Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Former Penguins winger Chris Kunitz, ‘the ultimate teammate,’ announces retirement


By Jonathan Bombulie
https://triblive.com/sports/former-penguins-winger-chris-kunitz-announces-retirement/
July 30, 3019

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Chris Kunitz, a key component of three Stanley Cup teams for the Pittsburgh Penguins, announced his retirement Tuesday at age 39.
Kunitz, who played for the Chicago Blackhawks last season, will stay with that organization as a player development adviser, working with young players on the NHL roster and on the club’s AHL affiliate in Rockford.
In his retirement announcement, Kunitz thanked the four teams with which he spent most of his career — Anaheim, Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay and Chicago — and their owners, coaches, trainers and management. He saved his most poignant words for his former teammates.
“As a young player, you taught me to give my very best,” Kunitz said. “Your leadership helped mold me into the player I knew I could be. I was given the opportunity to play with the very best teams and the very best players, and I’m grateful for the laughs and the friendships that we shared together. Thank you for making my childhood dream come true.”
Kunitz forged an impressive legacy in his 15-year NHL career and will go down as one of the top players in Penguins history.
First and foremost, he will be known as a winner.
In addition to the three championships he won with the Penguins, he was a member of Anaheim’s Stanley Cup club in 2007. He’s the only NHL player to win four championships since the turn of the century.
He also won a gold medal with Team Canada at the 2014 Olympics in Sochi.
“Very fortunate is probably the first thing that comes to my mind, being able to play on some really good teams with some great players,” Kunitz said in 2017. “I feel extremely fortunate to be able to win but also make all those friends and be part of other peoples’ careers throughout your own career.”
Kunitz also will be known as an underdog who overcame numerous obstacles at the start of his pro career.
Undrafted out of Ferris State, Kunitz was waived by Anaheim in 2005. He was claimed by the Atlanta and played two games with the Thrashers before being waived again and reclaimed by the Ducks.
“You start thinking, ‘Is hockey for me? What am I supposed to do?’ ” Kunitz said in 2009. “I thought I had a good chance of making it with Anaheim. Then you go to another team, and they don’t want you, either. A lot of thoughts were going through my head.”
Kunitz persevered, and a trade to the Penguins in February 2009 sent his career to the next level.
He quickly became one of Sidney Crosby’s most effective linemates. The chemistry he showed playing alongside the Penguins captain helped him compile one of the most impressive stat lines in team history.
Kunitz recorded 169 goals and 388 points in 569 regular-season games in eight-plus seasons. He ranks ninth on the team’s all-time goal-scoring list.
Kunitz also recorded 23 goals and 76 points in 123 career playoff games. He ranks eighth on the team’s all-time playoff scoring list.
“He’s the ultimate teammate for a lot of different reasons: the way he treats people, the way he handles himself, the way he plays every single night,” Crosby said. “That’s no fluke that he’s won four Stanley Cups. A great person and a great teammate.”
Kunitz’s final goal in a Penguins uniform was his most memorable.
He took a pass from Crosby and beat goalie Craig Anderson to net the winning goal in the second overtime of Game 7 of the 2017 Eastern Conference finals against Ottawa.
“It meant a lot, never knowing if you were going to play in Pittsburgh again, to be able to carry your team on to going to the Stanley Cup Final,” Kunitz said. “Everybody has to have a moment at some point to help your team win, and for whatever reason, it just turned out I was having a good day that day.
“It wasn’t the best shot in the world, but it found its way in the net. I think when you look back at think about getting a pass from Sid to be able to move your team to the Stanley Cup Final, I think that’s something I’ll remember forever.”
Jonathan Bombulie is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Jonathan by email atjbombulie@tribweb.com or via Twitter .

Categories: Sports | Penguins

Dickerson's 2-HR, 5-RBI game leads Pirates | Pirates-Reds Game Highlights 7/30/19

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

How can the Pirates blow up what doesn’t exist?


