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Dick Allen Photo Gallery
The “Dick Allen For the Hall of Fame” Petition Has Been Submitted, Due to Arrive at the Hall of Fame on Tuesday, December 3, Ahead of the Vote on December 8.
Thanks to All of You That Signed the Petition and Have Been Following the Cause. Let’s Hope Our Efforts Are Successful!
The Classic Era Hall of Fame Committee is scheduled to meet on December 8, just two weeks from now. Having missed out on selection to the Hall by one vote the last two times he was on the ballet, this is a great chance for all of us to help correct one of the biggest injustices in all of sports by showing our support for Dick’s election to the Hall.
If you agree with me that Dick Allen is more than deserving of this honor, then I kindly ask you to read the essay I wrote earlier this year detailing his qualifications. Then sign the Dick Allen for the Hall of Fame petition, which you will find below.
The Case for Dick Allen’s Enshrinement in the Hall of Fame
“Dick Allen hits the ball harder than any player I’ve ever seen!” –Willie Mays
Now that’s quite a quote! In a recent post about the Phillies’ historic collapse in 1964, some of our readers commented that Dick Allen has been overlooked for the Hall of Fame. I’ve heard this before, so I decided to do a little research into his career. After doing so, I would certainly have to concur: Dick Allen belongs in the Hall.
(Read this great column by sportswriter Dave Jolley in support of Dick Allen for the Hall of Fame)
I also found that many historians regard him as the best player not yet in. Typical is Wall Street Journal sports columnist Allen Barra who wrote, “A growing body of baseball historians think that Dick Allen is the best player eligible for the Hall of Fame.” One thing I learned for sure: He’s a better hitter and player than a good percentage of those already enshrined in the Hall.
Dick Allen’s Career Statistics
Dick Allen played 15 seasons (1963-’77) in the majors with the Phillies (1963-’69, 1975-’76), Cardinals (1970), White Sox (1972-’74), and the Athletics (1977). Over his career, he hit .292, with 351 home runs, 1119 RBIs, a .534 slugging percentage, and .378 on-base percentage. Allen had an 11-year peak that was truly staggering, putting up a .299/.386/.554 from 1964 through 1974. That’s a slash line that would be impressive in the high-scoring 1930s, but Allen did it in the heart of the “Pitchers’ Era” (think Koufax, Gibson, Drysdale, Jenkins) in the 1960s.
Allen was a seven-time All-Star, National League Rookie of the Year (1964), American League MVP (1972), two-time American League home run leader (1972, 1974), and one-time American League RBI leader (1972). He led the National League in slugging percentage once and the American League twice. For many years he held the highest slugging percentage among players not in the Hall. Allen hit over 30 home runs six times.
His rookie year of 1964 ranks among the greatest rookie seasons ever. He led the league in runs (125), triples (13), extra-base hits (80) and total bases (352); and finished in the top five in batting average (.318), slugging average (.557), hits (201), and doubles (38). Plus he hit 29 home runs, 91 RBIs, and a .382 on-base percentage.
When the Phillies suffered their collapse in 1964 by losing ten straight games to blow a six and a half game lead with twelve to play, Allen hit .438 with five doubles, two triples, three home runs and 11 RBI in those last 12 games.
Allen’s OPS+ Tells the Story!
Many historians point out that Dick Allen began his career during the mid-1960s, a period so dominated by pitchers that it’s sometimes called the “second dead ball era.” Allen also played much of his career in pitcher-friendly parks like Busch Memorial Stadium, Dodger Stadium, and Comiskey Park. That’s why his offensive numbers and his 156 OPS+ (Adjusted On-base Plus Slugging) are so impressive. This valuable sabermetric stat adjusts a player’s OPS for the era and parks in which he played. Of the players whose careers intersected with Dick Allen, only Mickey Mantle’s lifetime OPS+ of 172 topped Allen’s lifetime 156 (100 is the major leaguer average).
In addition, his career 156 OPS+ is the second highest of any retired player not in the Hall of Fame, and currently ranks Allen twenty-fourth all-time. What’s even more impressive, he ranks sixth all-time among right-handed hitters, tied with Frank Thomas, and ahead of Willie Mays (155), Hank Aaron (155), Joe DiMaggio (155), Mel Ott (155), and Frank Robinson (154). Dick Allen, at-bat for at-bat, is one of the top twenty-five hitters in baseball history. To me, that stat alone qualifies him for the Hall of Fame.
One Of The Most Powerful Sluggers Ever!
