Thomas, Frank 1968—
Frank Thomas 1968—
Professional baseball player
“Big Baby”
A Second Chance in Baseball
The Big Hurt
Back-to-Back MVP
Sources
Frank Thomas is quite possibly the most exciting major league baseball player to emerge in the 1990s. The six-foot-five-inch, 257-pound Thomas carries the nickname “The Big Hurt,” which aptly describes his devastating talents as a power hitter for the Chicago White Sox. Thomas is the only player in recent history to have won back-to-back American League Most Valuable Player citations—in 1993 and 1994—after he put together outstanding seasons as a leader in a number of offensive and defensive categories. Chicago Tribune reporter Skip Myslenski described Thomas as “a major star, a supernova in his game’s constellation of stars.” For his part, the hard-working Thomas has only this to say: “I want to make a dent in the game.”
Thomas’s performance has brought comparison to some of baseball’s biggest names. He is one of only five players to bat over .300 with 20 or more home runs, 100 runs batted in, 100 runs, and 100 walks in three consecutive seasons—and the other four players are in the Baseball Hall of Fame. Small wonder that Thomas earned his first Most Valuable Player award by unanimous vote from the always-cantankerous Baseball Writers’ Association of America. As Jerome Holtzman noted in the Chicago Tribune, Thomas is “among the very best hitters in baseball history, probably the best of his generation, which is flooded with strong-arm sluggers hitting for both distance and average.”
For Thomas, baseball is a serious business. If he performs at the highest levels, he also sets impossible standards for himself and works toward them. “I’m a competitive person,” he explained in the Chicago Tribune. “I’ve been involved in athletics all my life, and I don’t handle failure well. That’s why I try to outwork everyone else.” In another Chicago Tribune profile, he concluded: “I’ve learned this much. A player can’t take anything for granted. I have a gift. But that means I have to work extra hard to get better.”
The fifth of six children born to Frank and Charlie Mae Thomas, Frank Edward Thomas Jr. was admittedly spoiled by his doting parents and older siblings. Growing up in Columbus, Georgia, he was called “Big Baby” and
At a Glance…
Full name Frank Edward Thomas Jr.; born May 27, 1968, in Columbus, GA; son of Frank (a bail bonds-man) and Charlie Mae (a textile worker) Thomas; married Elise Silver, February 8, 1992; children: Sterling (son), Sloan (daughter). Education: Attended Auburn University, 1986-89.
Baseball player with Chicago White Sox organization, 1989—. Signed with White Sox in first round of 1989 college draft (seventh pick overall); member of Class A Sarasota White Sox, 1989; member of Birmingham Barons, 1990; made debut with Chicago White Sox, August 2, 1990, became full-time first baseman for White Sox, 1991.
Selected awards: Southeastern Conference Most Valuable Player and All-SEC Tournament selection (baseball), 1989; named American League Most Valuable Player, 1993 and 1994. Member of American League All-Star Team, 1994 and 1995.
Addresses: Home—Burr Ridge, IL. Offce—Chicago White Sox, 333 W, 35th St, Chicago, IL 60616.
was encouraged to develop his gift for athletics. His parents never pushed him into sports, but they knew that if he was not at home he was playing ball somewhere nearby. As he grew he made little secret of his ambitions to play professional ball—even though his working-class family could hardly imagine such a life. “When I was a kid, probably around 12, I already knew I wanted to be a player,” Thomas told the Chicago Tribune. “So I was just telling [my parents] what I wanted, and I followed my dream, and I worked hard enough to get it. A lot of people nowadays won’t dedicate themselves like that....I was a little different.”
Thomas was just nine years old when he convinced his father and the local coaches that he could play football in the Pop Warner league, which catered to 12-year-olds. Sure enough, he easily made one of the teams and won the job of starting tight end. He was equally successful in Little League baseball, where he began seeing the frequent intentional walks that put him on base to this day. His success in sports was put into perspective by a family tragedy. In 1977 his two-year-old sister Pamela died of leukemia. Recalling those days many years later, Thomas told the Chicago Tribune: “It was sad. It affected me. But it’s something you don’t look back on. The way I’ve dealt with it is to totally forget about it. As the years went by, it got easier and easier.” Thomas has not really forgotten his baby sister, however. For years he has worked closely with The Leukemia Foundation, helping to raise money for research into a cure for the disease.