By Tim Benz
July 30, 2019
Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Alex McRae (63) stands on the mound after meeting with pitching coach Ray Searage (54) in the second inning of their 11-6 loss to the Cincinnati Reds, Monday, July 29, 2019, in Cincinnati. The loss was the Pirates' ninth straight, their longest losing streak since 2011.(AP/John Minchillo)
This probably shouldn’t have hit me the way it did.
It was late Saturday night on the set of the CW “Nightly Sports Call.” So maybe I was a bit testy.
With the July 31 MLB trade deadline looming, a call came in asking if it was time to “just blow this whole thing up” with the Pirates.
It set me off.
Blow what up? What “thing?”
If the Penguins had traded away Kris Letang and Evgeni Malkin along with Phil Kessel, that would’ve been “blowing the whole thing up” at PPG Paints Arena.
If the Steelers had fired Mike Tomlin and traded Ben Roethlisberger along with ditching Antonio Brown and failing to re-sign Le’Veon Bell, that would’ve been “blowing the whole thing up” at Heinz Field.
Who are the Pirates removing from the roster that would constitute “blowing the whole thing up” at PNC Park?
First of all, what’s “the thing?” What “thing” exists at PNC Park? The team that plays there is a last-place squad that has won three playoff games since 1992.
That’s “a thing?”
The point is, there’s nothing to blow up. There’s nothing to dismantle. The Pirates are barely an entity.
Hence, who would genuinely be missed from the franchise if they were removed from it?
The list is short. Of the players on veteran contracts, who would constitute a major deletion from the Pirates’ plans moving forward?
Probably Starling Marte and Felipe Vazquez. And that’s it.
Even Gregory Polanco — as if anyone would want him while injured — getting shipped out wouldn’t be that big of a deal, especially with prospect Will Craig on the horizon.
Melky Cabrera and Corey Dickerson are good players. But they won’t be back next year. Jung Ho Kang is about to become a free agent. Francisco Cervelli, too. And even Chris Archer’s contract has club options on it.
Heck, if Neal Huntington doesn’t “blow it up” at the trade deadline, it’s going to happen on its own this winter, anyway.
To be honest, even if Vazquez and Marte were to be moved, how seismic would those decisions be? If the Pirates are never up in the ninth inning, how often will a closer really be missed from a cellar-dwelling organization?
Not often.
As talented as Marte is, his mental gaffes and wild inconsistencies have made him maddening to manage.
And watch.
For as useful as many of those players are, they haven’t helped the Pirates be anything but at the bottom of the standings. Plus, very few of them are in the works to be part of an attempt to get better in 2020.
So “blow the whole thing up?” Sure. Go ahead. But I hardly expect a mushroom cloud over the North Shore by the evening of July 31.
Tim Benz is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Tim at [email protected] or via Twitter. All tweets could be reposted. All emails are subject to publication unless specified otherwise.
Categories: Sports | Pirates | Tim Benz Breakfast With

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Ben Roethlisberger, Steelers ready to move on from Antonio Brown, drama


By Dan Scifo, Associated Press
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2019/jul/26/ben-roethlisberger-steelers-ready-to-move-on-from-/
July 26, 2019

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(Keith Srakocic/AP)