Not only did Dick Allen put up great offensive numbers, his massive strength and body torque produced prodigious blasts off his bat. Baseball historian Bill Jenkinson ranks him with Foxx and Mantle – and just a notch below Babe Ruth – as the four top long-distance sluggers in baseball history. Twice Allen cleared Connie Mack Stadium’s 65-foot-high right center field scoreboard: a feat considered virtually impossible for a right-handed hitter. One was a massive blow estimated at 529 feet.
Controversial? His Teammates Loved Him!
Controversy always seemed to find Dick Allen, and perhaps that’s why he’s not yet been elected to the Hall. Bill James rated Dick Allen as the second-most controversial player in baseball history, behind only Rogers Hornsby. But that harsh judgment doesn’t seem to square with comments by those who played with him. Here’s some quotes from Dick Allen’s contemporaries:
“Dick Allen was ahead of his time. He played the game in the most conservative era in baseball history. It was a time of change and protest in the country. His way of doing things would go unnoticed today. If I had been manager of the Phillies, I would have found a way to make Dick Allen comfortable. When Dick Allen was comfortable, balls left the park” -Willie Stargell
“Allen was not a ‘clubhouse lawyer’ who harmed team chemistry. Dick was the leader of our team, the captain, the manager on the field. He took care of the young kids, took them under his wing. And he played every game as if it was his last day on earth” –Chuck Tanner
“Dick’s behavior never had a negative effect on the team. His teammates always liked him. I’d take him in a minute.” -Gene Mauch
“I’ve been around the game a long time, and he’s the greatest player I’ve ever seen play in my life. He had the most amazing season in 1972 I’ve ever seen. He’s the smartest baseball man I’ve ever been around in my life. He taught me how to pitch from a hitter’s prospective, and taught me how to play the game right. There’s no telling the numbers this guy could have put up if all he worried about was stats. The guy belongs in the Hall of Fame.” -Hall of Famer Rich Gossage
“I actually thought that Dick was better than his stats. Every time we needed a clutch hit, he got it. He got along great with his teammates and he was very knowledgeable about the game. He was the ultimate team guy.” -Teammate Stan Bahnsen
“Dick Allen was my mentor. The baseball writers used to claim that Dick would divide the clubhouse along racial lines. That was a lie. The truth is that Dick never divided any clubhouse.” –Mike Schmidt
A few years ago, I interviewed Dick Allen’s long-time friend, Mark Carfagno. I asked him what kind of man Dick Allen was. Here’s how Mark responded:
Dick Allen may be the most misunderstood person I’ve ever met. He really was a wonderful human being and a great father. I’ll also add that he was a great athlete who had over one hundred Division One basketball scholarship offers. I’ve said this before: Dick Allen was an “athletic freak,” like Bo Jackson, Allen Iverson, Wilt Chamberlain. Freaks do special things. One thing that Allen did that only Babe Ruth could do was hit the ball over 500 feet at least 20 times.
Anytime his name is brought up, the first words out of people’s mouths are, “I was there when he hit it over the Coke Sign.” Or, “I saw him hit one over the roof.” Or, “I saw him hit one over the 75-foot high scoreboard.” When he passed away his tremendous power was always mentioned. To me that means something. It should be part of his Hall of Fame resume.
Also what Allen went through in Arkansas and Philadelphia should be taken into consideration [for the Hall of Fame]. How could he play under those conditions and play at an optimum or Hall of Fame level? Politics has kept Dick Allen out of the Hall of Fame for years…His career 156 OPS+ ALONE should get him into the Hall of Fame…All of his Hall of Fame peers are nowhere to be found on that list. OPS+ is believed to be the fairest stat to judge a player’s HOF case because it factors in the era played in, ballparks and pitchers, etc. It’s one of the biggest injustices in all of Sports that fact that Dick Allen is NOT in the hall of Fame.
All-in-all, it sounds to me like Dick Allen belongs in the Hall of Fame. What do you think?
Gary Livacari
Photo Credits: Most photos from http://dickallen15.com/media/galleries/#prettyPhoto; Others from Google search
Information: Excerpts edited from the Dick Allen Wikipedia page; interview with Mark Carfagno
Statistics from Baseball-Reference, Dick Allen page
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Enough of this nonsense…Dick Allen is a HOFamer…period! Those few years with the Sox were electrifying. He saved the franchise from moving. All the names on this Classic Era list should be in. It’s a museum…I’ve been there, it’s wonderful…nothing more than that.
Thanks Pat…all great points!