Knowledge

Tommy Hughes (baseball)

Source đź“ť

361:
Hughes was 6-9. In 1947, the pattern repeated for Hughes, losing his first several decisions, though he did earn a save in Philadelphia's 8-4 win over Cincinnati. On July 14, Hughes earned his final win as a member of the Philles, a 5-2 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. Hughes went the distance, pitching all nine innings, giving up only six hits, and holding Cardinals stars like
337:, Hughes did not earn a win and finished 0-2 after appearing in seven games at the age of nineteen. That season he also played for Dover of the Eastern Shore League. Playing on the D-League level, Hughes went 9-0 with a 1.80 ERA. The next season, he played the entire year with Baltimore, finishing with a 14-11 record. The next season he made the Orioles parent club, the 345:, who'd pitched 11 innings, Hughes walked two batters and gave up one hit, and struck out one in just one inning of work. Hughes struggle a bit in his rookie season. He finished with nine wins, fourteen losses and an E.R.A. of 4.45. He bounced back with a strong outing in 1942. Hughes went 12-18, despite not recording his first win until May 10, a 4-3 win over the 399:
the end of the season, Hughes was 14-3. He was assigned to Camp Siebert, located in Alabama. While stationed there, Hughes pitched for the military baseball team. In 1945, he was assigned to Camp Patrick Henry, located in Virginia. While keeping up with his military duties, Hughes found time to play for that camp's baseball squad as well.
379:. Hughes' time in Cincinnati saw him not only go 0-4, but the Reds were 0-12 in games in which Hughes appeared. Hughes made his last major league appearance on July 14, 1948. He worked one inning and gave up five hits and allowed four runs. Starter Ken Peterson, who only last two innings, gave up five runs, as did 360:
Hughes missed the next three seasons serving in the military during World War II, as did many major leaguers. In 1946, Hughes appeared in 29 games for the Phillies. Once again, Hughes lost his first several decisions before picking up his first win in June to put him at 1-6. When the season was over,
398:
Hughes enlisted in the military on December 19, 1942. During his military career, Hughes served as a Private, First Class (PFC for short). Based at the New Cumberland Reception Center, Hughes played for the camp's baseball team. he was the teams ace, earning wins over the stronger military teams. By
402:
After his military service and baseball career were both over, Hughes returned home. He served as the director of baseball fields for the city of Wilkes-Barre. In 1953, he was a coach for the Eastern league's Wilkes-Barre Barons. He was active for a few games, but did not appear in any of them.
390:, the triple A affiliate of the Reds. He spent all of 1949 pitching for the Tulsa Oilers of the Texas League. Hughes was not re-signed by the Reds at the end of the year, ending his career as a baseball player. 632: 607: 349:
in which Hughes went the distance, giving up three runs on six hits in nine innings. It would be a month, June 16 to be exact, before Hughes earned his next win, a 3-2 win over the
657: 627: 652: 647: 341:. In his rookie season, Hughes went 9-14 with a 4.45 ERA. He earned his first major league victory on April 22, 1941. Coming in relief for starter 622: 637: 280: 642: 612: 268: 121: 617: 515: 298: 210: 71: 55: 333:
Hughes made his pro debut for the old Baltimore Orioles of the International League. Playing under the legendary
