1919
A day after selling Babe Ruth to the Yankees, cash-strapped Boston owner Harry Frazee was unable to promise further cuts from his roster. (The Red Sox were coming off of a 66-71-1 season but were just a year removed from a World Series title.)
Frazee made one exception: Superstar outfielder Harry Hooper was staying put.
That promise lasted a year, as Hooper — coming off of a career-best 5.2 WAR season — was traded to the White Sox. And while Hooper already had 12 seasons under him and a bit long in the tooth at age 33, he was really good for the White Sox over the final five seasons of his career: 14.9 WAR, .302/.383./.436, 114 OPS+. In fact, Boston’s castoff gave the White Sox a right fielder who remains the 45th-best hitter in franchise history.
Hooper became a Hall-of-Famer via Veterans’ Committee in 1971.
1981
The first player (alphabetically) in White Sox history, David Aardsma, was born in Denver. Aardsman, preceding Henry Aaron, is in fact the first player (alphabetically) in major league history.
Though he may be first on the all-time alphabetical roster, Aardsma performed poorly in his one season on the South Side (2207), with a -0.4 WAR that ranks as the worst of his nine years in the bigs.
1994
After a superb season at DH (20 HR, 98 RBI, 3.0 WAR) for the White Sox in the truncated 1994 season, Julio Franco signed with the Chiba Lotte Marines of Japan’s Pacific League for an all-time record salary of $3.5 million.
Given Franco’s production and the fact that he almost surely would have taken less than $3.5 million to say in the majors and with a winning team like the White Sox, it seems obvious that GM Ron Schueler badly undercut Franco with his contract offer. Schueler essentially admitted as much at the time, laughing heartily about the numbers and warning, “Wait’ll you see the [Marines] numbers.”
The loss of Franco infuriated Frank Thomas, who was aided in a second straight MVP season with the veteran hitting cleanup behind him. Thomas volunteered a fax out to the media with the news breaking, admitting that the loss of Franco (as well as ace Jack McDowell) would hamstring Chicago against the up-and-coming Cleveland club in the division: “I really feel it’s a shame and a huge step backwards.”
The White Sox would not repeat their first-place effort of 1994 and failed to win another AL Central title until 2000. After a terrific year in Japan, Franco returned to MLB — back with his original club, Cleveland. While that 1996 campaign turned out to be his last truly productive one in the majors, he remained active in the bigs until 2007, at age 48 — 23 big-league seasons in all.
2003
In a case that remains unsolved to this day, White Sox outfielder Iván Calderón was murdered in a bar in his hometown of Loiza, Puerto Rico, dead at age 41.
Calderón was the best straight-up deal made during Ken Harrelson’s yearlong GM tenure, snatched from Seattle for Scott Bradley in midseason 1986. By 1987, the man whose flashy necklaces belied a gritty work ethic had established himself as Chicago’s regular right fielder with a 4.2 WAR year punctuated with 28 homers and 83 RBIs — all numbers that would stand as his career bests.
Iván the Terrible never again approached that production, but contributed 2.6 WAR to the surprise 1990 division contenders, which in turn allowed GM Ron Scheuler to sell high that offseason, swapping Calderón and pitcher Barry Jones to Montreal for Tim Raines, a huge step forward into a contention window for the South Siders.
Calderón was superb for the Expos in 1991, nearly matching Raines’ output in Chicago, with 3.3 WAR. However, his career descended rapidly from there, and after a brief reunion with the White Sox in 1993, Calderón was out of the majors for good.
For his career, Calderón hit .272 with 104 home runs, 97 stolen bases, 12.0 WAR, a .775 OPS and 113 OPS+.
Sadly, just a decade after his career ended, Calderon was shot at least seven times in the back at the El Trompo bar after Christmas. He left behind his wife, Elsabeth, and seven children.