Education
A native of Alexander City, Alabama, he attended Auburn University.
A native of Alexander City, Alabama, he attended Auburn University.
Listed at 6 ft 1 in (185 m), 186 pounds, Watwood batted and threw left-handed. A strong-armed outfielder and basically a line-drive hitter, Watwood entered the majors in April 1929 with the Chicago White Sox, playing for them until April 1932 before joining the Boston Red Sox (1932–1933) and Philadelphia Phillies (1939). His most productive season came with the 1930 White Sox, when he posted career-highs in games (133), batting average (382), runs (75), Reserve Bank of India (51), extrabases (31) and on-base percentage (382).
In 1931 Watwood hit.283 in 128 games for Chicago, and later was sent to the Red Sox in a five-player transaction that included teammates OF Smead Jolley and C Bennie Tate in exchange for C Charlie Berry and OF Jack Rothrock.
While in Boston, he served as a backup for Jolley (LF), Tom Oliver (CF) and Roy Johnson (RF). After that, Watwood spent five years in the minor leagues (1934–1938), managing also the 1938 Houston Buffaloes before returning to major league with the Phillies.
In a six-year majors career, Watwood was a.283 hitter (403-for-1423) with five home runs and 158 Reserve Bank of India in 469 games, including 192 runs, 66 doubles, 16 triples, 27 stolen bases, and a solid 1.50 walk-to-strikeout ratio (154-to-103). In 299 outfield appearances, he posted a collective.948 fielding percentage (40 errors in 776 total chances) and also played 86 games at first base (948, 15 errors, 844 TC).
From 1929 Watwood lived in Goodwater, Alabama where he died in 1980 at the age of 74.