I will miss him as a Sox fan. However, I am glad to see him still out there. When healthy, he can still rake it. He hit 12 HRs in just 105 at bats last year, and he wasn't completely healthy then. Good luck to him.
I think that regardless of what Thomas does or does not do over the remainder of his career (and irrespective of what he has (or has not) done over the past few injury-plagued seasons), he is probably a Hall of Famer, based on what he did at his peak and the fact that he was largely the most dominant hitter of the 90s. As to his OPS, he has a career 995 OPS. OPS in his prime years: 1033 (1993), 1216 (1994), 1060 (1995), 1085 (1996), and 1067 (1997).
kjones, unless we get some pitching here in Arlington, you could probably bump your number up to at least 20!!!!
Before the season is over, injury or not, the Oakland franchise will be needing chemotherapy to cure the cancer that they've just been infected by.
Once we got Jim Thome from the Phillies the "Big Skirt" was obsolete. It's pretty sickening to see a supposed White Sox fan call Thomas "The Big Skirt". He was pretty much the only thing worth watching in a White Sox uniform for 10 years. He dominates most of the Top 10 single season and career batting records in Chicago. It's not a stretch to say he's the greatest hitter in White Sox history. He deserves a little more respect than that.
grum@work: agreed.
umpduck -- you may be on to something. but if anyone's a cancer there, it ain't going to be frank thomas. it's that board-games guy oakland picked up about a month ago: milton bradley.
doesnt matter. the hurt isnt a big help to them. he hasnt done much the past 3 or 4 years and is rusty. he had a little luck last year for like the only 2 months he started. he got 13 hr and like 25 rbis. its not like hes gonna play much anyway. chicago has been looking forward to him leaving for a long time.
he hasnt done much the past 3 or 4 years and is rusty. 2003: .267 .390 .562, 42HR , 15th in MVP voting I'm pretty sure that's "doing much". he had a little luck last year for like the only 2 months he started. No, that wasn't luck. That was the raw skill and talent he posesses as a hitter shining through a debilitating injury that's kept him off the field most of the time. He's put up similar (or better) numbers in his career. Would you say that his whole career has been "luck"?
As a Cubs fan, even I'm gonna miss the big Smurf. Good guy and practically a Chicago institution for the past decade. Good luck, Frank.