https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/dick-allen
original article written by Rich D’Ambrosio
researched and compiled by Carrie Birdsong
The Philadelphia Phillies’ first black superstar, Dick
Allen was one of the most feared hitters in baseball in the 1960s. In an era dominated by pitching, he slugged
some of the most prodigious home runs and quickly became one of the most
exciting players in the game, though he was soon shrouded in controversy.
The Phillies had high hopes as they gathered in
Clearwater, Florida, for spring training in 1964. They had acquired a bonafide ace pitcher in Jim
Bunning, were coming off an impressive close to the year before, in which
they had the best record in all of baseball in September, and were stocked with
bright young stars. All eyes, however,
were fixed on a young slugger from a tiny hamlet in western Pennsylvania with
the broad shoulders and narrow waist of a Greek Olympian. He did not disappoint.
Richard Anthony Allen was born on March 8, 1942, in
Wampum, Pennsylvania, a small town 30 miles northwest of Pittsburgh. Though Allen earned the moniker of the Wampum
Walloper, the family actually lived in Chewton, a smaller village (pop. 188)
just outside of Wampum (pop. 717). One
of nine children, Dick was raised by his mother, Era, who supported the family
by working as a domestic.
As a child Allen spent hours batting stones and
announcing every hitter in the Brooklyn Dodgers’ lineup until he got to his
favorite player, Jackie Robinson.
“I was always paying for new window panes all over the neighborhood,”
said Mrs. Allen. “The neighbors wouldn’t
even ask the kids who were responsible.
They would just come and tell me it was Dickie again. I knew they were right, too, because there
were no baseball fields in all of Chewton or Wampum that could hold a stone if
Dickie hit it good.”[2] Aleen summed up
his childhood succinctly: “My mom did a swell job of raising us.”[3]
An outstanding athlete at Wampum High School, Allen
was a starting guard on the basketball team, which had achieved national
prominence in the 1950s under coach L. Butler Hennon. In 1958 Dick and his older brothers, Hank
and Ronnie, played on the team together.
Amazingly, all three earned All-State honors in basketball, and all were
later signed by the Phillies and played baseball in the major leagues. In 1958 and 1960, the basketball team,
captained by Dick the latter year, won the Division B state championship, Allen
earned All-American honors although he was only 5 feet-11 inches tall and weighed
187 pounds.
Dick put baseball ahead of basketball because baseball
paid better then and the Allen children wanted to buy a new home for their
mother. Dick’s prowess on the diamond
caught the attention of Phillies Scout John Ogden, who said that he took
one look and the young Allen and knew he was special. Ogden endeared himself to the family and did
not allow Allen out of his sight. Allen
was signed upon graduation from high school for an estimated $70,000. The first thing Dick did was buy his mother
that new house.
Allen, along with his brother Hank, began his
professional career at Elmira in the New York-Pennsylvania League in 1960. Signed as a shortstop, he was soon switched
to the outfield and told he needed to wear glasses from then on. In 1961 he was promoted to Magic Valley (Twin
Falls, Idaho) in the Pioneer League, where he played second base, and spent the
1962 season at Williamsport in the Double-A Eastern League. In his first three minor-league seasons,
Allen hit 49 homers and drove in 245 runs.
He was clearly one of the crown jewels of the Phillies’ farm system.
At the major league level, the Phillies were a wretched
ballclub. The team had finished last
from 1958 through 1961 and had endured a 23-game losing streak in 1961. By 1962 they had improved slightly and
enjoyed their first winning season since 1953.
Allen expected to reach the major leagues in 1963, but the Phillies had
other plans.
To say that the Phillies had a poor history with race
relations would be an understatement.
They were notorious for their disgraceful treatment of Jackie Robinson
in 1947, and the 1950 Whiz Kids were the last National League champion without
a player or color. The Phillies did not
integrate until 1957, by which every other team in the National League already
had established black stars. Many of the
early players of color in the Phillies were Cuban, Mexican, or Panamanian. Their first African-American player of
significance was Wes Covington, acquired from the Kansas City Athletics
in 1961.[4]
In 1963 the Phillies’ Triple-A farm club relocated
from Buffalo to Little Rock, Arkansas.
Without telling anyone, the Phillies decided to integrate the team. Little Rock found itself in the middle of
the civil rights movement in 1957 after Governor Orval Faubus refused to
integrate Central High School in Little Rock.
For Allen, who grew up in racially tolerant Wampum,
Little Rock was a startling experience.
As the first black play there, he experienced racial segregation and
pressure daily. “I didn’t
know anything about the racial issue in Arkansas and didn’t really care. Maybe if the Phillies had called me in, man
to man, like the Dodgers had done with Jackie Robinson, at least I would have
been prepared. Instead, I was on my
own.”[5]
Governor Faubus attended the season opener, and the
opening night crowd waved placards that read, “Let’s not NEGRO-ize our
baseball.” The very first pitch of the
game resulted in a routine fly ball to Allen, who promptly dropped it. The racially charged atmosphere frightened
young Allen. He came from a small town
where blacks and whites got along and socialized to some degree. He heard racial taunts from the crowd and
found threatening notes on his car after games.
Allen told a writer in 1964. “I didn’t want to be a crusader. I kept thinking, ‘Why me?’ It’s tough to play ball when you’re
frightened.”[6] Allen was harassed at a
local store by a policeman and was afraid to walk around town. Things got so bad that he considered quitting
the team. His older brother, Coy, went
down to Little Rock and told Allen that if he quit, he would have to get a job
in one of the mills in Wampum. Allen
stuck it out.
