitcher. Sale was the first 2010 draft pick to be added to an MLB roster. After that game, the Sox were 37–13 (.740) over their last 50 games since June 8, the best record in MLB during that span. On the next day, in the top of the ninth inning, Paul Konerko singled and Mark Kotsay hit a two-run home run which made it a 4–1 Sox lead. But in the bottom of that frame, Ryan Raburn hit a game-tying three-run homer off of Bobby Jenks which tied the game at 4–4. Then in the top of the 11th, Mark Kotsay hit a two-run triple on which Brent Lillibridge and Andruw Jones scored which made it 6–4 Sox lead. In the bottom of the 11th with two outs, Ryan Raburn, who hit a game-tying three-run homer in the ninth, grounded out with men on first and second to end game for a White Sox victory. Sergio Santos got his first major league victory after he pitched two innings following Jenks, who blew his third save of the season. In that series, the White Sox took three out of four from the Tigers in Comerica Park, even though Tigers had one of the best home records in the American League. On August 9 against the Baltimore Orioles at Camden Yards, it is the first time this season that the White Sox pitcher (J. J. Putz) allow a walk-off home run (to Brian Roberts) and lost 3-out-of-4 in a series with two walk-off extra-inning losses under the Orioles' new manager Buck Showalter. The Sox got four walk-off losses since the All-Star break and wee then 2–4 in walk-off games that season. For the Orioles, they led the American League in walk-off wins at 9, including three under Showalter. From August 10 to 12, the Sox lost the series against the Twins and fell to second place in the AL Central, one game back. Also the Sox lost the series at home for the first time since June 4–6 against the Indians, snapping their seven straight home series wins. During the time between series losses at home, the Sox were 20–3 while the Sox swept four opponents. From August 17–19, the Sox played a series against the rival Twins at Target Field when the Sox were three games behind the first-place Twins prior to the first game. In the first game, the former White Sox teammate Jim Thome hit a walk-off two-run homer off of Matt Thornton in the tenth inning to down the White Sox 7–6. In the second game, the Twins beat the Sox again 7–6 with the final batter out. And then in the third game, the Sox blew out the Twins 11–0 to avoid a sweep. The Sox snapped the Twins 9-game home winning streak and they snapped their five-game losing streak at Target Field. On August 29, The White Sox hosted Frank Thomas day at U.S. Cellular Field against the New York Yankees. Thomas' jersey was retired that day, along with his face put up on the legendary wall in right-center field next to Billy Pierce on his left and Carlton Fisk on his right, and also right under 'The Catch' logo. On August 30 against the Indians in Cleveland, in the bottom of the ninth inning, the Sox blew a three-run lead to tie the game at 6 thanks to his fourth blown save by Jenks. Then in the top of the eleventh inning, the Sox scored four runs, all with two outs, including Brent Lillibridge's second home run of the season. The Sox took the victory 10–6. They were now 2–1 when they had given up a three-run lead in the ninth. Also on that same day, Chicago acquired Manny Ramírez off waivers from the Los Angeles Dodgers. The White Sox finished with a record of 14–15 in August and 0–5 in walk-off games.

September

On September 3, the game in Boston was postponed due to Hurricane Earl. On September 4, the White Sox swept the doubleheader at Red Sox with identical scores 3–1 with both saves from Bobby Jenks. It is the first time the White Sox swept the doubleheader in Boston since 1991. Then on September 5, the White Sox swept the Red Sox at Fenway Park for their first time since July 27–28, 1991 when the Sox came back with four runs in the top of the ninth inning to take a 7–5 lead, all with two outs. Also, Manny Ramírez faced his former teammate, which he went 3–8 combined in this series. The White Sox finished the 10-game road trip 7–3, all three losses came in final three road games. With the WLLL format in four-game series at Tigers, since 2006, they're 0–7 in the finale of the four-game set after winning the first game and losing the next two. On September 12, Lucas Harrell allowed six runs in the first inning in courtesy of two three-run homers even before the Sox will bat, then the Sox scored twelve unanswered runs to beat the Royals 12–6 and win this weekend series. It is the biggest White Sox comeback so far this season. Also in this game, Paul Konerko hit two two-run homers and five RBIs, recording his fourth career 30 homer/100 RBI season. From September 14–16, the Sox got swept by Twins at home, losing 9 of their last 11 home games against these Twins. With that sweep, the Sox fell to nine games back and Twins outscored the Sox 26–11. Then the next series against the Tigers at home, the Sox got swept again. The Sox got swept by Tigers at home for the first time since April 2001. During the finale of that series, the Sox tied the game at 7 after scoring four runs in the bottom of the ninth inning. The Sox lost in 11 innings to Tigers 9–7, but in the bottom of the eleventh, Paul Konerko nearly hit a walk-off three-run homer, but it was foul just a couple feet from the foul pole. In that game, the Sox left 21 men on base and went 4–24 with runners in scoring position. On September 22 at Oakland Athletics, the Sox avoided getting swept for third consecutive times by scoring two runs in the top of the ninth inning and went on to a 4–3 victory. That victory also avoided their nine-game losing streak for the first time since 1991 and first time in September since 1976. Then the Sox swept the Angels in Los Angeles for the first time since April 2006. In this series, the Sox outscored the Angels 12–6 and finished the season series against the Angels 7–2 and won seven in a row against them. They finished the season road record 43–38 (4th best in AL, 3rd best since 1999), better than last year's 36–45. In this season, the Sox swept five opponents on the road compared to two last season, four of them are the losing teams. Finally on September 28 against the Boston Red Sox, Dayán Viciedo gave the White Sox their first walk-off hit since April 24, winning it 5–4, which came back from a 3–0 deficit. It is only the third walk-off win this season which trails the majors against seven walk-off losses, all since the All-Star break. The result of this four-game series against the Red Sox is LWWW, first time they had this result since 2006. The White Sox finished September with a record of 14–13.