295: 375:
At the end of the 1947 season, the Phillies traded Hughes to the Cincinnari reds for journeyman utility player
346: 445: 283:
behind him, he lost 18 games, also a career high. Hughes then spent three full seasons (1943–1945) in the
338: 244: 229: 225: 203: 162: 569: 543: 602: 597: 420: 529: 501: 487: 473: 459: 354: 322: 302: 301:
teams that never won more than 65 games in any of his five seasons, Hughes never recorded a .500
284: 276: 248: 131: 565: 236:. Hughes stood 6 feet 1 inch (1.85 m) tall and weighed 190 pounds (86 kg). 264: 188: 178: 174: 170: 166: 387: 383:, who relieved Hughes after Hughes' one inning of work. The Giants crushed the Reds 14-2. 370: 350: 272: 233: 206: 184: 362: 334: 310: 306: 260: 305:
in the Majors. In 144 games, 87 as a starter, and 688 innings pitched, he gave up 698
591: 318: 221: 573: 582: 380: 369:
hitless. Hughes struck out three and gave up a home run to Cardinals third baseman
366: 288: 256: 252: 214: 578: 342: 376: 314: 141: 263:. But his best season came in 1942, when he appeared in 40 games, 31 as a 502:"St. Louis Cardinals at Philadelphia Phillies Box Score, July 14, 1947" 217: 35: 240: 561: 488:"Philadelphia Phillies at Cincinnati Reds Box Score, May 16, 1947" 460:"Philadelphia Phillies at Boston Braves Box Score, April 22, 1941" 474:"Philadelphia Phillies at Boston Braves Box Score, May 10, 1942" 530:"New York Giants at Cincinnati Reds Box Score, July 19, 1948" 101:
April 19, 1941, for the Philadelphia Phillies
202:(October 7, 1919 – November 28, 1990) was an American 446:"Tommy Hughes Minor Leagues Statistics & History" 111:
July 19, 1948, for the Cincinnati Reds
154: 140: 130: 120: 115: 105: 95: 26: 633:Baseball players from Luzerne County, Pennsylvania 608:Baltimore Orioles (International League) players 560:Career statistics and player information from 8: 658:United States Army personnel of World War II 628:Sportspeople from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 23: 243:season, on June 3, 1941, Hughes threw a 412: 394:Military service and post-baseball life 158: 653:Wilkes-Barre Barons (baseball) players 516:"Tommy Hughes 1948 Pitching Game Logs" 386:In 1948, Hughes also pitched for the 7: 544:"Baseball in Wartime - Tommy Hughes" 421:"Baseball in Wartime – Tommy Hughes" 14: 228:from 1941–42 and 1946–48 for the 353:, as Hughes out dueled Reds ace 648:Tulsa Oilers (baseball) players 623:Major League Baseball pitchers 275:(253), and notched a low 3.06 1: 638:Philadelphia Phillies players 570:Baseball Reference (Minors) 267:, and set a career high in 674: 579:Thomas Owen "Tommy" Hughes 211:Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 72:Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 56:Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 159: 150: 110: 100: 77: 61: 42: 33: 281:last-place Phillies team 16:American baseball player 643:Syracuse Chiefs players 613:Cincinnati Reds players 618:Dover Orioles players 425:BaseballinWartime.com 339:Philadelphia Phillies 230:Philadelphia Phillies 204:professional baseball 163:Philadelphia Phillies 220:who appeared in 144 106:Last MLB appearance 566:Baseball Reference 355:Johnny Vander Meer 303:winning percentage 285:United States Army 279:. However, with a 277:earned run average 200:Thomas Owen Hughes 132:Earned run average 259:getting the only 197: 196: 65:November 28, 1990 665: 548: 547: 540: 534: 533: 526: 520: 519: 512: 506: 505: 498: 492: 491: 484: 478: 477: 470: 464: 463: 456: 450: 449: 442: 436: 435: 433: 431: 417: 265:starting pitcher 68: 