By the end of the season, Allen was voted Most Valuable
Player by the Travelers’ fans and wound up hitting .289 and leading the
International League with 33 home runs and 97 RBIs. He was called up to the Phillies and made his
major-league debut on September 3, 1963, in Milwaukee. Facing Denny Lemaster, Allen wore
uniform number 32 instead of what would become his familiar number 15, and went
1- for -3 with a double. He played in
ten games, but showed his power only once, in Los Angeles on September 28, going
3- for -4 with a triple and two RBIs to pace a 12-3 Phillies win.
During spring training of 1964, manager Gene Mauch decided
that Allen, whom the team insisted on calling Richie, would play third base, a
position he had never played regularly at any level. The reason was simple: The Phillies were a
predominantly left-land-hitting team.
They needed Dick’s right-handed bat and power in the lineup. The Phillies had traded their only
right-handed power hitter, Don Demeter, to Detroit over the winter to
get Jim Bunning. Mauch preferred to play
the veteran Don Hoak, whom he had acquired a year earlier to play third
base. But Hoak struggled terrifically,
and with Allen tearing up the league in spring training, Mauch had to play him
somewhere. Mauch reasoned that Allen had
good hands and could play third well enough to get by: “I know his bat has
to help,” the manager said.[7]
Early in the 1964 season, Allen was the talk of
baseball. On April 19 in Wrigley
Field, he hit two home runs against the Cubs and raised his average to
.429. Mauch said that “he hardly strides
at all in the batters’ box. His hands
are so fast it’s unbelievable. And he
can hit them to any field.”[8]
In what would be the first of many controversies
surrounding him, Allen complained about being Richie. For whatever reason, the Phillies insisted on
referring to him as Richie on all printed rosters, scorecards, and team
correspondence. “To be truthful with
you, I’d like to be called Dick. I don’t
know how Richie started. My name is
Richard and they called me Dick in the minor leagues.”[9] He added, “It makes me sound like I’m ten
years old. I’m 22. …Anyone who knows me
well calls me Dick. I don’t know why as
soon as I put on a uniform it’s Richie.”[10]
The moniker stayed with him until 1966 when the Philadelphia
sportswriters began referring to him as Rich Allen.
By August 1964 Philadelphia was in the grip of pennant
fever, and Allen, hitting .313, was being touted for National League Rookie of
the Year honors. Allen brushed off the
talk of the award: “So what? No money
goes along with that award, does it? If
they put ten or eleven thousand dollars in a pot and gave it to the Rookie of
the Year, I might be interested.”[11]
Allen later said that individual honors did not mean as much as winning
the pennant.
While Allen was adept with the bat, his fielding was a
sore spot with fans. He made 41 errors
at first base in 1964. Phillies fans at
Connie Mack Stadium booed him unmercifully, to the dismay of both his teammates
and opponents. Manager Mauch commented,
“I just don’t understand it. I guess
when people have exceptional talent, they are expected to be exceptional every
minute of the day, and the perfect player hasn’t been born yet.”[12]
By September 10 the Phillies had built a comfortable 6
½- game lead with 12 to play in the National League, and looked forward to
winning their first pennant in 14 years.
But fate intervened. While World
Series tickets were being printed, the Phillies lost ten painful games in a
row. Cincinnati and St. Louis played
their best baseball of the season and caught the Phils down the stretch. During the season’s final two weeks, Allen
hit .429 and fashioned an 11-game hitting streak. On the season’s final day, with the Phillies
needed a win and a Cardinals loss to force a playoff, Allen went 3-for-5 with
two home runs in a 10-0 win over the Reds in Crosley Field. However, the Cardinals beat the New York
Mets and clinched the pennant. Allen
had done his part. It simply wasn’t
enough.
Allen finished the 1964 season with a .318 average, 29
homers, and 91 RBIs. He led the league
with 125 runs scored but also set an NL strikeout mark with 138. He was the only Phillie to start all 162
games and earned himself the National League Rookie of the Year Award. It was little consolation for the
disappointment he and his teammates felt.
That 1964 season was the closest Allen ever came to playing for a
pennant winner.
Allen began the 1965 season by holding out for a raise
and refusing to report to spring training.
He said he was asking for less than $25,000 and thought he was worth
it. Phillies general manager John
Quinn, known for being parsimonious, said that Allen was “asking for too
much after one year.”[13] Allen
reluctantly came to terms with a reported $20,000.[14]
The Phillies went into spring training trying to
forget the disappointment of 1964. Many writers picked the Phils to contend for
the pennant once again. “Richie” picked
up right where he left off in 1964. On
April 12 he hit the first regular-season home run in the new Astrodome
in Houston. The Phillies got off to a
slow start, but Allen was sizzling with the bat. On May 16 he went 4- for -5 against the
Milwaukee Braves to raise his average to .368.
His most dramatic moment came on May 29 at Connie Mack Stadium against
the Chicago Cubs. Facing Larry
Jackson in the first inning, Allen blasted a 510-foot homer that sailed
over a 15-foot billboard on the roof in left-center field and landed in a tree
50 feet up on Woodstock Street, a block away from the ballpark. It was believed to be one of the longest home
runs ever hit in Connie Mack Stadium.
Gene Mauch commented, “I’ve seen Allen hit balls harder and look better
doing it, but that has to be his most impressive homer.”[15] A blasé Allen
said, “I don’t measure them. It was a
low and away let-up pitch. It felt
good. But I didn’t look to see where it
was going.”[16]
On July 3 Allen was leading the Allen was leading the
National League in hitting with a .335 average, and was selected as the
starting third baseman on the All-Star team. However, an incident during batting practice
at Connie Mack Stadium that evening altered Allen’s relationship with
Philadelphia fans. As teammate Frank
Thomas took his swings in the cage, Johnny Callison taunted Thomas
about a botched bunt the night before.
Thomas yelled out to Allen, “Who are you trying to be, another Muhammad
Clay?”[17] The racially tinged remark
struck a nerve with Allen.
