Earl Whitehill joined the Detroit staff in late 1923 after the club purchased his contract from Birmingham in the Southern Association, where he had been honing a devastating curveball. A high-velocity left-hander with a reputation that preceded him, his aggressive, uncompromising demeanor on the mound was just as potent as his arsenal. He quickly transitioned into the definitive workhorse of the Tigers' rotation during a high-scoring era that chewed up and spit out lesser arms.
During the mid-to-late 1920s, he demonstrated a focused intensity that made him a perennial fixture at the top of the American League leaderboard for innings pitched and games started. He reached a career peak for individual dominance in 1924, winning 17 games as a rookie to lead all American League newcomers, but it was his steady-state production over the next several years that solidified his place in the rotation. Recording five separate campaigns in the Motor City with at least 16 victories, Whitehill possessed a rare ability to navigate the hitter-friendly confines of the era,
Between 1923 and 1932, Whitehill was a statistical standout for the Tigers, amassing 133 wins and over 2,200 innings of work. The run in the Motor City ended in a 1932 trade to the Washington Senators, a move that saw him eventually secure a 22-win season and a World Series victory elsewhere.





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