Thomas’s skills won him a scholarship to The Brook-stone School, a private college preparatory institution in his home town. He stayed only three years, opting to return to the local public school and its more competitive sports teams. There he lost little time in making his mark. As a Columbus High School sophomore he hit cleanup for a baseball team that won a state championship. As a senior he hit .440 for the baseball team, was named an All-State tight end with the football team, and played forward with the basketball team. He wanted desperately to win a contract to play professional baseball, but he was completely overlooked in the 1986 amateur draft. Baseball teams signed some 891 players on that occasion, and Thomas was not among them.
“I was shocked and sad,” Thomas recalled in the Chicago Tribune. “I saw a lot of guys I played against get drafted, and I knew they couldn’t do what I could do. But I’ve had people all my life saying you can’t do this, you can’t do that. It scars you. No matter how well I’ve done. People have misunderstood me for some reason. I was always one of the most competitive kids around.”
In the autumn of 1986, Thomas accepted a scholarship to play football at Auburn University. Even so, his love of baseball drew him to the Auburn baseball team, where the coach immediately recognized his potential. “We loved him,” Auburn baseball coach Hal Baird told Sports Illustrated. “He was fun to be around—always smiling, always bright-eyed.” He was also a deadly hitter, posting a .359 batting average and leading the Tigers in runs batted in as a freshman. During the summer of 1987 he played for the U.S. Pan American Team, earning a spot on the final roster that would compete in the Pan American Games. The Games coincided with the beginning of football practice back at Auburn, so he left the Pan Am team and returned to college—only to be injured twice in early season football games.
Thomas might have lost his scholarship that year because he could no longer play football. Instead the school continued his funding, and baseball became his sole sport. He was good enough as a sophomore to win consideration for the U.S. National Team—preparing for the 1988 Summer Olympics—but he was cut from the final squad. Stung and misunderstood again, he fought back. By the end of his junior baseball season he had hit 19 home runs, 19 doubles, and had batted .403 with a slugging percentage of .801. With another amateur draft looming, the scouts began to comprehend that the big Georgia native could indeed play baseball.
The Chicago White Sox picked Thomas seventh in the first round of the June 1989 draft—after his home state team the Atlanta Braves had chosen someone else. While he would have liked to have played in Georgia, Thomas was thrilled to be with Chicago. He made his minor league debut with the Sarasota, Florida Class-A White Sox. The following year, 1990, he was named Minor League Player of the Year by Baseball America magazine after hitting .323 with 18 home runs, 71 runs batted in, and a league-best 112 walks as a member of the Class-AA Birmingham Barons.
Finally prepared to admit that they might have a future star on their hands, the White Sox organization called Thomas to the major leagues on August 2, 1990. Thomas jumped into a tight pennant race and batted .330 with seven home runs and 31 runs batted in over the following two months. He never saw another inning of minor league baseball after that. By the spring of 1991 he had won a position as regular first baseman for Chicago.
In his first full season with the White Sox, Thomas batted .318 with 32 home runs and 109 runs batted in. He led the majors in walks, with 138, and on-base percentage (.453). At a stage when most young players are struggling to establish themselves, he finished third in the American League Most Valuable Player voting, behind veterans Cal Ripken Jr. and Cecil Fielder. Chicago fans quickly dubbed Thomas “The Big Hurt,” based on his size and his ability to punish opposing pitchers.
Prior to the 1992 season, the New York Times released an article about the relative worth of active major league players. Using a formula based on several statistics, the Times declared that Thomas was “the biggest bargain in the majors,”based on his l991salary of $120,000. The White Sox lost little time in placating their emerging star, issuing Thomas a new three-year contract with a base salary more than $1 million, not including performance bonuses. Thomas responded in 1992 by leading the American League in extra-base hits, on-base percentage, walks (a tie at 122), and doubles. Thomas promised that he could do even better if he could avoid the distractions of superstardom. “Concentration is the key,” he explained in the Chicago Tribune. “I try not to be distracted. Lately, I’ve been blowing a lot of people off because they’ve been getting in the way. I don’t like to do that. But to be successful, I’ve got to have time for myself.”