LATROBE, Pa. – Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger acknowledged on Friday that he had a unique on-field connection with wide receiver Antonio Brown.
Roethlisberger also admitted before the Steelers’ first practice of training camp that it would be different without Brown on the line of scrimmage this season. But he’s excited to move on after the Steelers traded Brown to Oakland following a messy public offseason divorce.
“I think the things we did together were some things that no one’s really ever done,” Roethlisberger said. “It was pretty special, so it’s going to be hard to make up for that. But I’m going to do my best to still bring my “A” game, and I know we have other guys on this team who are ready to step up.”
Roethlisberger and Brown combined for 74 touchdowns, the most in team history and sixth-best in NFL history. They also ended with 797 completions, second-most between a quarterback and receiver tandem in NFL history.
But Brown decided to bail on his teammates before a must-win Week 17 home game against Cincinnati last season. The four-time All-Pro spent most of the offseason lashing out at the organization after a late-season collapse kept Pittsburgh from the playoffs for the first time since 2013. Brown also criticized Roethlisberger, once saying that he felt the two-time Super Bowl winner had an “owner mentality.”
Roethlisberger said he isn’t using offseason criticism from ex-players as motivation this season.
“I’m only focused on the guys that are here,” he said. “That’s all that really matters to me, the guys who are in this locker room, and on this team, and that’s all I should focus on.”
The charismatic JuJu Smith-Schuster is now the unquestioned No. 1 receiver on the team after the 22-year-old finished with 111 catches for 1,426 yards and seven touchdowns last season. Roethlisberger has noticed a difference in the third-year receiver, who was named team MVP last season.
“I think JuJu is still himself and that’s what makes him special,” Roethlisberger said. “He’s still fun-loving and silly at times, but you see some growth and maturity, and you see him kind of accepting that leadership role.”
The Steelers have several options to fill the void opposite Smith-Schuster, including veterans Donte Moncrief, Ryan Switzer, and Eli Rogers. They also have James Washington, last year’s second-round pick, and Diontae Johnson, the team’s third-round selection this year.
“I know they can catch, I know they can play,” Roethlisberger said. “I want to see who makes the least amount of mistakes, who can get a subtle hand signal, who can interpret visual signals, the little subtle nuances.”
Roethlisberger, in his 15th season, led the league in passing last year and also broke his own franchise record with 34 touchdown passes. The 37-year-old Roethlisberger says he’s not as fast entering year 16 but feels his arm is just as strong as it was 10 years ago.
“I really spent a lot of time with my trainer, working on my shoulders and back and things for throwing,” Roethlisberger said. “I feel as good as I ever have physically, and I still feel sharp mentally, too, so that’s important.”
Roethlisberger also plans to stick around at least for another three years after signing a contract extension that will keep the two-time Super Bowl winner in Pittsburgh through the 2021 season.
“I’m going to play to the end of my contract and then I’ll decide anything after that,” Roethlisberger said. “I’ve honored all of my contracts to date. That’s my goal.”
Roethlisberger also wants to win another Super Bowl.
“That’s much more motivation for me than what people say,” Roethlisberger said. “I’ll be selfish when it comes to that. I want to win Super Bowls. Truthfully, that should be all of our motivation because that’s what’s driving me right now.”

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Steelers' Mike Tomlin isn't here to be understood


