The last of the great 1890s outfield: Sam Thompson
Posted by Johnny Goodtimes on May 13th, 2009
Last week, I told you about the great Phillies outfield of the 1890s, one of the greatest hitting outfields ever assembled. I told you a bit about Billy Hamilton and the tragic story of Big Ed Delahanty. This week, we stay in the 1890s with the third outfielder in that great triumvirate, Sam Thompson. Thompson came to the Phils from the Detroit Wolverines in 1888, and proceeded to put up monster numbers for the Phils throughout the ’90s. In 1895, he knocked in 61 RBIs in a single month, a record which still stands (and which I can’t imagine will ever be broken, though Joe DiMaggio and Hack Wilson both hit 53 in a month.) He also inspired this amazing quote, which is mentioned on his Hall of Fame page. It comes from the Spalding Guide of 1896, and rips him for not trying to produce less runs!
“Thompson belongs to that rutting class of slugging batsmen who think of nothing else when they go to the bat but that of gaining the applause of the ‘groundlings’ [fans] by the novice’s hit to the outfield of a ‘homer’, one of the least difficult hits known to batting in baseball, as it needs only muscle and not brains to make it.”
Here’s another fascinating fact about Sam Thompson: his great-great-grandson is a world renowned mandolin player named Chris Thile. Here he is playing a song called Big Sam Thompson.
