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On June 27, 1983, the White Sox got their first walk-off win of that season. On June 27, 2026 — the day the team was honoring the AL West division champs of ’83 — Jacob Gonzalez delivered this year’s team its seventh walk-off win with a bases loaded single.
Gonzalez being the seventh different player to come through with a walk-off hit for the White Sox this season. Seven walk-offs by seven guys, all before the end of June. If the 1983 team was the “Win Ugly” White Sox, the 2026 group is forging a different kind of identity, one built around the ability of young players to step up in key moments.
“It’s special, and it seems fitting for our group,” manager Will Venable said. “We talk about every night that we’re getting contributions throughout the lineup, you know, every guy that steps on the mound, it’s coming from everywhere every single night.”
In all, the Sox have had twelve players make their major league debuts this season. Gonzalez, whose walk-off single drove in the game-winning run on Saturday against John Schreiber and a five-man Royals infield, is one of those twelve. He debuted less than a month ago.
“Great at-bat. Obviously, a lot on the line there, a really tough situation,” Venable said. “You got the five man infield. And you’ve got a really good pitcher on the mound, and obviously a big spot, everyone going crazy. So it was a big spot for him to come through.”
Gonzalez said he was looking to get the ball in the air with the infield covered, but he drove a hard grounder past Bobby Witt, Jr. at shortstop to push the White Sox to five games above .500.
Now exactly halfway through the season, the White Sox are sitting in first place and look capable of sticking there. Some of that is a product of a division that’s turned out weaker than expected, and some it is a product of some baseball magic like Saturday’s walk-off, but there’s just as much that’s a product of a quality team. One that has the kind of depth where, of the twelve players who’ve made debuts, many of them have stepped up and contributed. And Gonzalez isn’t the first rookie to deliver a walk-off, Braden Montgomery hit a walk-off homer in his debut.
“I think the most impressive thing so far about our season is–obviously we had the core going into this year–is just as soon as we get someone called up from Triple-A, there’s an immediate impact,” said Davis Martin, who pitched 5 1/3 shutout innings against the Royals. “There’s so many guys who are just coming in and just doing their role and doing their job. It’s just a testament to where our organization is as a whole, where we’re developing guys and just the culture we have. They can come up, be themselves and go play to the best of their ability.”

That’s a different kind of identity than the 1983 White Sox, who were built around veterans like Carlton Fisk, Greg Luzinksi, and Tom Paciorek on offense. This year’s group entered the season with the youngest average age in baseball (27). Having the young, fun group has helped the White Sox stay loose in big moments like Gonzalez’s walk-off hit or in a big series against the best teams in baseball like they did in their last homestand against the Braves and Dodgers.
“I don’t even think these guys really realize what they did there,” Randal Grichuk told CHGO of those series wins. “It’s one of those things that brings up confidence through the long haul, that will help us down the line.”
Grichuk started his career with the Cardinals, where he played in the postseason his first two years in the big leagues, in 2014 and 2015. He saw early in his career what makes the difference between a team that starts off hot but fades in the second half and a team that’s still playing in October.
He said he’s talked to some of his younger teammates about the importance of staying focused on only the day that’s in front of them. Lingering on the successes or failures of what’s past or getting caught looking too far ahead is one of the quickest ways to sink a team in the dog days of the baseball season, Grichuk said.
“It’s win each day. Every game is the most important game of the year,” Grichuk told CHGO. “You can’t look ahead, you can’t look at the past. It’s one of those things that you just keep pushing along and then you’ll be where you need to be.
“It’s where the guys get focused on the wrong things or jumping ahead instead of being in the moment is when it could cost you a game or a series that could cost you a season.”
But for right now, the 2026 White Sox are having a lot of fun. Given that they already have more walk-off wins now than the 1983 White Sox did in their entire season that year, the walk-off might be how this year’s team is remembered. But at the end of June, there are a lot of games left to determine who this group will be viewed as a whole.
One thing that is true is that, for as caught off guard as some on the outside might be about how good this team is so far, that isn’t the case in the locker room. Whether they’re winning one-one run games via walk-off like Saturday or via 22-run showings like Friday, the White Sox came into the season believing they could win.
“We are probably the least surprised about this. I think everybody else can be surprised,” Martin said. “We’ve had the talent. We have the people in the locker room and I think we have the people in the coaching staff and the support staff. We have everything we needed inside the building and now I think we’re just putting it all together. We’re playing good baseball. Just continue to do our work. We’re only halfway, still a lot of baseball to go. So continue to do what we need to do.”