When Allen came into the cage to hit, he confronted
Thomas. Words were exchanged, and Allen
punched Thomas squarely in the jaw.
Thomas, a big man, grabbed a bit and hit Allen on the right shoulder
with it. The two were then separated by
teammates. After the game, the Phillies
announced that Thomas had been placed on irrevocable waivers. Mauch threatened to fine any player who spoke
about the incident to the press $1,000, while Allen was told he would be fined
$2,000. When asked about Thomas’s
release, Allen replied, “Why should I have any comment? I don’t work in the office.”[18]
From the next day on, some Philadelphia fans booed
Allen incessantly. He was unfairly
labeled the villain in the fight with Thomas and blamed for the veteran’s
release. Some fans even hung large “WE
WANT THOMAS” banners from the upper deck at Connie Mack Stadium. Although Thomas was a popular player, he was
36 and had been replaced as the starting first baseman when the Phillies traded
for Dick Stuart the previous winter.
The incident further divided a city recovering from racial rioting near
the ballpark the previous summer. On
July 8, five days after the incident, more than 37,000 fans jammed Connie Mack
Stadium for a doubleheader with the San Francisco Giants. In the nightcap, Allen hit his first
major-league grand slam, off Jack Sanford, a majestic shot off the top
of the 75-foot-high Ballantine Beer scoreboard.
The same fans who had been abusing Allen all week suddenly gave him a
huge ovation “which almost lifted the roof off the ancient playpen.”[19] Allen commented, “The people in this town like
to boo, but I just play it as hard as I can and don’t listen.”[20]
The rest of the 1965 season was uneventful for the
Phillies; they finished sixth. Allen
played in all 161 games, slumped in July and August. And wound up hitting .302
with 20 homers and 85 RBIs. His power
numbers declined a bit, and he struck out a league-leading 150 times, breaking
his own league record. Allen also cut
down on his errors at third base from 41 to 26, and led all NL third basemen
with 29 double plays.
The 1966 season solidified Allen’s status as a true
baseball superstar. He hit .317 (fourth
in the National League), with 40 home runs (second to Hank Aaron’s 44),
and 110 RBIs (third in the league), while playing 141 games. He led the league in slugging, played in his
second consecutive All-Star Game, and finished fourth in National League MVP
voting. It was Allen’s best season
statistically and his least controversial as well.
Allen began wearing a batting helmet for protection
from the projectiles being thrown at him.
Teammate Bob Uecker nicknamed him “Crash,” as in crash
helmet. Allen wore a batting helmet at
all times for the remainder of his career.
The Phillies finished the 1966 season a strong fourth with an 87-75
record, 8½ games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers. Allen was rewarded with an $85,000 contract
for 1967, the highest ever for a fourth-year player.
Like many of his teammates, Allen lived year-round in
Philadelphia, residing in the Mount Airy section of the city. He loved horses and spent hours riding his
horse Old Blaze in nearby Fairmount Park.
Despite his powerful physique, Allen dreamed of being a jockey: “I’m one
of those guys who would like to weigh about 115 pounds for a couple of hours in
the afternoon and then go back to my own size about 5 o’clock.”[21] Another passion of Allen’s was music,
especially singing. In 1968 he formed
the Ebonistics, a doo-wop group, and recorded the song “Echoes of November,”
which became an R&B hit in the Philadelphia area. In January 1969 Allen and the Ebonistics
performed the song during halftime of a Philadelphia 76ers game at the Spectrum
in Philadelphia.
By 1967 the Phillies were in the beginning stages of a
downward spiral, but Allen was at the top of his game. He maintained a .300 batting average
throughout the season and led the league in on-base percentage. Allen was once again the starting third
baseman on the All-Star team. In the
game, in Anaheim, he blasted a home run that gave the NL a 1-0 lead.
But controversy swirled around Allen all season. On July 8 he arrived late for a game with the
Cardinals, and in no condition to play.
Mauch benched and said, “I think some rest will help him. If there’s any disciplinary problem between
Richie and me it’s going to remain between Richie and me.”[22] The next afternoon Allen was back in the
lineup and hit a tremendous game-tying home run. The ball traveled well over 500 feet and
cleared the center-field fence about halfway between the flagpole and the light
tower on the center side of the scoreboard.
It was the first home run to clear the 32-foot-high wall at the Connie
Mack Stadium.
Despite leading the Phillies in practically every
offensive category, Allen continued to be booed. He made it known that he was disturbed by the
booing and wanted to be traded: “I’d like to get out of Philadelphia. I don’t care for the people or their
attitude, although they don’t bother me or my play. But maybe the Phillies can get a couple of
broken bats and shower shoes for me.”[23]
On August 24, 1967, the Phillies were rained out. With no game that night, Allen spent the
evening at home tinkering with his 1950 Ford.
As he tried to push the car up the driveway in the rain, his right hand
slipped and went through the headlight.
Two tendons were cut and a nerve was severed. After a five-hour operation at Temple
University Hospital, doctors gave Allen a 50-50 chance of ever playing again.
But Allen’s hand healed well enough to enable him to
report to spring training in 1968. With
a lingering sore shoulder and a right hand that would never fully heal, Allen
opened the season as the Phillies’ regular left fielder and handled the
position well, committing only six errors all year. But controversy found him on June 1, when he
was sent home after arriving late to Connie Mack Stadium. He was fined after that and did not play
during the following week’s West Coast road trip, except for a pinch-hitting
appearance against the Dodgers. Allen
did not take part in pregame practice during much of the trip, and was dressed
in street clothes before the games were over.
Clearly agitated by the Allen situation, Mauch gave
the Phillies a “me or him” ultimatum.
