Today in White Sox History: October 9

1906
With flurries in the air, baseball’s third World Series (and first-ever intracity Series in baseball) kicked off at West Side Park. The 116-win Chicago Cubs were huge favorites, but get dealt a sobering blow with the Hitless Wonders outpaced them in Game 1, 2-1. Nick Altrock got the win, throwing a four-hitter and striking out three.

The White Sox never trailed in the game, scoring first in the fifth inning after a leadoff triple by George Rohe, who scored one out later when Patsy Dougherty grounded to back to pitcher Mordecai Brown and Frank Chance dropped his throw to first.

What would be the deciding run came in the sixth, when Altrock led off with a walk, was sacrificed to second, but was thrown out at home by Solly Hofman on a Fielder Jones single. A passed ball moved Jones to third (he had advanced to second on the out at home), and Frank Isbell singled Jones home for a 2-0 lead.

The Cubs would get one run back in the bottom of the sixth, but Altrock held the Cubs to two hits over the final three frames to earn the win.

This was not only the first intracity Series in history, it was the only one of the first 17 World Series to feature teams from the same city. It goes without saying, the White Sox and Cubs haven’t faced off in a Fall Classic since 1906.

1919
The White Sox unexpectedly lost the World Series to Cincinnati, five games to three. Sox fans, reporters and some players were totally shocked over the way some games were lost.

Lefty Williams, who was in on the fix, retired just one batter in a 10-5 Reds rout. With Dickey Kerr scheduled to start a potential deciding Game 9 — Kerr was 2-0 in the Series and the only White Sox starter not in on the fix — gamblers felt it was urgent that Chicago lose Game 8. To that end, Williams allegedly was threatened by the syndicate that the White Sox would need to be losing badly by the time the lefthander was removed from the game.

The questions surrounding this Series would linger for a year before exploding into the Black Sox scandal — eight players put on trial for attempting to deliberately lose games and defraud the public.

1931
Donie Bush resigned as White Sox manager after two horrible seasons, in 1930 and 1931. The 16-year veteran shortstop had previously managed over four years with Washington and Pittsburgh, with stellar records and the 1927 NL pennant with the Pirates. So his awful 118-189-3 record in Chicago may truly have been a product of a weak roster rather than poor management.

That said, only Will Venable, Pedro Grifol and Lew Fonseca have worse managerial records than Bush, among managers of at least one full season.

1950
White Sox catcher of the mid-1970s, Brian Downing, was born in Los Angeles. Downing attended the 1959 World Series between the White Sox and Dodgers as a child, and 10 years later he signed with the White Sox after a year of community college, as an undrafted free agent.

In his MLB debut in 1973, Downing entered as a replacement for Ron Santo at third base during a blowout win for the White Sox — and tore up his knee catching a foul fly ball. In his first start back later in the season (this time playing right field) Downing stroked an inside-the-park home run as his first major league hit.

Downing played mostly catcher in Chicago, but would move to the outfield and become an All-Star after the White Sox dealt him to the Angels after the 1977 season. He ended up playing 20 seasons in the bigs, amassing 51.5 WAR as one of the earliest adopters of weigh training the game had seen.

1993
In Game 4 of the ALCS the White Sox squared the best-of-seven series at two games apiece, with a 7-4 win in Toronto. Tim Belcher (acquired in a July trade) got the win in relief of Jason Bere. Unfortunately, this was the last great moment for the “Good Guys Wear Black” White Sox, as Toronto closed out the series by winning Game 5 in Toronto and Game 6 at Comiskey Park.

A few years later, Toronto manager Cito Gaston revealed that the Jays knew exactly what pitches were coming from both Sox aces, Jack McDowell and Alex Fernandez — something the Sox coaching staff and players never picked up on. In fact, Toronto beat those pitchers four times, while losing all the other games.

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