Andre Thornton Stats & Facts

 

Andre Thornton

Positions: Designated Hitter and First Baseman
Bats: Right  •  Throws: Right
6-3, 200lb (190cm, 90kg)
Born: August 13, 1949  in Tuskegee, AL
High School: Phoenixville HS (Phoenixville, PA)
Schools: Capital University (Bexley, OH), Cheyney University (Cheyney, PA)
Debut: July 28, 1973 (13,400th in major league history)
vs. STL 1 AB, 0 H, 0 HR, 0 RBI, 0 SB
Last Game: August 31, 1987
vs. DET 1 AB, 0 H, 0 HR, 0 RBI, 0 SB
Full Name: Andre Thornton
Nicknames: Thunder
View Player Info from the B-R Bullpen
View Player Bio from the SABR BioProject

 

Nine Players Who Debuted in 1973

Dave Winfield
George Brett
Dave Parker
Brian Downing
Frank White
Bill Madlock
Frank Tanana
Steve Rogers
Randy Jones

All-Time Teammate Team

Coming Soon

 

 

Notable Events and Chronology

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Biography

He signed his first contract at 17, promising Andre Thornton to overcome horrifying personal tragedy to become a valuable slugger for the Cleveland Indians in the 1970s and early 1980s. When the Tribe acquired him in 1977, they gave him his first full-time job, and he blossomed, launching 28 homers. Tragically, that October, the van he was driving skidded off the road and into a ditch, killing his wife and young daughter. Devastated, Thornton relied on his strong Christian faith to help him through the aftermath. Amazingly, he set a career-high in 1978 with 33 homers while driving in 105 runs. In 1979, the quiet Thornton was awarded the Roberto Clemente Award for his character on and off the field, as well as his commitment to helping those in need. The DH/first baseman hit 20 or more homers six times for Cleveland, earning two All-Star selections and a Silver Slugger Award. Despite his powerful swing, Thornton was selective at the plate, walking more than he struck out during his 14-year career. He was the most popular player on the Indians during lean years for that franchise and retired among the all-time Cleveland leaders in homers and RBI.

 

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Factoids, Quotes, Milestones and Odd Facts

Best Season, 1978
Following the death of his wife and daughter during the off-season, Thornton had an incredible year. He slugged 33 homers, drove in 105, and scored 97 runs, for a team that finished 10th in the league in offense. On Opening Day against the Royals, Thornton hit a two-run home run. Two days later he drilled a three-run homer against Boston, and hit a solo homer the next day. On April 22, at Fenway Park against the Red Sox, Thornton had the best day of his playing career, hitting for the cycle, and going 4-for-5 in the Indians’ 13-4 triumph.

 

Factoid
On May 2, 1984, Andre Thornton walked six times in one game, tying the all-time record held by Jimmie Foxx.

Where He Played: In 728 games at first base, Thornton hit .253/.466/.372 with 122 homers and 407 RBI. In 738 games as a DH, he hit .254/.435/.350 with 124 homers and 458 RBI.

Notes
Thornton belted six pinch-hit homers in his career.

Transactions
During the 1976 winter meetings, the Indians sent journeyman pitcher Jackie Brown to the Expos for Thornton, straight-up. The trade proved to be one of the best in Cleveland history. Thronton led the Tribe in homers seven times and played through 1987. Brown won nine games for the Expos in 1977 and was out of baseball.

The Milwaukee Menace
Thornton absolutely clobbered the Brewers. In 103 career games against Milwaukee, he hit 31 homers and drove in 87 runs. He slugged .624 with a .308 batting average. In 1978 alone, he smacked seven homers off Brewer pitchers, driving in 19 runs in 15 games, while slugging .818 with a .439 OBP and .382 AVG. In 1982, he had 16 RBI in 13 games against Milwaukee, slugging .732 and batting .393 (22-for-56 with five taters). You would have thought that the Brewers would have stopped pitching to him, but the following year he was walked just three times by Milwaukee pitchers. Thankful for the opportunity to swing, he unleashed a .370 AVG in 11 games, with five homers, eight RBI, 11 runs scored, and a .804 SLG mark. He hit .308 with eight more extra-base hits (including four homers) against Brewer hurlers in 1984. His favorite targets were southpaw Mike Caldwell (.382 AVG against with nine doubles and five HR in 68 career AB), Jerry Augustine (7-for-16 with three HR), Bill Travers (three HR), Teddy Higuera (3 HR), and Lary Sorenson (.360 AVG).

Quotes From Thornton
“There is no doubt that the accident was like tearing the insides right out of me. My first wife and I both loved the Lord. She was a wonderful woman. We spent seven years together. I felt God’s presence right there on that highway in Pennsylvania. I felt God’s peace. Now I’m thankful that I knew Him years before, that I didn’t have to come to that point in my life and see my wife and child lying on a highway and have no hope at all.” — Thornton on the terrible car accident that claimed the life of his first wife and three-year old daughter, in October 1977.

Matchup Data
Thornton pounded Dennis Leonard for a .405 AVG (15-for-37) and six homers for a .973 SLG mark.

All-Star Selections
1982 AL
1984 AL

Replaced By
Pat Tabler

Best Strength as a Player
Fortitude and class.

Largest Weakness as a Player
Foot speed

 

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