The Chicago White Sox show mixed results as vs non-conference opponent. Since 2014, they're 236-217-0 against the spread—a 0.0% win rate with an ROI of -0.5%. While not a strong standalone angle, this data provides valuable context when combined with other factors.

⚖ Neutral
Record236-217-0
Win Rate0.0%
Sample Size453 games
ROI-0.5%
Units Won-2.5u
Time Period2014-2024

Year-by-Year Performance

SeasonRecordWin %ROI
201424-24-00.0%-4.5%
201517-19-00.0%-9.8%
201632-22-00.0%+13.1%
201720-13-00.0%+15.7%
201820-16-00.0%+6.1%
201915-21-00.0%-20.4%
202025-17-00.0%+13.6%
202126-28-00.0%-8.1%
202219-12-00.0%+17.0%
202317-25-00.0%-22.7%
202421-20-00.0%-2.2%

Why This Trend Exists

The White Sox's mediocre performance against non-conference opponents stems from their historically inconsistent approach to unfamiliar matchups. Unlike divisional games where extensive scouting reports and familiarity breed strategic advantages, interleague play often exposes Chicago's tactical inflexibility. The organization has traditionally struggled with in-game adjustments against pitchers and lineups they see infrequently, particularly when facing National League teams that employ different strategic philosophies around roster construction and bullpen usage. Chicago's recent volatility between seasons highlights another key factor: their heavy reliance on veteran players who perform inconsistently when removed from comfortable divisional rhythms. The White Sox coaching staff has shown a tendency to over-manage these unfamiliar situations, leading to questionable pitching changes and lineup decisions that create value for sharp bettors on the opposing side. The psychological element cannot be ignored either. This franchise has historically treated interleague games as less meaningful than division contests, resulting in flat performances that fail to cover spreads even when winning outright. Bettors should focus on fading Chicago in interleague home games where the pressure to perform for casual fans often creates inflated lines that don't reflect their true capabilities against unfamiliar opponents. This trend matters most during mid-season interleague series when roster fatigue combines with unfamiliarity.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Chicago White Sox's ATS record as vs non-conference opponent?

The Chicago White Sox have gone 236-217-0 against the spread when facing non-conference opponents from 2014-2024. This represents a 52.1% ATS win rate over 453 games.

Is betting on the Chicago White Sox as vs non-conference opponent profitable?

Betting on the Chicago White Sox vs non-conference opponents has not been profitable, showing a -0.5% ROI from 2014-2024. Despite their positive ATS record, the negative return indicates the juice/vig has eroded profits over time.

How does this compare to the league average?

The White Sox's 52.1% ATS win rate vs non-conference opponents is slightly above the typical 50% baseline expected in spread betting. However, the -0.5% ROI suggests this modest edge hasn't overcome standard sportsbook margins.

ANALYZE This Trend

This trend is near break-even. Combine with other factors and compare odds before placing any bets.

Compare Sportsbook Odds

Methodology

All trends in The Archives are calculated from official game results and closing point spreads from 2014 to 2024. ROI assumes a flat $100 bet at standard -110 juice. Win rate is calculated as wins divided by total decisions (pushes excluded). A minimum of 10 games is required for a trend to be published. Data is sourced from The Odds API and verified against official league records.