The Phillies made their decision. On June 15 Mauch was fired after 8½ seasons
and replaced by Bob Skinner.
General manager Quinn acknowledged that Allen was a factor in Mauch’s
firing, but not the only reason. When
asked about Allen, Skinner told the press, “There’s a lot of managers in the
National League who would like to have him, and Bob Skinner is one of
them. I anticipate no problems with any
of the players.”[24]
The change in managers rejuvenated Allen for a
while. He hit .356, scored 24 runs, hit
12 homers, and drove in 27 runs in Skinner’s first 30 days at the helm. But on July 16 Allen was second in the National
League in batting and homers.
After a hot streak, the Phils faded and finished the
year tied for seventh place with a 76-86 record. Allen saved his best for last, hitting three
home runs and driving in seven runs on the season’s final against the Mets at Shea
Stadium. Although 1968 was
considered “the year of the pitcher,” Allen finished second in the league with
33 home runs, drove in 90 runs, and hit .263.
the Phillies tried but did not trade Allen that winter.
The Phillies struggled in the early part of the 1969
season as the rebuilding process continued.
Despite getting off to a torrid start with the bat, Allen found himself
embroiled in yet another controversy. On
May 1 he missed the early-morning team flight to St. Louis, claiming he was
caught in traffic. He was then scheduled
to take a 4 P.M. flight to St. Louis but missed that one too.
He finally arrived at Busch Stadium the following
afternoon, 25 minutes late for that day’s game, and was fined $1,000. Skinner commented, “I can’t speak for Allen,
but I think he has a full understanding of the wrong he was involved in. It was one of the worst things you can do in
baseball.”[25] Allen later informed the
press that he had told Phillies management “to get rid of me last winter. They had their chance. I don’t feel sorry for them.”[26]
After that escapade, Allen played solid, consistent
baseball. In late May he homered in five
straight games, and on June 1 he was hitting a sizzling .341, but was growing
increasingly unhappy with the situation in Philadelphia.
On Tuesday, June 24, Allen went to Monmouth Park in
New Jersey to watch his horse, Trick Fire.
He left the racetrack late and failed to realize that the starting time of
the evening’s doubleheader with the Mets at Shea Stadium had been moved up an
hour. Switching on the car radio, he
heard that he had been suspended by Skinner.
Instead of reporting to the ballpark, Allen headed home to
Philadelphia. A visibly angry Skinner
did not say how long the suspension would last: “That’s up to Mr. Allen. I’ll have to talk to him.”[27’ General Manager John Quinn supported
Skinner’s decision, saying, “The manager has the jurisdiction to do anything he
deems necessary on the field,”[28]
At the time of his suspension, Allen was hitting .318
with 19 home runs and 45 RBIs. He was
far and away the best player on an otherwise mediocre team. Without Allen, the team struggled
mightily. Allen’s suspension was
indefinite, meaning that he would have been reinstated if he had just
met with the Phillies’ management. Instead, he stayed away 26 days. At times no one
could locate him, and he gave no indication that he would return to the
Phillies. He was being fined $1,000 a
day, a steep price to pay for his stubborn streak.
Finally, on July 19, Allen met with Phillies owner Bob
Carpenter at a suburban Philadelphia restaurant. Allen agreed to end his self-imposed exile,
and Carpenter promised to trade the slugger at the end of the season. The next morning Allen was scheduled to meet
with Skinner at 9 A.M. Allen kept
Skinner waiting for two hours, finally arriving at 11. Despite the obvious disregard for his
manager, Skinner told the press there had been a misunderstanding concerning
the time of the meeting. That afternoon,
as the Apollo 11 astronauts landed on the moon, Phillies infielder Cookie
Rojas remarked, “This must be the greatest day in history. The astronauts come down on the moon and
Richie Allen comes down to earth.”[29]
In late July Allen began scrawling large words in the
dirt with his foot around first base at Connie Mack Stadium. “The people were getting on me and I wanted
to hit a home run over the Coca-Cola sign to shut them up,”[30] so he wrote
”COKE” in the dirt to amuse the fans.
Throughout the next few games he wrote “BOO,” “OCT 2,” and
“PETE.” When ordered to cease his “dirt
doodling,” Allen responded with “NO” and “WHY”.
Allen remarked, “I kept it up cause everyone made such a fuss over
it.”[31]
On August 7 Allen refused to accompany the Phillies to
Reading for an exhibition game. Skinner,
furious and fed up, resigned. Skinner
blamed the Phillies front office for not backing him in handling Allen. Once again, Allen was made the
scapegoat. The Phillies replaced Skinner
with coach George Myatt. When
Myatt was asked how he would handle Allen, replied, “Good God himself couldn’t
handle Richie Allen.”[32]
Allen played out the remainder of the 1969 season and
the Phillies finished with an abysmal 69-99 record. Only the expansion Montreal Expos kept them
out of last place. Despite appearing in only 118 games, Allen hit .288 with 32 homers and 89 RBIs. On October 7 the Phillies released Allen from
his prison, trading him, along with Rojas and pitcher Jerry Johnson to
the St. Louis Cardinals in return for outfielder Curt Flood, catcher Tim
McCarver, outfielder Byron Browne, and pitcher Joe Hoerner. The trade had a lasting impact on baseball
history, although Allen had nothing to do with it. Flood refused to report to the Phillies,
challenging baseball’s reserve clause, an action that foreshadowed free agency.
After a contract dispute with Cardinals owner August
A. Busch was settled, Allen arrived to St. Petersburg for spring training
in March 1970 and told the press, “I’m no angel, but I haven’t done anything
more than the others have done. I don’t
think I’m as bad as I’m made out to be.
