- Earl Whitehill
Infobox MLB retired
bgcolor1=#003279
bgcolor2=#bd1021
textcolor1=white
textcolor2=white
name=Earl Whitehill
width = 250px
position=Pitcher
birthdate=February 7 ,1899
city-state|Cedar Rapids|Iowa
deathdate=death date and age|1954|10|22|1899|2|7
city-state|Omaha|Nebraska
bats=Left
throws=Left
debutdate=September 15
debutyear=by|1923
debutteam=Detroit Tigers
finaldate=September 30
finalyear=by|1939
finalteam=Chicago Cubs
stat1label=Win-Loss Record
stat1value=218-185
stat2label=Earned Run Average
stat2value=4.36
stat3label=Strikeouts
stat3value=1350
teams=
*Detroit Tigers (1923-1932)
*Washington Senators (1933-1936)
*Cleveland Indians (1937-1938)
*Chicago Cubs (1939)
highlights=
* Top 10 in Wins in American League 6 times: 1924, 1926, 1927, 1930, 1933.
* Top 10 in Strikeouts in American League 8 times: 1925-1927, 1929-1930, 1933-1935
* His 218 career wins ranks 74 in Major League history
* No. 9 in AL MVP voting in 1933
* His career total of 1431 bases on balls allowed ranks 14 in Major League history
* His career total of 1726 earned runs allowed ranks 16 in Major League historyEarl Oliver Whitehill (
February 7 ,1899 –October 22 1954 ) was aMajor League Baseball pitcher for theDetroit Tigers for the most significant portion of his career (1923-1932), and later with the Washington Senators (1933-1936),Cleveland Indians (1937-1938), and theChicago Cubs (1939). Consistently winning in double digits for thirteen years (1924-1936), left-handed Whitehill went on to become one of theTop 100 winning pitchers of all time . He was born inCedar Rapids, Iowa ."The Earl", as many called him, was a handsome and often temperamental pitcher who often showed up in the top 10 in
hit batsmen , leading the league in his first full year, 1924, when he hit 13 (tied withGeorge Uhle ).Whitehill averaged 14 wins each season and he never dipped below 11 wins in a full season (30 starts or more). Whitehill made his debut on
September 15 ,1923 . He was a small left-handed pitcher, who weighed around 175 pounds. With Detroit, he came to be known as one of the most consistent pitchers in the league. From 1928 through 1932, he never had an ERA higher than 4.62 and never had one lower than 4.08; a difference of only .54 in those years.In his rookie season, Whitehill was 17-8, with a 3.86 ERA, and two
shutout s). The Tigers' offensive support helped, as the Tigers finished 1st in most major offensive categories in 1923. Reduced run support became a factor later in his stint with Detroit, which lead some to believe his overall record could have been better. In his early years with Detroit, Whitehill was part of a starting rotation that includedHooks Dauss , Dutch Leonard, andLil Stoner .Whitehill, one of the top pitchers of the Roaring Twenties, had a celebrity marriage to Violet Geissinger. Geissinger was a model for Sun-Maid Raisins during the 1920s. She was known as The Sun-Maid Raisin Girl. [http://www.detroit-tigers-baseball-history.com/almanac-1920.html] [http://www.pricefarmer.com/cgi-bin/farm?isbn=081293055X]
After he was traded to Washington, for
Firpo Marberry andCarl Fischer , Whitehill fit right in there, going a career-best 22-8 in his first year, with a 3.33 ERA (also a career-best, excluding his first year when he pitched in 8 games and had a 2.73 ERA). With Washington that year, he saw his first (and last) postseason action, when the Senators were defeated by the New York Giants in 5 games. However, Whitehill did his part, getting the only win of the series for Washington. In that game, he pitched acomplete game shutout allowing 5 hits and 2 walks. Because he didn't start until Game 3, it became his only start of the Series, and his only start of the postseason. Thus, his final postseason ERA was 0.00, tied with many others for a record.Whitehill one-hit the
New York Yankees onMay 30 ,1934 . The Yanks' Ben Chapman broke up theno-hitter in the ninth inning.He was traded as part of a three team deal on
December 10 ,1936 . The Senators receivedJack Salveson from theChicago White Sox , who receivedThornton Lee from the Indians, which is where Whitehill was headed. In Cleveland, Whitehill had two average years and made a number of relief appearances (mostly in 1937). His final record with the Indians was 17-16.Whitehill signed with the Cubs in 1939, went 4-7 with a 5.14 ERA there, and was released in October 1939. In 17 seasons, he was 218-185 with a career ERA of 4.36, having given up 1726
earned run s in 3564 and 2/3innings pitched . He recorded 1350 careerstrikeout s. He pitched in 541 games, 473 of them starts. His lifetime ERA of 4.36 is higher than any other 200-game winner.After serving as a coach for the Indians, the
Philadelphia Phillies , and in theInternational League in the early 1940s, he became a sales representative for theA.G. Spalding sporting goods firm. Whitehill died in an automobile accident inOmaha, Nebraska at the age of 54.Quick Facts
*Got angry with manager/teammate
Ty Cobb when the hall-of-famer came in fromcenter field to advise him to throwcurveball s; Whitehill wanted to throwfastball s
*On April 23, 1933, knockedLou Gehrig unconscious with a pitch during Gehrig's famedgames played streak. Gehrig recovered and finished the game. [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/W/Whitehill_Earl.stm]
*Had highest (worst) earned run average of any 200-game winner with 4.36 (winning answer in 1987 SABR trivia semi-final). [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCI/is_7_63/ai_n6108327/pg_2]ee also
*
List of Major League Baseball leaders in career wins
*MLB All-Time Hit Batsmen List External links
*baseball-reference|id=w/whiteea01
* Des Moines Register, 3/24/1963, "Whitehill in Iowa's 'Hall'; Rapids Pitcher Won 218" [http://desmoinesregister.com/sports/extras/hall/whitehill.html]
* Baseball Library.com article on Whitehill [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/W/Whitehill_Earl.stm]
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