St. Louis Browns right-handed pitcher, Hollis Thurston, was born on June 2, 1899, in Fremont, Nebraska. He would build a 19-season professional baseball career that would include nine seasons in the major leagues, and ten seasons in the minor leagues. He would appear in 579 career games, earning 195 wins and 374 recorded strikeouts. With all these statistics, Hollis Thurston would spend just four innings as a St. Louis Brown.
Hollis Thurston would attend John H. Francis High School in Sun Valley, California. This would be the same school as Browns future manager, Fred Haney. After pitching three seasons with the Salt Lake City Bees (1920-22), the Browns signed Thurston prior to the 1923 season.
He would make his MLB debut on April 19, 1923, as he replaced Hub Pruett in the eighth inning against the Detroit Tigers. He would pitch two innings, giving up one run on two hits. Thurston would make his second appearance for the Browns on April 23, as he started against the Chicago White Sox. He would last just two innings, giving up six hits, two walks, that led to three runs.
During a four games series against the Tigers in Detroit (April 26-29, 1923), Browns manager Lee Fohl assigned Thurston to throw batting practice. Thurston refused the assignment, and Fohl was forced to suspend the pitcher. On May 12, his contract would be purchased by the Chicago White Sox, and his time in St. Louis would be over.
Hollis Thurston would go on to play for the White Sox (1923-26), Washington Nationals (1927), and the Brooklyn Dodges (1930-33). He would pitch throughout the Pacific Coast League towards the end of his career with the San Francisco Seals (1928-29), Mission Reds (1934-36), Seattle Indians (1937), and Oakland Oaks (1938).
After his playing days, Thurston would manage the Tacoma Tigers to the Western International League Championship in 1937. He would then scout for the Pittsburgh Pirates (1939-45), Cleveland Indians (1948-50), and Chicago White Sox (1951-67).
Hollis Thurston would have the colorful nickname of "Sloppy", because he was always aware of his clean appearance.