I did things in Philadelphia but I don’t have any intention of doing
those things in St. Louis. I came here to play ball.”[33]
Despite missing almost three weeks of spring training,
Allen was more than ready once the season began. On opening day at Jarry Park in
Montreal, he homered and hit two doubles in five at-bats, knocking in three
runs as the Cardinals defeated the Expos, 7-2.
The fans in St. Louis could not contain their
excitement over their new slugger. On
April 10 a throng of 47,568 at the Cards’ home opener gave Allen a pregame
standing ovation. After the game, he
called the reception “heartwarming,”[34] and added, “I just hope I prove to be
worth it."[35]
After years of enduring boos and taunts in
Philadelphia, Allen was happy to be in St. Louis: “No wonder they win over
here. I feel just like I made the big
leagues. This is the best ball club I
ever played with, and I’m not kidding.
This team has a lot of talent and a lot of speed.”[36]
Allen was voted the starting National League first
baseman by the fans for the 1970 All-Star Game. This was a surprising development considering
that only a year earlier, some considered him the most disliked player in
baseball.
In mid-August Allen led the Cardinals in home runs and
RBIs and seemed well on his way to yet another impressive offensive
season. However, during a game with the
Giants on August 14, he tore a hamstring sliding into second base. The injury was slow to heal, and Allen played
in just five more games that season.
Rumors surfaced that the Cardinals were unhappy with Allen’s slow
recovery from the injury and wanted to trade him.
When they circulated, the rumors were denied by
manager Red Schoendienst, but on October 5, four days after the season
ended, the Cardinals traded Allen to the Dodgers for second baseman Ted
Sizemore and catcher Bob Stinson.
Cardinals GM Bing Devine said the reason for the trade was to
replace the aging Julian Javier at second base. Devine added, “He (Allen) and I talked,,, and
I told him that he did everything we expected of him. It was just that the club wasn’t balanced
enough… the vital aspect being defense.”[37]
Schoendienst said, “Allen did a fine job for us, and we never had
any problem with him.”[38]
As a result of the trade, the Dodgers were seen as a
possible contender, with Allen supplying the long-ball threat they had lacked
for several years. Allen said his love
for the Dodgers began in his childhood: “Putting on a Dodger uniform is
something special for me. My family, we
used to go to Forbes Field in Pittsburgh every time the Dodgers would
come there. And we lived 30 miles
away.”[39]
Allen was a huge part of the Dodgers’ on-field success
in 1971. Coach Danny Ozark
recalled, “Allen did a great job for us in L.A.
He was a great baserunner, the best I ever coached. I’d take the extra base with him, and I don’t
think he was ever thrown out the entire year.”[40] Off the field, however, Allen wanted no part
of the public relations commitments that owner Walter O’Malley expected
of the players. Allen felt this
distracted from the team’s mission of winning ballgames.
Los Angeles and San Francisco engaged in a spirited
battle for the National League West title, and the Dodgers finished second, a
game behind the Giants. Allen had
another fine year at the plate, hitting .295 with 23 home runs and 90 RBIs in
155 games. On December 2, 1971, Allen
was traded for the third time in three years, to the Chicago White Sox for
pitcher Tommy John and infielder Steve Huntz.
A mediocre club, the White Sox were managed by Chuck
Tanner, a native of New Castle, Pennsylvania, not far from Wampum, and a
longtime friend of the Allen family. At
this point, Allen was weary of trades and the baseball life. In a 1972 interview, he said, “After last
year at Los Angeles, I decided I had had it.
But I talked with my mother and she told me, ‘Listen, son, go help Chuck
out.’ I got in touch with the White Sox
and signed.”[41] When he arrived in
spring training, Allen made it known to the press that he disliked being called
Richie. Almost overnight he was referred
to as Dick Allen by the national media.
He recalled that Chicago was the first city to refer to him by the name
his mother gave him at birth. “I made up
my mind right then and there that Dick Allen was going to pay back Chicago for
the respect they were giving me."[42]
Allen carried the White Sox on his broad shoulders
into pennant contention in 1972. He was
far and away the most talented player on the team. He was also credited for revitalizing
baseball on Chicago’s South Side.
According to Roland Hemond, then the team’s general manager, “He
gave us great years; he made it fun.
Attendance had been down for years.
You know we had experimented with playing a few games up in Milwaukee
(1968-96). Dick got them out to the
ballpark again. He had a tremendous
impact on our attendance.”[43] The White Sox drew only 833,891 fans to Comiskey
Park in 1971, but in 1972 attendance spiked to 1,177,318. During Allen’s three-year tenure in Chicago,
the Sox drew a million fans each season.
Allen was the most dominant player in the American
League – if not in all of baseball – in 1972.
He led the league with 37 home runs and 113 RBIs, and was the starting
first baseman on the AL All-Star Team. The
season was full of memorable moments, but none as dramatic as Sunday, June
4. The White Sox hosted the New York
Yankees in a doubleheader at Comiskey Park before a crowd of 51,904. In game two, Allen came off the bench to
pinch-hit in the bottom of the ninth inning with two runners on and the White
Sox on and the White Sox trailing 4-2.
He blasted a three-run homer off Sparky Lyle to give Chicago a
dramatic 5-4 win and a sweep of the twin bill.
On July 31 Allen hit two inside-the-park home runs in a game against the
Minnesota Twins.
The White Sox battled the more talented Oakland A’s
for the division lead all summer and climbed to within 2½ games of the lead as
late as September 24. But they
eventually faded and finished the season in second place with a record of
87-67. For Allen, though, it was a year
to remember; he was overwhelmingly voted MVP of the American League.
