Kuhel started his major league career with the Washington in 1930 and replaced
Joe Judge on a regular basis a year later. He appeared in 139 games, batting .269 with eight home runs and 85 RBI. In the Senators' pennant year of , Kuhel hit 11 home runs with 107 RBIs and posted career-highs in batting average (.322) and
hits (194). He also led AL first basemen with 1,498
putouts. He batted just .150 (3-for-20) in the
1933 World Series in his only postseason appearance. Kuhel seemed headed to another solid season in 1934, hitting .289 with three homers in 63 games, but he suffered a broken ankle in July and was out for the remainder of the season. He was healthy in 1935, hitting .261 with 74 RBIs in 151 games. His most productive season came in 1936, when he hit .321 with 16 home runs and set career-highs in
doubles (42), RBIs (118) and
slugging percentage (.502), while
stealing 15 bases and
struck out just 30 times. He finished sixth in the
American League MVP Award voting tied with
Vern Kennedy, behind
Lou Gehrig,
Luke Appling,
Earl Averill,
Charlie Gehringer and
Bill Dickey, and over
Joe DiMaggio,
Tommy Bridges,
Hal Trosky and
Jimmie Foxx. After his stellar season, Kuhel slumped in 1937, batting .283 but with low numbers in home runs, RBIs and slugging (6, 61, .400). Before the 1938 season he was traded to the Chicago White Sox for
slugger Zeke Bonura in a swap of first basemen. In the more forgiving
Comiskey Park, Kuhel hit for more power, averaging 18 home runs from 1939 to 1941, and tying Bonura's franchise record with 27 homers in 1940. But after struggling to .249, four homers, 52 RBIs in 1942, and .213, 5, 46 in 1943, Kuhel was let go by Chicago. Before the 1944 season Kuhel returned to Washington. He hit .282 in his first two seasons back in a Senators' uniform, but when
Mickey Vernon returned from World War II in 1946, Kuhel was expendable and was sold back to the White Sox in the midseason. After three
pinch-hit appearances in 1947 he retired as a player to manage a White Sox
farm team, the Class C
Hot Springs Bathers. Then, in 1948 Kuhel was brought back to Washington to manage the Senators. In two seasons, he had a 106–201 (.345) record that produced seventh- and eighth-place finishes. After being fired, he managed the
Kansas City Blues in the
American Association. Kuhel died in
Kansas City, Kansas, at the age of 77. ==See also==