The Mercury News

Dick Allen, Phillies slugger and 7-time All-Star, dies

-

Dick Allen, a fearsome hitter who was a seventime All-Star, the 1964 NL Rookie of the Year and the 1972 AL MVP, has died. He was 78.

The Philadelph­ia Phillies, the team Allen started out with, announced his death on Monday. Allen spent the final season of his 15-year career with the Oakland A’s in 1977.

Allen’s No. 15 was retired by the Phillies in September, an honor that was considered long overdue by many for one of the franchise’s greatest players who fought against racism during a tumultuous period with the team in the 1960s.

“The Phillies are heartbroke­n over the passing today of our dear friend and co-worker, Dick Allen,” the team said.

“Dick will be remembered as not just one of the greatest and most popular players in our franchise’s history, but also as a courageous warrior who had to overcome far too many obstacles to reach the level he did. Dick’s iconic status will resonate for generation­s of baseball fans to come as one of the all-time greats to play America’s pastime,” the Phillies said.

Phillies managing partner John Middleton broke from the team’s longstandi­ng “unwritten” policy of only retiring the number of players who are in the Hall of Fame to honor Allen.

“I thank the city of Philadelph­ia. Even though it was rough, I’ve made some friends along the way,” Allen said in an emotional ceremony on a warm, sunny afternoon.

Mike Schmidt, a Hall of Fame third baseman who helped lure Allen out of retirement to return to Philadelph­ia for a second stint with the team in 1975, was among the former players who attended the ceremony. They wore masks and sat several feet apart during the coronaviru­s pandemic that shortened the major league season to 60 games. The Phillies planned to honor Allen again in 2021 with fans in attendance.

Schmidt called Allen “an amazing mentor” who was wrongly labeled a “bad teammate” and “troublemak­er.”

“Dick was a sensitive Black man who refused to be treated as a secondclas­s citizen,” Schmidt said in a speech. “He played in front of home fans that were products of that racist era (with) racist teammates and different rules for whites and Blacks. Fans threw stuff at him and thus Dick wore a batting helmet throughout the whole game. They yelled degrading slurs. They dumped trash in his front yard at his home. In general, he was tormented and it came from all directions. And Dick rebelled.”

Allen batted .292 with 351 homers, 1,119 RBIs and .912 OPS in 15 seasons. He played first base, third base and left field. After seven seasons in Philadelph­ia, Allen played a season with the Cardinals and Dodgers. In 1972, he joined the Chicago White Sox and was the AL MVP.

Allen wasn’t elected into the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers Associatio­n of America and he fell one vote short in Golden Era Committee voting in 2014. The Golden Days Committee and the Early Days Committee did not vote this year because of COVID-19 and instead will meet during the winter of 2021.

ANGELS ACQUIRE CLOSER IGLESIAS FROM REDS IN TRADE >> The Los Angeles Angels acquired closer Raisel Iglesias from the Cincinnati Reds for righthande­r Noé Ramirez and a player to be named or cash.

Iglesias has been the Reds’ closer for the past four seasons, racking up 100 saves in 114 opportunit­ies over that stretch with a career 3.15 ERA and a 1.12 WHIP. The 30-yearold Cuban right-hander is coming off a strong performanc­e in the shortened season. He went 4-3 with a 2.74 ERA and a 0.91 WHIP with eight saves and 31 strikeouts against just five walks.

Ramirez, who turns 31 this month, is a Los Angeles native who was among the Angels’ few effective relievers last season, going 1- 0 with a 3.00 ERA in 21 appearance­s.

MARINERS SIGN HANIGER, AVOID ARBITRATIO­N >> The Seattle Mariners signed outfielder Mitch Haniger to a $3.01 million, one-year contract and avoided arbitratio­n. Haniger did not play last season due to lingering issues from injuries suffered during the 2019 season.

WAINWRIGHT WINS MLB’S ROBERTO CLEMENTE AWARD >> Longtime St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright has won the Roberto Clemente Award, given annually by Major League Baseball for community involvemen­t and philanthro­py.

Wainwright’s Big League Impact foundation and recording artist Garth Brooks’ Teammates for Kids Foundation teamed for a Home Plate Project with Texas pitcher Kyle Gibson, and raised money from more than 150 big leaguers that led to the donation of about $5.8 million donated to 94 charities.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — AP ?? Dick Allen played most of his career with the Phillies, but won an MVP with the White Sox and retired after playing for the A’s in 1977.
MATT SLOCUM — AP Dick Allen played most of his career with the Phillies, but won an MVP with the White Sox and retired after playing for the A’s in 1977.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States