In February 1973 the White Sox rewarded Allen with a
three-year contract estimated at $700,000, believed to be the biggest contract
ever given to a major-league baseball player at the time. He picked up right where he left off in
1973. He was among the AL leaders in
home runs and RBIs and was hitting a robust .342 as late as June 13. In late June, Allen suffered a hairline
fracture of a bone in his right leg in a collision with the Angels’ Mike
Epstein and was out of action for a month.
Controversy erupted over the length of Allen’s absence. Some accused him of being a malingerer,
claiming that the injury was not as serious as he claimed. Critics noted that he walked without his
crutches while attending the All-Star Game in Kansas City. But Allen did attempt to play again in 1973,
returning to the lineup on July 31. He
went 3- for -4, limped noticeably, and was shut down for the remainder of the
season on August 2.
With his leg fully healed, Allen was well on his way
to another outstanding season in 1974.
He was once again voted the star first baseman on the American League
All-Star team, and led the league in home runs for most of the summer. However, it was a good season in
Chicago. The White Sox spent most of the
year mired in fourth place in the AL West, and dissension was tearing the
clubhouse apart. Furthermore, Allen was
playing in pain. His shoulder had been
bothering him and the pain had spread to his back. On September 14, before a game with the
California Angels, Allen called a team meeting and tearfully announced his
retirement to his teammates. He later
told a Chicago reporter, “I just can’t hack it anymore.”[44] At the time Allen was hitting .301 with 32
homers (which would ultimately lead the league) and 88 RBIs. Only Mike Schmidt of the Phillies hit
more home runs than Allen in 1974.
But like most Allen situations, the issue of retirement
was not cut and dried. It was soon
discovered that he never filed the required paperwork with the American League,
which would have made the retirement official.
Therefore, Chicago placed him on the disqualified list, meaning the team
could trade its rights to Allen, but he would be ineligible to play again until
May of 1975.
In December 1974 the White Sox traded Allen to the
Atlanta Braves for cash and a player to be named later. However, Allen wanted no parts of the South,
the Braves, or their manager, Clyde King. He immediately informed the Braves in a
telegram that he would not play for them.
At the same time, he surprised everyone by announcing that he would be
interested in returning to Philadelphia.
However, Allen missed all of spring training and sat idly by as the 1975
season opened.
On May 7, 1975, after trading away popular first
basemen Willie Montanez a few days earlier, the Phillies sent minor
leaguers Jim Essian, Barry Bonnell, and an unspecified amount of cash to
the Braves in return for Allen and catcher Johnny Oates. After six years and five trades, the prodigal
son had returned home.
It was a different team and city that Allen returned
to. The Phillies had long since
abandoned Connie Mack Stadium and now played in Veterans Stadium, nicknamed The
Vet. Only two of his 1969 teammates, Tony
Taylor and Terry Harmon, were still on the ballclub. The Phillies were a young team on the rise in
the National League and needed an experienced player like Allen to guide
them. On May 14, 1975, he played in his
first game with the Phillies since 1969.
A huge crowd welcomed him back with numerous standing ovations. Allen singled off the Reds’ Pat Darcy
in the first of his three at-bats and inspired his teammates to a 4-0 win over
Cincinnati.
The long layoff and lack of spring training caught up
with Allen. He struggled mightily; his
average hovered at or below .220 most of the summer. Dick finished the 1975 season with career
lows in batting average (.233) and home runs (12). Yet he managed to drive in 62 runs despite
hitting behind RBI leader Greg Luzinski.
He vowed to come back stronger in 1976, saying, “I owe them
something.”[45]
Allen started the 1976 season slowly, hitting .250
with no home runs when he was placed on the disabled list in late April. He was out of action for a few weeks, but
returned rejuvenated in May and played well as the Phillies blitzed through the
National League. By Memorial Day the Phillies
were solidly in first place and never relinquished their lead. By early June Allen was hitting .333 and his
popularity with the fans soared. But the
good feelings would soon fade.
On July 25 Allen injured his shoulder in a collision
at first base. A few days later he left
a game in the third inning and was not seen or heard from for two days. The Phillies reported him AWOL and announced
he would be fined. When Allen finally
showed up at Shea Stadium on July 30, he explained that he left the team to
consult his own doctor about the injury.
He was placed on the disabled list once again and the fines were
rescinded. However, manager Danny Ozark,
his authority compromised, contemplated resigning over the incident. Despite Allen’s month-long absence from the
lineup, the Phillies increased their lead in the NL East to 15½ games by August
26.
By the time Allen was activated on September 4, the
Phillies were in the midst of a monumental collapse that brought back memories
of 1964. The Phils saw their lead
dwindle to four games over the suddenly hot Pittsburgh Pirates. Allen played poorly and erratically through
much of September, and his average dropped from .290 to .257 in just three
weeks. He was benched by Ozark during a
weekend series in Chicago for supposedly refusing to pinch-hit during one of
the games. Off the field, dissension
brewed in the Phillies clubhouse as Allen openly criticized the lack of playing
time given to black players such as Bobby Tolan and Ollie Brown.
The Phillies rebounded and clinched the National
League East title in Montreal on September 26.
As the team celebrated on the field, Allen remained in the dugout. His explanation was that he was too overcome
with emotion to go onto the field, but many of the players saw it as a
snub. As the Phillies sprayed champagne
in the clubhouse, Allen, Garry Maddox, Dave Cash, and Mike Schmidt
celebrated in a supply room. This only
added to the racial climate surrounding the team. While Allen was popular with some teammates,
others considered him a phony.
Before the Phillies opened the League Championship
Series, Allen announced that he would not play unless his longtime friend and
teammate Tony Taylor was placed on the active roster. Taylor, who played sparingly in 1976, was at
the end of a long career and never had the opportunity to play in the
postseason for the Phillies. This put
Ozark in a precarious spot, since the Phillies did not have room on the roster
for the aging Taylor, and wanted to avoid yet another Allen controversy. Finally, owner Ruly Carpenter intervened and
a solution was arrived at; the Phillies put Taylor in uniform as a coach.