52: 50: 29: 24: 673: 672: 668: 667: 666: 664: 663: 662: 588: 587: 557: 552: 551: 542: 541: 537: 528: 527: 523: 514: 513: 509: 500: 499: 495: 486: 485: 481: 472: 471: 467: 458: 457: 453: 444: 443: 439: 429: 427: 419: 418: 414: 409: 396: 388:Syracuse Chiefs 371:Whitey Kurowski 351:Cincinnati Reds 331: 299:National League 296:second-division 273:innings pitched 234:Cincinnati Reds 185:Cincinnati Reds 122:Win–loss record 91: 90: 84: 70: 66: 54: 53:October 7, 1919 48: 46: 27: 22: 21:Baseball player 17: 12: 11: 5: 671: 669: 661: 660: 655: 650: 645: 640: 635: 630: 625: 620: 615: 610: 605: 600: 590: 589: 586: 585: 576: 556: 555:External links 553: 550: 549: 535: 521: 507: 493: 479: 465: 451: 437: 411: 410: 408: 405: 395: 392: 363:Enos Slaughter 335:Rogers Hornsby 330: 327: 319:complete games 311:bases on balls 195: 194: 193: 192: 182: 157: 156: 152: 151: 148: 147: 144: 138: 137: 134: 128: 127: 124: 118: 117: 116:MLB statistics 113: 112: 108: 107: 103: 102: 98: 97: 93: 92: 85: 79: 78: 75: 74: 69:(aged 71) 59: 58: 40: 39: 31: 30: 20: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 670: 659: 656: 654: 651: 649: 646: 644: 641: 639: 636: 634: 631: 629: 626: 624: 621: 619: 616: 614: 611: 609: 606: 604: 601: 599: 596: 595: 593: 584: 580: 577: 575: 571: 567: 563: 559: 558: 554: 545: 539: 536: 531: 525: 522: 517: 511: 508: 503: 497: 494: 489: 483: 480: 475: 469: 466: 461: 455: 452: 447: 441: 438: 426: 422: 416: 413: 406: 404: 400: 393: 391: 389: 384: 382: 378: 373: 372: 368: 364: 358: 356: 352: 348: 347:Boston Braves 344: 340: 336: 328: 326: 324: 320: 316: 312: 308: 304: 300: 297: 294:Pitching for 292: 290: 286: 282: 278: 274: 270: 266: 262: 258: 254: 250: 246: 242: 237: 235: 231: 227: 226:Major Leagues 223: 222:games pitched 219: 216: 212: 208: 205: 201: 190: 186: 183: 180: 176: 172: 168: 164: 161: 160: 153: 149: 145: 143: 139: 135: 133: 129: 125: 123: 119: 114: 109: 104: 99: 94: 88: 82: 76: 73: 64: 60: 57: 45: 41: 38: 37: 32: 25: 19: 583:Find a Grave 538: 524: 510: 496: 482: 468: 454: 440: 428:. Retrieved 424: 415: 401: 397: 385: 381:Walker Cress 374: 367:Marty Marion 359: 332: 293: 289:World War II 257:Lou Novikoff 253:Chicago Cubs 251:against the 238: 215:right-handed 199: 198: 86: 80: 67:(1990-11-28) 62: 43: 34: 28:Tommy Hughes 18: 603:1990 deaths 598:1919 births 321:, and five 313:, with 221 239:During his 213:, he was a 592:Categories 574:Retrosheet 572:, or  568:, or  564:, or  407:References 343:Si Johnson 329:Pro career 315:strikeouts 209:. Born in 142:Strikeouts 49:1919-10-07 377:Bert Haas 271:(12) and 96:MLB debut 430:July 11, 323:shutouts 309:and 308 287:during 255:, with 249:shutout 245:one-hit 224:in the 218:pitcher 81:Batted: 36:Pitcher 261:safety 247:, 7–0 241:rookie 207:player 87:Threw: 317:, 31 155:Teams 126:31–56 89:Right 83:Right 63:Died: 44:Born: 432:2017 365:and 307:hits 269:wins 232:and 189:1948 179:1947 175:1946 171:1942 167:1941 136:3.92 581:at 562:MLB 146:221 594:: 423:. 357:. 325:. 291:. 173:; 546:. 532:. 518:. 504:. 490:. 476:. 462:. 448:. 434:. 191:) 187:( 181:) 177:– 169:– 165:( 51:) 47:(

Index

Pitcher
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Win–loss record
Earned run average
Strikeouts
Philadelphia Phillies
1941
1942
1946
1947
Cincinnati Reds
1948
professional baseball
player
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
right-handed
pitcher
games pitched
Major Leagues
Philadelphia Phillies
Cincinnati Reds
rookie
one-hit
shutout
Chicago Cubs
Lou Novikoff
safety
starting pitcher
wins

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