By Jeremy Fowler
https://www.espn.com/blog/pittsburgh-steelers
July 17, 2019

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PITTSBURGH -- After working the halls of a national coaches convention, Mike Tomlin grabbed a chair. Legendary coach Bobby Bowden was speaking, and Tomlin, then a young position coach in the college ranks, sought wisdom to take back to his meeting rooms.
Tomlin's older brother was alongside him as Bowden delivered the double-take message to the crowd of 20-somethings about two decades ago.
"He said, 'I treat players according to how fast they are,'" Ed Tomlin said. "We kind of laughed at how honest that was."
Mike Tomlin has the Super Bowl cachet to headline those conventions now. He also is known to be just as honest about his treatment of players, which only deepens the intrigue for his crucial 13th season with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Despite racking up 125 regular-season wins since 2007, second to the New England Patriots' Bill Belichick among active coaches during that span, Tomlin faced scrutiny last season for the Steelers' late collapse, their propensity for making headlines and a rocky relationship with former receiver Antonio Brown, who many former teammates believe received star treatment in Pittsburgh.
Tomlin remained unapologetically himself through that storm, unmoved by a players' coach label or what he called chatter. He publicly stated he treats everyone fairly but not exactly the same.
He is not concerned with being misunderstood. Winning rises above that, which is why Tomlin considers himself "ready for battle" in 2019.
"I shaped my reputation in this business and this outlook in this business being singularly focused on the task at hand," Tomlin told ESPN in a sit-down interview from his hometown of Hampton, Virginia, where he appeared at a fundraiser for the Hampton Roads Youth Foundation. "So I'd be kidding you if I told you I had a certain edge because of what happened in 2018. I just have a certain edge because I better have a certain edge. This business that I’m in dictates that I better have a certain edge, and I embrace that element of it.”
The organization prefers stability at the top, having famously employed just three head coaches since 1969. What Tomlin does during the Steelers' 2019 campaign will strengthen the organization's faith in him or test its limits.
With Brown and Le'Veon Bell in new uniforms and the Steelers no longer a trendy Super Bowl pick, those who know Tomlin believe he is at his best when doubted.
His players are eager to find out.
"Every team except one team in the NFL would love to have him," said Steelers linebacker Anthony Chickillo, making the obvious nod to the New England Patriots, who have won six Super Bowls with Belichick. "His résumé speaks for itself. That's what I want out of a coach."
Veteran guard Ramon Foster takes that analogy a step further.
"I'm sure if you ask all 1,200 players in this league which one [of the coaches] they'd rather play for, he's at the top of the list," said Foster, a 10-year starter on Pittsburgh's offensive line.
The 2016 Steelers were 4-5, and Arthur Moats saw a lack of discipline in his team.
That's when Tomlin set a tone with enforcement, from player fines for tardiness to policing toes on the line during sprints. Pittsburgh won seven straight to secure a playoff berth.
"The team responded and we went on a run," said Moats, a Steelers linebacker from 2014 to 2017. "He can do that if he needs to. No matter the adversity he's faced, he's always found a way to motivate the guys, to create a plan that works, to make an adjustment.
"Now, with the way things played out with AB, he can make sure to avoid those reoccurrences."
Those who have called Tomlin too friendly with players had a convenient talking point with Brown, who forced a trade after missing multiple work days in 2018. The perception of a star player leaving fuels those critics. Former Steelers such as James Harrison have claimed Tomlin needs to command more from his locker room, citing Belichick's disciplinary style resonating in New England.
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Player-coach dynamics are complex, of course. Micromanaging fines or discipline can take time away from preparing to win games, Moats said, making a self-policing locker room crucial.
Tomlin prefers to focus on acquiring "quality men who happen to be quality players," he said. "It starts there."
Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Tony Dungy hired Tomlin while with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2001.
"When you win, that’s considered a strength. When you lose, that can be the reason you’re losing. It comes back to winning. I don’t think Mike is going to change. That’s not who he is," Dungy said of Tomlin's style. "He’s not the type to babysit with a lot of rules. He’ll expect players to be the driving force and set the tone. He's a proven leader and proven winner."
Where Tomlin might showcase the most discipline is in one-on-one settings. Tomlin is "not a bulls----er" with players, Chickillo said, and many have a personalized story to illustrate as much. Tomlin has challenged running backs -- from Bell to DeAngelo Williams and James Conner -- to lose weight to maximize results. All of them did, then produced on the field.
Former Steelers safety Ryan Clark remembers Tomlin once telling him more disciplined play would elevate his career. Clark eventually became a team captain.
Foster calls Tomlin "that uncle you just don't want to piss off."
"You know you can be who you want to be, but if you step out of line ... he can be a real problem if you take him down that lane," Foster said. "Guys understand what we have to do because of the amount of respect we have for him and how he allows us to be men."
That's why the coach's brother laughs at the notion that Tomlin is too easy on players.
"Nobody is treated the same, but he treats people as individuals," said Ed Tomlin, who played football at Maryland. "That’s what makes him a great coach. People need someone in their lives to tell them the truth. I don’t know why that’s perceived as a negative thing. It’s a deed-based business. These are grown men. That [hard discipline] doesn’t fly anymore. He’s a new-age coach who doesn’t rule by fear.”
Tomlin will enforce rules when necessary, and prioritizing change -- even if subtle -- can usher the Steelers past a bitter season.
Tomlin is on record as being open to that -- "We all need to look in the mirror," he said at the NFL owners meetings in March -- but his exact plan is unclear. One tangible move is hiring defensive assistant Teryl Austin, who will coach from the booth and help Tomlin with replay challenges on game days. The decision seems overdue for a head coach who has lost his past 10 challenges.
While Tomlin might interact differently with Ben Roethlisberger as opposed to a special-teamer, certain guidelines should be universally applied for Tomlin to maximize results with this team, Moats said.
"You have to have certain things in place where, no matter what, you’re always going to stand on," Moats said. "When we talk about fines, if you fine guys for being late, it shouldn’t matter who it is. Certain things have to hold more weight. Whatever he decides on, it will be, 'No matter who it is, I have to do this.'"
The Steelers can hope the losses of Brown and Bell eliminate distractions and employ an addition-by-subtraction approach. Perhaps that is naive, considering their elite talents. But Tomlin might as well have been talking directly to Conner and receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster when he told the media he has two Pro Bowlers to replace the departed stars; the coach is emboldening them to take massive leaps in Year 3.
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Roethlisberger is coming off a healthy season with a league-high 5,129 yards on 675 passing attempts. Despite taking shots publicly from former teammates over leadership concerns, Roethlisberger will be the team's central figure in 2019; he signed a three-year contract this offseason. Tomlin has worked hard to jell with Roethlisberger, who at the end of last season cited a friendship with his head coach.
None of that legwork matters much without results.
"I acknowledge that there are some significant changes, but talking about it is not going to dictate the outcome," Tomlin said about the 2019 season outlook. "You won’t hear a lot of bold predictions from us. That is not our style; that is not appropriate. We know that we are judged based on performance anyway."
Now, players seem ready to talk for Tomlin.
"Personally, I don't think he needs to motivate us," Chickillo said. "We're already plenty motivated. Not many are believing in us right now."
Defense will drive the performance. Redirecting Tomlin's legacy in Pittsburgh will require improvement from a unit that mixes flashes of brilliance with uneven play. The Steelers have struggled drafting cornerbacks. Not one of their five corners selected in the 2015-17 drafts are projected to start in 2019. The release of safety Morgan Burnett is a reminder that the Steelers' heavily used dime package still needs tweaking.
With his weighty influence on that side of the ball, Tomlin often urges his defense to "trim the fat" -- that is, run a select number of plays cleanly rather than overload with superfluous options. But the defense run by Tomlin and coordinator Keith Butler can be difficult for young defensive backs, in part because of the pre- and post-snap reads. A defensive back might have three reads once the play starts.
Helping a rebuilt secondary to play smart but free football will be crucial.
"One thing he probably doesn’t get enough credit for is his football mind," Moats said of Tomlin. "The things he sees and is able to communicate, it doesn’t always work or we can’t execute at that level of detail, but the tendencies he’s able to pick up on is what makes him a special coach. Within that, he's coaching at a doctorate level, and sometimes that can be a lot for young players. All 11 players getting it right on Sundays is the challenge."
And a challenge Dungy expects Tomlin to meet and exceed.
Dungy hasn't spoken to Tomlin recently, but Dungy has a go-to line for him whenever he does: "You've got great instincts, so trust them."
A Steelers defensive back in the late 1970s, Dungy believes the organization will support the coach.
"Things generally tend to work out when you're true to yourself," Dungy said. "Like Chuck Noll always said, 'You don’t leave the game plan.'"