Both Thomas and the White Sox turned in stellar years in 1993. For Thomas it was the unanimous Most Valuable Player award. For the White Sox it was a division title in the competitive American League West. Although the White Sox were beaten in the American League playoffs by the Toronto Blue Jays, Thomas emerged as his team’s focal point. He was rewarded accordingly with a four-year contract estimated to be worth $42 million, as well as lucrative product endorsement deals with Reebok, Pepsi-Cola, DonRuss, and Bausch & Lomb. The financial security Thomas achieved with the deal did little to dim his competitive spirit. “I can’t afford... not showing up at the ball park mentally,” he told the New York Times. “I have to be on every night to be a force in the lineup. I’m a humble guy; I’ve always been humble. But I realize my place.”
White Sox fans might always moan for what might have been. Frank Thomas was on his way into the history books—and the 1994 baseball season was ended prematurely by a players’ strike. No one felt the sting of the strike more than Thomas, who stood poised to achieve one of baseball’s most prestigious honors: the Triple Crown. Not since 1967 had any player finished the regular season first in average, home runs, and runs batted in. Thomas was contending for the honor when the strike occurred, and his numbers were good enough to earn him a second American League Most Valuable Player award. Pressed by the media to comment on his accomplishments—and his future—Thomas told the Atlanta Journal and Constitution: “I’m not into being known as the best by fans or the media. I care how I’m perceived by my peers. I can settle for the label ’one of the best’ because that means you’re considered an elite player.”
This “elite player” has let it be known that baseball comes first and off-the-field activities rank a distant second. For years Thomas has tried to avoid the kind of fish bowl existence that plagues fellow Windy City superstar Michael Jordan. This dedication to his game as a serious business has led to some misunderstandings in Chicago for Thomas, but as the White Sox continue to fare well, he has earned respect for his workmanlike attitude. Thomas is such a lethal hitter that he draws walks—intentional and otherwise—with stunning regularity. Some observers have even speculated that he will some day be walked with the bases loaded, so tremendous is his home run potential. “We’re very mindful of his presence,” Seattle Mariners manager Lou Piniella told the Chicago Tribune. “If we have our druthers, we’ll let somebody else beat us.”
Thomas has expressed no interest in leaving Chicago, at least in the near future. “I see myself with the Sox my whole career,” the slugger told Sports Illustrated in 1993. Stability has been part of Thomas’s life off the field as well. His 1992 marriage to Elise Silver, the daughter of a minor league baseball team owner, has produced two children, a son and a daughter. Thomas plays an active, if quiet, role in many charities, donating money from autograph signings to a variety of local and national sources. And although he has achieved more in a short major league career than many players do in a lifetime, he still has big ambitions. “I relish the opportunity to rise to the top,” he told the Chicago Tribune. “When you see the Jordans and guys like that who love that type moment, it takes a special guy to want that. I want to be the guy there with two out and the bases loaded trying to get a hit. I love that situation.”
Asked what final mark he would like to leave on the game, Thomas paused and concluded: “I want to be able to.. .when I leave here, I want people to say, ’Hey, I don’t know if some of the things he did can ever be done again.’”
Atlanta Journal and Constitution, July 30,1994, p. D7.
Chicago Tribune, March 25, 1992, p. 1 (Sports); November 11,1993, p. 6 (Sports); March 23,1994, p. 1 (Sports); August 7,1994, p. 1 (Sports); September 17, 1995, p. 3 (Sports).
New York Times, March 12,1992; October 5,1993, p. B13; October 28, 1993, p. B15; November 11, 1993.
Sports Illustrated, September 16, 1991, p. 30-34; September 13, 1993, pp. 40-44.
—Mark Kram
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Freud's Wizard: Ernest Jones and the Transformation of Psychoanalysis.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith; 12/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; FREUD'S WIZARD: Ernest Jones and the Transformation of Psychoanalysis...a misnomer, however, in that Ernest Jones is well known among psychoanalysts...write a book on dreams in English. Ernest Jones became, without doubt, the major...
|
|
Interview: Ernest Jones discusses tonight's watch-night service in Cumberland County, North Carolina
Transcript from: NPR All Things Considered; 12/31/2003; ; 642 words
; ...NPR) 12-31-2003 Interview: Ernest Jones discusses tonight's watch-night...called Pray Cumberland County. Ernest Jones is pastor of True Vine Ministries...transition for the faithful. Pastor ERNEST JONES (True Vine Ministries): We look...