October

The White Sox concluded the regular season with a 2–1 record in October.

Game log

Legend
White Sox Win White Sox Loss Game Postponed
2010 White Sox game log

Player stats

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

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO AVG SB
Gordon Beckham, 2B 131 444 58 112 25 2 9 49 37 92 .252 4
Mark Buehrle, P 2 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 .000 0
Ramón Castro, C 37 115 18 32 2 0 8 21 9 26 .278 1
John Danks, P 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 0
Alejandro De Aza, OF 19 30 7 9 3 0 0 2 1 4 .300 2
Tyler Flowers, C 8 11 2 1 0 0 0 0 4 5 .091 0
Gavin Floyd, P 2 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 .250 0
Freddy García, P 2 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 0
Andruw Jones, OF, DH 107 278 41 64 12 1 19 48 45 73 .230 9
Paul Konerko, 1B,DH 149 548 89 171 30 1 39 111 72 110 .312 0
Mark Kotsay, DH,1B,OF 107 327 30 78 17 2 8 31 32 36 .239 1
Brent Lillibridge, 2B,SS,OF 64 98 19 22 5 2 2 16 3 36 .224 5
Donny Lucy, C 7 15 2 5 3 0 1 2 2 3 .333 1
Brent Morel, 3B 21 65 9 15 3 0 3 7 4 17 .231 2
Jayson Nix, 3B,2B,SS 24 49 3 8 1 0 1 5 7 12 .163 0
Jake Peavy, P 2 7 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 .143 0
Juan Pierre, LF 160 651 96 179 18 3 1 47 45 47 .275 68
A. J. Pierzynski, C 128 474 43 128 29 0 9 56 15 39 .270 3
Carlos Quentin, RF, DH 131 453 73 110 25 2 26 87 50 83 .243 2
Alexei Ramírez, SS 156 585 83 165 29 2 18 70 27 82 .282 13
Manny Ramírez, DH 24 69 6 18 1 0 1 2 14 23 .260 0
Alex Ríos, CF 147 567 89 161 29 3 21 88 38 93 .284 34
Mark Teahen, 3B,OF 77 233 31 60 13 2 4 25 25 61 .258 3
Dayán Viciedo, 3B 38 104 17 32 7 0 5 13 2 25 .308 1
Omar Vizquel, 3B,2B,SS 108 344 36 95 11 1 2 30 34 45 .276 11
Team totals
162 5484 752 1467 263 21 177 710 462 918 .268 160

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; BAA = Batting average against

Player W L ERA G GS SV IP H R ER HR BB K BAA
Mark Buehrle 13 13 4.28 33 33 0 210.1 246 105 100 17 49 99 .295
John Danks 15 11 3.72 32 32 0 213.0 189 93 88 18 70 163 .237
Gavin Floyd 10 13 4.08 31 31 0 187.1 199 92 85 14 58 151 .274
Freddy García 12 6 4.64 28 28 0 157.0 171 85 81 23 45 89 .279
Lucas Harrell 1 0 4.88 8 3 0 24.0 34 18 12 2 17 15 .337
Daniel Hudson 1 1 6.32 3 3 0 15.2 17 11 11 1 11 14 .293
Gregory Infante 0 0 0.00 5 0 0 4.2 2 0 0 0 4 5 .133
Edwin Jackson 4 2 3.24 11 11 0 75.0 73 31 27 8 18 77 .248
Bobby Jenks 1 3 4.44 55 0 27 52.2 54 28 26 3 18 61 .260
Scott Linebrink 3 2 4.40 52 0 0 57.1 59 31 28 11 17 52 .262
Jeffrey Marquez 0 0 18.00 1 0 0 1.0 2 2 2 1 0 0 .400
Jake Peavy 7 6 4.63 17 17 0 107.0 98 55 55 13 34 93 .242
Tony Peña 5 3 5.10 52 3 0 100.2 108 63 57 10 45 56 .278
J. J. Putz 7 5 2.83 60 0 3 54.0 41 18 17 4 15 65 .204
Chris Sale 2 1 1.93 21 0 4 23.1 15 5 5 2 10 32 .185
Sergio Santos 2 2 2.96 56 0 1 51.2 53 18 17 2 26 56 .261
Matt Thornton 5 4 2.67 61 0 8 60.2 41 18 18 3 20 81 .191
Erick Threets 0 0 0.00 11 0 0 12.1 9 1 0 0 3 6 .220
Carlos Torres 0 1 8.56 5 1 0 13.2 23 13 13 2 9 13 .377
Randy Williams 0 1 5.40 27 0 0 25.0 37 17 15 2 21 22 .346
Team totals
88 74 4.09 162 162 43 1446.1 1471 704 658 136 490 1149 .264

Roster

2010 Chicago White Sox
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Charlotte Knights International League Chris Chambliss
AA Birmingham Barons Southern League Ever Magallanes
A Winston-Salem Dash Carolina League Joe McEwing
A Kannapolis Intimidators South Atlantic League Ernie Young
Rookie Bristol White Sox Appalachian League Ryan Newman
Rookie Great Falls Voyagers Pioneer League Chris Cron

References

External links

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