The Phillies were swept in three games by the powerful
Big Red Machine Cincinnati Reds. Allen
went 2- for -9 and made a crucial error in Game Two that cost the Phillies two
runs. It was a foregone conclusion
before the playoffs began that because of his age, injuries, and disruptive
behavior, he would not return to the Phillies in 1977. On November 5, 1976, Allen was officially and
unceremoniously released. His return to
the Phillies had proved to be a disappointment.
There was little interest in Allen’s services that
offseason, save for the Oakland A’s, who were in dire need of players after
most of their established stars opted for free agency. On March 10, 1977, Allen signed with Charlie
Finley’s ballclub. Allen said, “I
thank God I’m here today and have a job in baseball.”[46] That season, he wore the number 60 and the
name “WAMPUM” on the back of his uniform as a tribute to his high school graduation.
Allen played well in the early part of the 1977
season. He went 4- for -8 in a
three-game sweep of the Minnesota Twins, and on April 25 was hitting .353 with
four home runs. But things soon
soured. Unknown to the manager Jack
McKeon, Allen had a contract condition that excused him from being a
designated hitter. When McKeon penciled
in Allen as the DH in the last game of the opening series, Allen refused to
play. He slumped in early May and was
having shoulder problems.
Allen hit what turned out to be his final major-league
home run on May 17, a game-tying blast in the ninth inning off the Yankees’ Ron
Guidry. Still, his production
continued to decline. On June 19 Allen
struck out as a pinch hitter in the second game of a doubleheader in
Chicago. It was his last at-bat in the
major leagues. The next night he left
the bench during the game with permission.
Finley walked into the clubhouse, found Allen showering, and suspended
him for a week. Allen decided that he
had enough and was through playing for the season. He returned to the A’s in 1978 spring
training but was released on March 28 without ever appearing in a game.
Allen finished his career at the age of 35 with a .292
average, 351 home runs, and 1,119 RBIs.
After baseball, he endured many personal tragedies and was estranged
from the game for several years. But in
the 1980s he began to rebuild his life.
Allen worked briefly with the Texas Rangers as a coach in spring
training in 1982. He also appeared at
baseball card shows in the Philadelphia area, and played in several Cracker Jack
Old-Timer’s games throughout the major leagues.
In 1989 his autobiography, Crash, co=written with Tim Whitaker,
was published and received several favorable reviews.
In 1994 Allen was hired by the Phillies as a
spring-training batting instructor and a community fan representative. That same year he was inducted into the
Phillies’ Wall of Fame.
In 2001 Allen made a cameo appearance in Mike Tollin’s
film Summer Catch. He also had a
brief role as a gambler in the 2005 film Dreamer. In 2003 he was one of many Phillies’ alumni
who participated in the closing ceremonies at Veterans Stadium. In 2009 he was invited by the Phillies to
throw out the first ball at the opening game of the 2009 NLDS at Citizens Bank
Park.
In July 2010 Allen was selected as an inductee into
the Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame.
That day, he reflected on the reaction he received from the fans: “I get
stopped all the time by these fellows whose dads had taken them to the
ballpark. I appreciate them. And they appreciate me because I didn’t cheat
them.”[47] Allen had mellowed, and
professed that his love for Philadelphia was sincere: “You see how things turn
around? Do you see how rewarding it is? I’m proud of this city. It's in my heart.”[48]
Allen spent his final years with his wife, Willia,
living in Wampum, Pennsylvania, and Los Angeles. He died at the age of 78 at his home in
Wampum on December 7, 2020.
Last revised: July 4, 2021 (zp)
This biography is included in the book “The
Year of the Blue Snow: The
1964 Philadelphia Phillies” (SABR,
2013), edited by Mel Marmer and Bill Nowlin.
Sources
Books:
1. Allen, Dick and Tim Whitaker, Crash: The Life and Times of
Dick Allen (New York:
Ticknor and Fields, 1989).
2. Kashatus, William C., Almost a Dynasty: The Rise and
Fall of the 1980 Phillies.
(Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 2008).
3. Kashatus, William C.: September Swoon: Richie Allen.
The ’64 Phillies, and Racial
Integration (University Park: The
Pennsylvania State University Press, 2004).
4. Nathanson, Mitchell: The Fall of the 1977 Phillies:
How a Baseball Team’s Collapse Sank
a City’s Spirit (Jefferson,
North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. 2008).
Articles:
1. Giordano, Paul, “Not All Allen’s Fault,” Bucks County Courier Times, August 8, 1969.
Giordano, Paul, “Dick Allen: The Prodigal Son Returns,” Bucks County Courier Times,
October 3, 1976.
2. Kelly, Ray, “Allen Admits Being Late Saturday; Homers Over
Centerfield Fence,
” Philadelphia Evening Bulletin,
July 10, 1967.
3. Lewis, Allen, “Allen Rift Called Factor in Mauch Firing,” The Sporting News,
June 29, 1968.
4. Rathet, Mike, “Richie Allen: Some Love Him, Some Hate
Him,” Stars and Stripes, May 28,
1969.
5. Russo, Neal: “When Richie the Stone Heart Almost Wept,” The Sporting News,
May 25, 1970.“
6. ‘I’ve Found a Home,’ Says MVP Dick Allen,” Albuquerque Journal, November 16, 1972.
7. “Richie Allen Is Signed, But He’s Not Happy,” Lebanon (Pennsylvania) Daily News,
March
16, 1965.
8. “Allen Listed at Third: Wampum Rookie Key to Philly
Hopes,” New
Castle (Pennsylvania) News, March 18, 1964.