|
|
ERNEST JONES SET TO RETIRE
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 4/15/1991; 670 words
; PHOTO - ERNEST JONES (RAN IN FINAL AND WEST LAKE ONLY) THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER...edition without a photo. Next fall, for the first time in 41 years, Ernest Jones won't be concerned with increasing standardized test scores or lowering...
|
|
IVY TECH PICKS ERNEST JONES FOR GARY POST
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 12/11/1987; 640 words
; PHOTO - ERNEST JONES THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED VERSION...Vocational Technical College (Ivy Tech) officials Thursday named Ernest Jones, former superintendent of the Gary Community School Corp., dean...
|
|
Controversial alderman Ernest Jones dies at 64
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 4/14/1990; ; 700+ words
; Ernest Jones, 64, the 20th Ward alderman whose controversial...Hospital said. Elected to office in 1987, Jones was a strong ally of former Mayor Harold...now Cook County state's attorney. Ald. Jones was taken to St. Bernard at about 12...
|
|
Freud's Wizard. The enigma of Ernest Jones
Magazine article from: Psychotherapies; 4/1/2007; ; 617 words
; ...Freud's Wizard. The enigma of Ernest Jones Brenda MADDOX London, John Murray...correspondances Freud-Abraham et Freud-Jones sont accessibles actuellement dans...est la figure nigmatique d'Ernest Jones, organisateur de grande nergie...
|
|
Q & A ERNEST JONES
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 3/8/1987; 307 words
; PHOTO ERNEST JONES THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED VERSION...Tribune microfilm for complete text. Unless things change dramatically, Ernest Jones will be the Gary school superintendent for the next nine months and...
|
|
Freud's Wizard: Ernest Jones and the Transformation of Psychoanalysis.(Books: A selection of new and notable books of scientific interest)(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Science News; 4/21/2007; 562 words
; FREUD'S WIZARD: Ernest Jones and the Transformation of Psychoanalysis BRENDA MADDOX Today...work might have sunk into obscurity were it not for the efforts of Ernest Jones, an eccentric but devoted translator of Freud's writings. Maddox...
|
|
Freud's wizard; Ernest Jones and the transformation of psychoanalysis.(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: SciTech Book News; 12/1/2008; 504 words
; 9780306816109 Freud's wizard; Ernest Jones and the transformation of psychoanalysis. Maddox...Capo Press 2007 354 pages $18.95 Paperback RC438 Ernest Jones embraced the embryonic science of psychoanalysis along...
|
|
EX-SCHOOL CHIEF WINS LAWSUIT JURY SAYS GARY SCHOOLS MUST PAY $400,000 TO ERNEST JONES
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 7/14/1989; 606 words
; ...damages to former school superintendent Ernest Jones. The jury of four women and two men found the school system violated Jones's contract when it reassigned him...July of 1987. "I'm elated," Jones said. "Justice eventually prevailed...
|
|
Ernest Jones
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ernest Jones 1879-1958, British psychoanalyst, b. Wales. He taught (1910-13...Clinic for Psycho-analysis. A follower and colleague of Sigmund Freud , Jones was instrumental in introducing the study of psychoanalysis into England...
|
|
Ernest Alfred Jones
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Ernest Alfred Jones The British psychologist Ernest Alfred...Glamorgan, Wales, on Jan. 1, 1879, Ernest Jones attended Swansea Grammar School, University...Unconscious (1970). Additional Sources Jones, Ernest, Free associations: memories of a...
|
|
Ernest Charles Jones
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ernest Charles Jones 1819-69, English radical, lawyer, journalist, and poet. He was a prominent leader of the more militant wing of the Chartists...
|
|
Jones, Ernest (1879-1958)
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis
JONES, ERNEST (1879-1958) Ernest Jones, a British psychoanalyst, was born at Gowerton, Glamorgan, Wales, on January 1, 1879, and died in London on February 11, 1958. The product of a middle-class Welsh family, Jones was educated...
|
|
Dickerson, Ernest
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
DICKERSON, Ernest Cinematographer and Director...x2014; Interview with Jacquie Jones, "Peer Pressure," in Black...November 1992. Ravo, Nick, "Ernest Dickerson Would Rather Be...6 September 1999. * * * Ernest Dickerson's career has so...
|