Showing posts with label Richie Allen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richie Allen. Show all posts

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Three Sporting Thoughts

ONE:  Bill Belichick 

Big news on the football coaching front is that Bill Belichick, arguably the greatest coach in NFL history, will be returning to the sidelines in 2025, not in the NFL, but at the University of North Carolina.  "Can you imagine crusty, curmudgeonly  Bill Belichick kissing the asses of  17 year old high school kids on the college recruiting circuit?" seemed to be the most common theme among pundits.  True, although the landscape of college football has changed so drastically in recent years, that it has been speculated that a football "general manager" may be hired at UNC (as has been done at many other schools) to deal with the unseemly details of recruiting, transfer portal issues, and NIL money, and Bill would be left to do what he does best: coach football.  We'll see how it turns out.

A bigger question would be why has no NFL team turned to Belichick to become their HC?  He interviewed in Atlanta last year, and he reportedly wanted that job, but Arthur Blank choice otherwise. There will also be bunch of openings after this season concludes, and don't you think that Coach Bill would be a better option than any of the various OC's, DC'c and others who will be hired to fill those openings?

Belichick is 72 years old, and perhaps no team wants to commit long term to a guy of that age, but North Carolina is willing to go for five years at $10 million per.   It is going to be interesting to follow how things transpire in Chapel Hill over the ext several years.

TWO: Baseball Hall of Fame

Whatever they are calling the "Veterans Committee" in Cooperstown these days righted a couple of wrongs when it was announced this week that it has elected Dave Parker and Richie Allen into the Hall of Fame.


I'm not going to go into a recitation of the stats and numbers that Parker and Allen posted over long careers.  You can look those up.  If you followed baseball during the time that they played, you know just exactly how great they were.  Parker was a driving force  and best player on Pirates teams in the late '70s/early 80s that always competed for division titles and won the World Series in 1979.  He was the National League MVP in 1978.  The Cobra has fallen into ill health in his senior years, and I am glad that he got to know that he is a Hall of Famer while he can still smell the roses.

Not so Richie Allen, who left us in 2020.  A star with the Phillies, Cardinals, and White Sox (Al MVP in1972), Allen is surely one of the greatest players to ever come from Western Pennsylvania (Wampum, Beaver County), and I judge him by one totally subjective metric:  If the Pirates are clinging to a one run lead in the ninth inning and the other team has men on base, who do I LEAST want to see come to the plate in that situation?  Richie Allen was high, very high, on such a lot.

You can read what I wrote about Allen in 2020 when he died HERE, but I would like to add one paragraph from that post for y9our immediate reading:

He had his enemies and his defenders.  

"At two different SABR meetings in Pittsburgh over the years, I heard both sides.  Chuck Tanner, who managed him in Chicago, defended him to the highest, and said he was one of the best players, on and off the field, that he ever managed, a great guy.  On the other hand, Nellie Briles, who played with him on the Cardinals, said he was one of the worst teammates that he ever had, and almost shuddered when he even mentioned his name."

Both Parker and Allen were iconoclasts of sorts and I include these two photos proof:



THREE: The Pirates

Major League Baseball's annual winter meetings concluded this week and, lo and behold, the Pirates made a trade.  They acquired first baseman Spencer Horowitz from the Blue Jays via the Guardians.  Until the day of the trade, I had never heard of Spencer Horowitz.


No offense to Mr. Horowitz who I am sure is a nice guy and a competent baseball player, but the one word that appeared over and over again in news stories about the deal was "affordable".  In other words, he comes cheap, and that is the way our Beloved Buccos do business.  Free agent 1B Pete Alonso would sure have been a better addition for the Pirates, but, alas, he is not "affordable" for Bob Nutting's Pirates.  And when the biggest news was the Mets signing Juan Soto to a fifteen year contract worth $765 million, it becomes more depressing being a Pirates fan.  Oh, and Braves ace pitcher Max Fried signed an eight year, $218 million contract with.....the Yankees.

Other teams over the years have shown that you don't have to spend THAT kind of money to compete and win, but the Pirates won't even do that.  

Anyway, welcome to Pittsburgh, Spencer Horowitz!

It ain't easy being a Pirates fan.

Monday, December 7, 2020

To Absent Friends - Richie Allen

Richie Allen
1942 - 2020

One of the great baseball players of the 1960's and 1970's, and certainly one of the greatest to ever come from western Pennsylvania, Richie Allen from Wampum, PA (Beaver County), died today at the age of 78.

One of the yardsticks that I use in judging how great a player is is "Who would I least want to see coming up to bat against the Pirates in a close game in the ninth inning?"  By that measure, Richie, or Dick, as he preferred to be called, ranks high on any Great-Players-of-the-Era lists.  Over a fifteen year career, mainly with the Phillies and White Sox, Allen hit .292, hit 351 home runs and drove in 1,119 runs and had a career OPS of .912.  He was the American League MVP in 1972.  Pro-rated per 162 games, Allen hit 33 HR with 104 RBI.  He had an OPS over 1.000 in three different seasons, and five other seasons over .900.  Would you be interested in that to anchor your line-up?

Allen was also controversial.  He was branded a "militant" and a "trouble maker."  And who can forget his famous opinion of artificial turf?  "If a horse can't eat it" said avid racetrack aficionado Allen "then I don't want to play on it."  He was an iconoclast to be sure, as exemplified by the Sports Illustrated cover:


He had his enemies and his defenders.  At two different SABR meetings in Pittsburgh over the years, I heard both sides.  Chuck Tanner, who managed him in Chicago, defended him to the highest, and said he was one of the best players, on and off the field, that he ever managed, a great guy.  On the other hand, Nellie Briles, who played with him on the Cardinals, said he was one of the worst teammates that he ever had, and almost shuddered when he even mentioned his name.

Regardless of the truth, which no doubt lies somewhere in the middle here, Allen was one of the true stars of the times in which he played.

RIP Dick Allen.

Allen at Three Rivers Stadium with 
another well known star of the era.