9. “Phillies’ Allen Prefers ‘Dick’ As First Name,” Philadelphia Tribune, August 8, 1964.
Websites:
1. baseball-reference.com
2. retrosheet.org
Notes:
1. Larry Merchant, Too Many
Raves for Richie?” Philadelphia Daily News,
May 4, 1964, 43.
2. Dick Allen and Tim
Whitaker, Crash: The Life and Times of Dick Allen (New
York:
Ticknor & Fields. 1989), 51.
3. Ray Robinson, Baseball Stars of 1965 (New York: Pyramid Books,
1965), 17.
4. Christopher
Threston, The Integration of Baseball in Philadelphia (Jefferson,
North
Carolina: McFarland & Co, 2003), 96.
5. Allen and Whitaker,
15.
6. “Phillies’ Richie
Allen Says He’s Here to Stay,” Delaware County (Pennsylvania) Daily
Times, April 9, 1964.
7. Joe Reichler,
“Allen May Solve Phil Problem At 3rd Base,” Evening Standard
(Uniontown, Pennsylvania), January 29, 1964.
8. “Phenomenal Allen
Leads Phillies,” Delaware County (Pennsylvania) Daily Times,
April 20, 1964, 18.
9. George Kiseda,
“Candidates Run A Hard Campaign,” Philadelphia Evening Bulletin,
September 14, 1964, 39.
10. Ibid.
11. Allen
Lewis, “Richie Sniffs at Laurels – Phil Flag All That Counts,” The Sporting News,
September 5, 1964, 6.
12. Allen
Lewis, “Del Ennis’ Old Boo Buddies Find New Target – Allen,” The Sporting
News, September 19, 1964, 5.
13. Peter
Salsburg, “Rookie of Year Holding Out For Bigger Contract,” Daily Mail
(Hagerstown, Maryland), March 11, 1965,
30.
14. “Richie
Allen is Signed, But He’s Not Happy,” Lebanon (Pennsylvania) Daily News,
March 16, 1965.
15. Ray
Kelly, “Allen‘s 510-Ft. Homer Wins For Phils, 4-2,” Philadelphia Sunday Bulletin,
May 30, 1965, 1.
16. Ibid.
17. Allen
and Whitaker, 6.
18. John
Brogan, “Thomas Put On Waivers After Fight With Allen,” Philadelphia Sunday
Bulletin, July 4, 1965, 1.
19. Ray
Kelly, “37,110 Watch Allen Slam Phils to Split With Giants,” Philadelphia Evening
Bulletin, July 9, 1965, 25.
20. Sandy
Grady, “Allen Asked Mauch To Give Him Release,” Philadelphia
Evening Bulletin,
July 9, 1965, 25.
21. Ray
Kelly, “Hard-Riding Rich Eludes Pitcher Posse,” The
Sporting News, December 31,
1966, 27.
22. Frank
Dolson, “Richie Arrives Late, Stays Early,” Philadelphia Inquirer,
July 10, 1967, 23.
23. “Phils’
Allen Wants Out of Philly,” Delaware County (Pennsylvania) Daily Times,
August 18, 1967, 12.
24. “Skinner
Sees No Problems,” Delaware County (Pennsylvania) Daily Times, June 17,
1968, 16.
25. “Richie
Allen Is Fined $1,000,” Morning Herald (Uniontown,
Pennsylvania), May 5,
1969, 13.
26 Ibid.
27. Ray
Kelly, “Rich Allen Disappears Again,” Philadelphia Evening Bulletin,
June 25,
1969, 63.
28. Ibid.
29. Frank
Dolson, The Philadelphia Story: A City of Winners (South
Bend, Indiana: Icarus
Press, 1981), 137.
30. David
Wolf, “Let’s Everybody Boo Rich Allen,” Life, August 22,
1969, 52.
31. Ibid.
32. William
Kashatus, September Swoon: Richie Allen, the ’64
Phillies, and Racial
Segregation (University Park,
Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press,
2004), 197.
33. ’I’m
No Angel … I’m Here to Play Baseball’ – Richie Allen,” Colorado
Springs (Colorado) Gazette-Telegraph, March 13, 1970, Sec D, 3.
34. “Allen
May Have Found a Home in St. Louis,” Alton (Illinois) Evening Standard,
April 11, 1970, 1.
35. Ibid.
36. Ibid.
37. “Cardinals
Sacrifice Richie Allen’s Homerun Power to Shore up Team’s No. 1
Headache in ’70-Defense,” Jefferson City (Missouri) Post Tribune, October 6, 1970, 9.
38. Ibid.
39. Ed
Levitt, “The New Dodgers,” Oakland Tribune, May
16, 1971, 53.
40. Craig
Wright, “Dick Allen: Another View,” SABR Baseball Research Journal vol.
24, 1995, republished with permission at http://www.whitesoxinteractive.com, 12.
41. Edgar
Munzel, “Allen’s Mom Prime Mover in Chisox Surge,” The Sporting News,
August 26, 1972, 3.
42. Allen
and Whitaker, 145.
43. Wright,
13.
44. Richard
Dozer, “Allen Bids Adieu to Chisox Fame, Fortune,” The Sporting News,
September 28, 1974, 29.
45. Ray
Kelly, “I Owe Phillies,’ Says Allen After Dismal Season,” The Sporting News,
October 11, 1975, 10.
46. “Allen
United With Finley,” Lebanon (Pennsylvania) Daily News, March 11, 1977, 9.
47. Frank
Fitzpatrick, “Enshrined or Not, Allen Has Clout,” Philadelphia Inquirer,
July 18, 2010,
48. Ibid.
Full Name: Richard
Anthony Dick Allen.
Born: March
8, 1942, Wampum, PA (USA).
Died: December
7, 2020, at Wampum, PA (USA)
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