Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the top 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we maintain and update our existing Top 50 lists annually. As such, we are delighted to present our pre-2026 revision of our top 50 Chicago Cubs.
As for all of our top 50 players in baseball, we look at the following:
1. Duration and Impact.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the Major League Baseball.
3. Advanced Statistics.
4. Playoff performance.
5. Their respective legacy on the team.
6. How successful the team was when he was there.
7. Respecting the era in which they played.
Criteria 1-4 will make up the lion’s share of the algorithm. Please note that we have implemented this for the first time. This has changed the rankings all throughout the board.
Last year, the White Sox were awful, winning only 60 Games. None of the active players made a debut on the Top 50, nor were there any active players on the list.
As always, we present our top five, which saw a slight change.
1. Frank Thomas
2. Ed Walsh
3. Luke Appling
4. Ted Lyons
5. Red Faber
You can find the entire list here.
The new algorithm has led us to revise the list, with the most notable change in the top five, where Ed Walsh and Luke Appling flipped spots.
We thank you for your continued support of our lists on Notinhalloffame.com.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the top 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists and consistently look to update them when necessary and based on necessity. As such, we are delighted to present our post-2024 revision of our top 50 Chicago Whute Sox.
As for all of our top 50 players in baseball, we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the National League.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles that are not reflected in a stat sheet.
Please note that our algorithm has changed, which yielded minor changes throughout the baseball lists.
Last year, the White Soc posted only 41 wins and was one of the worst teams ever to disgrace the diamond. Nobody from the ’24 roster came close to breaking the top 50; however, there is one new entry, a former player who appears here based on the latest algorithm.
As always, we present our top five, which saw no changes.
1. Frank Thomas
2. Luke Appling
3. Ed Walsh
4. Ted Lyons
5. Red Faber
You can find the entire list here.
With the new algorithm, Lee Tannehill enters at #49.
We thank you for your continued support of our lists on Notinhalloffame.com.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists out and we always consistently look to update them when we can and based on necessity. As such, we are very happy to present our post 2022/23 revision of our top 50 Chicago White Sox.
As for all of our top 50 players in baseball we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in Major League Baseball.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
Last year, the White Sox did not make the playoffs, and we had no new entrants. For the first time ever, the only change was lowering a player based on the past year!
As always, we present our top five, which saw no changes:
1. Frank Thomas
2. Ed Walsh
3. Luke Appling
4. Ted Lyons
5. Red Faber
You can find the entire list here.
The only change was a first for us. Tim Anderson had such a bad season, that he dropped from #43 to #48. We have dropped players one spot before, this is unprecedented, especially for a team with as long as a history as the White Sox.
We thank you for your continued support for our lists on Notinhalloffame.com.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists out and we always consistently look to update them when we can and based on necessity. As such, we are very happy to present our post 2022 revision of our top Chicago White Sox.
As for all of our top 50 players in baseball we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the American League.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
Last year, Chicago was not able to make the playoffs, but they were contenders. There were no new entrants, though one elevation.
As always, we present our top five, which was not affected by the last season:
1. Frank Thomas
2. Ed Walsh
3. Luke Appling
4. Ted Lyons
5. Red Faber
You can find the entire list here.
Shortstop, Tim Anderson, climbed from #50 to #43.
We welcome your input and comments and as always, we thank you for your support.
When "Big Ed" Walsh broke into the White Sox rotation in 1906, he brought with him a devastating new toy: the spitball. He had learned the pitch from teammate Elmer Stricklett, but Walsh refined it with a terrifying level of control, claiming he could "hit a tack on a wall" with it. That season, he pitched the "Hitless Wonders" to a World Series title over the crosstown Cubs, striking out 12 in a single game and proving that he was the premier big-game hunter in the city. It was the beginning of a seven-year stretch where Walsh tested the very limits of human endurance.
The 1908 season stands as Walsh’s masterpiece, a campaign so massive it feels like a tall tale. He won 40 games, a post-1900 record shared only with Jack Chesbro. But the volume-dense reality was even more staggering: he pitched 464 innings, completed 42 games, and saved six others. He was a one-man pitching staff, leading the league in nearly every meaningful category and carrying the Sox to the brink of a pennant. To this day, he remains the last pitcher to ever reach the 40-win plateau, a benchmark that has become functionally impossible in the modern era.
Perhaps the most defining chapter of his tenure was the 1910 season, a year that serves as the ultimate case study in "Lack of Run Support." Walsh turned in a career-best 1.27 ERA and a microscopic 0.820 WHIP, yet he became the only pitcher in history to lead the league in ERA while losing 20 games. He was perfect, but his team was silent. Undeterred, he returned to win 27 games in both 1911 and 1912, leading the league in innings and games pitched once again. He was the "Sox's Architect," a man who refused to take a day off until his arm simply had nothing left to give.
By the spring of 1913, the bill for those 3,000 innings finally came due. The dead arm that had been looming for years finally arrived, and Walsh’s career effectively ended at age 31. He had given the White Sox every ounce of his physical prime, retiring with a 1.82 career ERA—the lowest in the history of Major League Baseball. He arrived as a raw spitballer and left as the statistical gold standard of the mound. Inducted into Cooperstown in 1946 and later honored in the first class of the White Sox Hall of Fame, "Big Ed" remains the towering figure of South Side pitching, a monument to an era where the mound belonged to one man.