Bluege was discovered by baseball promoter
Joe Engel, who operated the
Chattanooga Lookouts of the
Southern Association and scouted for Washington owner
Clark Griffith. He made his Major League debut on April 24, 1922, and played his final game on July 13, 1939, spending his 18-year, 1,867-game playing career with the Senators. In addition to the 1924 world champions, Bluege also was the team's starting third baseman for its
pennant-winning and editions. Bluege was chiefly known for his defensive ability, leading
American League third basemen in
double plays in three different seasons. His moonlighting, off-season job earned him the nickname "The Accountant" from teammates. Bluege's only
All-Star appearance, in 1935, came in a year which saw him primarily play shortstop for Washington. In his 18-year major league career, spanning 1,867 games, Bleuge posted a .272
batting average (1,751-for-6,440) with 883
runs, 276
doubles, 67
triples, 43
home runs, 848
RBI, 140
stolen bases, 723
base on balls, .352
on-base percentage and .356
slugging percentage. He finished his career with a .961
fielding percentage. In 17 games played during his three World Series, he hit .200 (12-for-60) with five runs scored and five runs batted in. ==Coach, manager, executive==