Showing posts with label Stan Thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stan Thomas. Show all posts

Friday, April 12, 2019

NOT REALLY MISSING IN ACTION- 1978 STAN THOMAS

Today we have a sort of extreme change of fortune, a career-capping “not so missing” 1978 card for former pitcher Stan Thomas, who went from the new, cellar-dwelling Seattle Mariners to the eventual World Champion New York Yankees in 1977:


Thomas began the season as one of the original Mariners, appearing in 13 games and posting a record of 2-6 with an unsightly 6.02 earned run average over 58.1 innings of work.
Then in the middle of the “Dog Days of Summer”, August 2nd to be exact, he was sent to the Bronx “as part of a conditional deal” (whatever that means), giving him the chance to pitch on a winning team.
What he’d end up doing is go 1-0 for the Yankees over three appearances, all out of the bullpen, yet posting an ERA of 7.11 (yikes), over 6.1 innings of work.
Turns out that would be it for his Big League career, which began back in 1974 with the Texas Rangers, leaving him with a career 11-14 record, sporting an ERA of 3.70 over 111 games and 265.1 innings, with 17 starts and nine saves thrown in.

Saturday, March 9, 2019

1977 MARINERS REDO- STAN THOMAS

I haven’t done one of these in a while, but came across a nice photo of former Mariners pitcher Stan Thomas from Seattle’s inaugural 1977 season, so here’s a re-do of his 1977 Topps card, as well as the original as issued:

Re-done for the blog
Original Topps release

Thomas was drafted by Seattle away from the Cleveland Indians on November 5th of 1976 in the expansion draft after what was a pretty good year out of the bullpen when he went 4-4 with a 2.30 earned run average and six saves over 37 appearances and 105.2 innings pitched.
He would go on to make 13 appearances for the Mariners, going 2-6 with a 6.02 ERA before being sent to the New York Yankees, where he’d make only three appearances, going 1-0 with a 7.11 ERA in 6.1 innings.
Turns out that would be the last MLB action he’d see, closing out a four-year career with a record of 11-14 along with a 3.70 ERA and nine saves over 111 appearances and 265.1 innings.

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