Hey Chicago! It’s been a wild ride this baseball season, and not in a good way for the local White Sox fans. It’s like watching a train wreck in slow motion, where you just can’t look away. The White Sox played against the New York Mets on Saturday and, drumroll, please… they lost again, 5-3. With this unfortunate defeat, the Sox have now tied a franchise record with their 106th loss of the season. Yes, you read that right—they still have a whole month left in the regular season to impress us even more with their historic losing streaks.
Let’s break it down. That loss to the Mets marked their ninth straight defeat. Hard to believe, right? The season has already been littered with losing streaks of 21 and 14 games this year. If they manage to lose on Sunday, they’ll hold the record for the three longest losing streaks in Major League Baseball this season. For reference, the infamous Pittsburgh Pirates earlier had a 10-game losing streak themselves. It really makes you wonder how things spiraled to this point.
This game was just one of those “classic” loss narratives we’ve come to dread watching. Initially, the Mets racked up a quick 2-0 lead in the first inning, thanks to solo homers by Jesse Winker and Pete Alonso. The White Sox found themselves in a hole, and let’s just say they didn’t do much digging out of it. Despite trying to mount a late comeback heading into the ninth inning trailing 5-2, they only managed to bring the tying run to the plate—thanks to a double from Miguel Vargas and a single from Jacob Amaya. Vargas got home on a fielder’s choice from Corey Julks, but that was it. Just a little whisper of hope before crashing back down.
What’s perhaps the most jaw-dropping part of all this is that the White Sox were eliminated from playoff contention way back on **August 17**. That’s the earliest any team has ever been sent packing, leaving us all wondering how they fell so far. Currently, they’re on track for a nightmarish record of 37-125, which would not only break the White Sox’s own records but also surpass the all-time record for losses in a season. For some extra perspective, the 1962 Mets, who own the unfortunate title, finished at 40-120. Talk about a demoralizing realization!
At this point, the White Sox might want to tip their hats to the 1899 Cleveland Spiders, who managed a horror-season report card of 20-134, as they might just be grateful no one remembers them in the same breath. And, let’s be honest, they’re probably secretly wishing modern MLB rules didn’t kick in until 1900, so they wouldn’t have to face such scorn.
As White Sox fans, this season has been nothing short of a brutal lesson. From the high hopes at the beginning to the dismal reality we face now, it has been a roller coaster ride of emotion—most of it, unfortunately, in the pits. And now we’re left with 25 more games to either right the ship or further entrench themselves in infamy.
So as we cling to the end of this season, we can only wonder, what’s next? Let’s see if the White Sox can manage a few victories to shave down that loss count, or if they’ll continue to make MLB history headlines for the worst reasons possible. One thing is for sure—this season is definitely one we’ll not forget soon!
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