I'll admit that nobody calls Konerko Paulie Longball except me. I named him it and was never able to make it catch on. What did catch on was Konerko's baseball prowess and love for the game. Konerko was the heart and soul of the 2005 team and instead of following the money he opted in 2005 and again in 2010 to stay with the Sox.
When Konerko retired in 2014, his 432 homeruns was 2nd only to Frank Thomas on the Sox all time list. His 439 total major league homers is good enough for 42nd all time. He averaged 30 homers over a 162 game season or 1 home run in every 5.4 games.
Pauls best 2 HR totals came in 2004 with 41 and 2005 with 40.
Paul Konerko retired from the White Sox last year. The class act that he is stayed 1 more year in 2014 and took a drastic cut in pay and reduced playing time and mentored Jose Abreu in his rookie season. If you look up class act . in the dictionary you won't see Konerko's picture because class act is not in the dictionary but if it was, you would. I took this video in 2013 on Paul Konerko Bobblehead day. Please appreciate that I called the play and filmed it.
Go to my sports blog to see about Konerko's HR achievements for the Sox.
I talked earlier about White Sox players who left after the 2004 season and missed the World Championship. Magglio Ordonez was one of those guys. Ordonez played for the Sox from 1997 to 2004 and then played with the Detroit Tigers from 2005 to 2011. While his batting average went up 5 points while with the tiger, his slugging percentage went down 50. He made it the World Series with the Tigers in 2006 but on the losing end and batted a miserable .105 with no extra base hits. With the Sox, Mags hit 187 of his 294 career home runs. 187 puts him 5th all-time for the Sox. Ordonez averaged 26 homers for every 162 games played in the major leagues. His best HR seasons for the Chisox were 2002 when he 38, and 200 when he hit 32.