Do something nice today...
Go to the TUG McGRAW FOUNDATION and spend some money
YA GOTTA BELIEVE!
There is no eligible former major league player more deserving for enshrinement in the Baseball Hall of Fame than Dick Allen.
At that time we badly needed a hitter in the five hole who would command enough respect to force the other team to pitch to Greg Luzinski. Dick became that man -- and more. I had another mentor, someone who decided to put on that Phillies uniform for one reason: to help us understand what it took to win. We responded. I can alive under Dick's and (Dave Cash) A.C.'s watch in the second half of 1975 to finish with 38 home runs and again lead the league. We finished second, one step closer to the top.
Last year Schmidt was swinging too hard, pulling away from the pitch and trying to jerk everything over the left-field fence. He did hit 18 homers, but Manager Danny Ozark had so little faith in him that once, with first and second open and a man on third, Ozark had the runner break for the plate on a grounder hit directly at the third baseman. The man was thrown out easily, and the manager explained his unorthodox tactics by saying, " Schmidt was the next hitter and he strikes out a lot."
A first-round (third overall) selection of the Phillies in 1990, Lieberthal spent 13 seasons (1994-2006) with the Phillies and is regarded as one of the franchise's best at his position. Among Phillies' catchers all-time, Lieberthal is the leader in hits (1,128), home runs (149) and games caught (1,139). In 1999, he became just the sixth catcher in Major League history to hit .300 with more than 30 home runs in a single season.
Myatt came by three nicknames: Foghorn, for his loud voice; Mercury, for his speed on the bases; and Stud, a name he applied to almost every other player, coach and manager he encountered in baseball.He also has a supporting role in what has become one of my favorite Dick Allen images ever. This picture shows Myatt on his first day as the Phils interim manager, holding on tight to an obviously disgruntled Dick Allen.
On August 7, Bob Skinner quit. His resignation came after I decided not to play in an exhibition game against our farm team in Reading, Pennsylvania. For Skinner it was the final straw.
"You're coming with us, Allen," he yelled at me when I told him of my plans to miss the game.
I explained to him that Bob Carpenter had given me permission to miss the exhibition. He thought I was lying. He went to Carpenter and was told I had been given permission to skip the game.
As far as I was concerned, Bob Skinner was a quitter.
Skinner was an old school baseball man and resented the fact I had a relationship with Bob Carpenter. He thought it undermined his authority. But my relationship with Bob Carpenter had been going on for six years. Nobody, outside of my family, knew more about what I had gone through in the Phillies organization. Carpenter was more than an owner to me. That doesn't mean that he always condoned my behavior. "You've got to grow up," he'd tell me. I'd say "I did grow up, black and poor. You grew up white and rich. But we're both grown up."
Skinner never understood my time in Philadelphia. He never felt the boos, the abuse, the threats. There were times when I wanted to sit down and talk to Skinner. I had been with the Phillies for a lot of years. I could have helped him understand the way things worked. But Bob Skinner wanted me to just like everybody else. I wasn't like everybody else. I'd hit 40 home runs in one season for the Phillies. I hit over .300 for four seasons. I'd been to hell and back.
In 1951, Topps produced its first baseball cards in two different sets known today as Red Backs and Blue Backs. Each set contained 52 cards, like a deck of playing cards, and in fact the cards could be used to play a game that would simulate the events of a baseball game. Also like playing cards, the cards had rounded corners and were blank on one side, which was colored either red or blue (hence the names given to these sets). The other side featured the portrait of a player within a baseball diamond in the center, and in opposite corners a picture of a baseball together with the event for that card, such as "fly out" or "single".Instead of just choosing one team to finish my project, here is a different 1951 Topps Red Back for each of the six teams he played on during his career.