Unconfirmed Player Note:
Once his teammates figured out that Rich Dotson could be hypnotized just by humming "Wheels on the Bus", there really was no limit to the ways they could screw with him.
Player: Rich Dotson
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Kravec made his stance crystal clear to White Sox upper management - you make him wear a jersey with a fake butterfly collar, he's flat out refusing to tuck it in. Deal with it.
Player: Ken Kravec
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Rudy was not amused when the Fleer photographer attempted to break the ice by asking him if he had ever been in trouble with his last name.
Player: Rudy Law
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Amidst one of the most trecherous storms to hit the city in decades, thousands of people claimed to have witnessed a vision appear in the gray, foggy Chicago sky. Despite varying details, all of the witness accounts shared one common trait - the vision had an impeccable mustache.
Player: Jose Valentin
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Despite his status as a 34 year old rookie, Ernesto earned his teammates respect when he calmly walked onto the field in spring training and snorted the entire third base line.
Player: Ernesto Escarrega
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Squires often wondered if he was the only White Sox player who felt that it was weird that the team wore blue coveralls as uniform.
Player: Mike Squires
Unconfirmed Player Note:
"I can't play worth a crap. Maybe I could do TV."
Player: Steve Lyons
Unconfirmed Player Note:
While he wasn't much of an outfielder, Warren Newsom was without a doubt the best clubhouse bouncer the Sox had ever seen.
Player: Warren Newson
Unconfirmed Player Note:
It was an unwritten rule in the Chicago clubhouse – no one touched Dick Tidrow’s White Castle cheeseburgers.
Player: Dick Tidrow
Unconfirmed Player Note:
In 1985, Foley experienced an offensive resurgence when he elected to bypass traditional pine tar and instead coat his bat with Plochman's yellow mustard before each plate appearance.
Player: Marvis Foley
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Luzinski made headlines in 1985 when it is believed that he became the first player in history to request the bullpen car to drive him to first base after he earned a walk.
Player: Greg Luzinski
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Of all the perks his status as a Major League Baseball player offered Joel Davis, his favorite were the free White Sox pajamas.
Player: Joel Davis
Unconfirmed Player Note:
In November 1989, Fred Manrique gave up baseball and returned to his native Venezuela where he founded the Manrique Ministries. The operation was shut down 6 months later after he was indicted on multiple counts of sexual misconduct .
Player: Fred Manrique
Unconfirmed Player Note:
Moments after the representative from Fleer had taken this picture, Kelly Paris became enraged and smashed $20,000 worth of camera equipment with his bat, claiming that the photographer "never told him to say cheese."
Player: Kelly Paris
Unconfirmed Player Note:
In 1988, the FBI conducted a random survey asking people to describe what a prototypical "serial killer" would look like. 85% of them described Bob James.
Player: Bob James