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From 1926 through 1929 with the White Sox, Thomas finished in the top 10 in the American League in earned run average three times and in wins three times.
From 1926 through 1929 with the White Sox, Thomas finished in the top 10 in the American League in earned run average three times and in wins three times.
He would play for the Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, Philadelphia Phillies, Saint Louis Browns, and Boston Red Sox. In 1927 he led the American League with 36 games started and tied for the American League lead with 307 2/3 innings pitched, and in 1929 he led the league with 24 complete games. In 1926 he held opposing hitters to a.244 batting average, leading all American League pitchers.
In 1928, he finished 15th in the balloting for American League Most Valuable Player.
The Baltimore, Maryland, native was also a pitching star and, later, the manager of his hometown team, the Baltimore Orioles of the International League. Thomas pitched for the Orioles from 1921 to 1925, winning 24 games in 1921 and 32 contests in 1925.
Thomas had held out for a higher salary at the start of the 1925 season, and after the season Oriole owner Jack Dunn sold him to the White Sox for a reported $15,000. He later returned briefly to Baltimore as a pitcher in 1935, and then as a pitcher-manager during the 1940s.
In ten seasons (1940–1949) as a manager, his Orioles posted a 638–734 record (475) with three winning campaigns.
Thomas served as a scout for the Boston Red Sox from 1949 to 1973, except for a brief stint as general manager of Boston"s American Association affiliate Minneapolis Millers. He died in Dallastown, Pennsylvania, at age 88.