- Published in Top 50 Detroit Tigers
45. Earl Whitehill
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.