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

'79 Pirates reminder of difficulty current small-market teams have


By John Steigerwald
https://triblive.com/sports/john-steigerwald-79-pirates-reminder-of-difficulty-current-small-market-teams-have/
July 21, 2019

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Tim Foli and Phil Garner (Christopher Horner/Tribune-Review)

What will happen first: An American walking on Mars or the Pirates going to another World Series?
Right now, I’d put my money on a Mars walk.
The Pirates celebrated the 40th anniversary of their most recent World Series win Saturday night — the same night America was celebrating the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11 landing on the moon. It was a nice reminder of just how hard it is for a major league team in a small market to win a World Series.
Kind of like landing on the moon, which was a lot harder than it looked.
There were lots of stories over the last few days about just how dangerous the trip to the moon was and how everything had to go exactly as planned to avoid disaster.
The Pirates have been a disaster for most of the time since they beat the Orioles in 1979, and seeing the players gathered on the field and shown on the PNC Park scoreboard Saturday night should have given every baseball fan an appreciation for the job general manager Pete Peterson did in putting that team together.
It’s also a stark reminder of just how unlikely it is the Pirates will play in another World Series.
That 1979 team was made up of a brilliant mix of homegrown players, free agents and trades.
Willie Stargell, Dave Parker, Omar Moreno, Steve Nicosia, Ed Ott, Manny Sanguillen, Kent Tekulve, John Candelaria, Bruce Kison and Don Robinson were products of the Pirates farm system, which was overseen by Peterson before he became General Manager in 1977.
No team in baseball was better at finding good players.
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Jim Rooker, Manny Sanguillen and Rennie Stennett (Christopher Horner/Tribune-Review)
Jim Bibby, who won 12 games in 17 starts, was signed as a free agent before the 1978 season. Lee Lacy, a valuable utility man, was signed before the 1979 season.
Bill Robinson, Phil Garner, Bill Madlock, Mike Easter Tim Foli, Bert Blyleven, Enrique Romo and Grant Jackson were brought in via trades. Peterson also made a trade to bring in Chuck Tanner as manager.
If it hadn’t been so well orchestrated, you might call it catching lightning in a bottle. Under MLB’s current economics, that’s the only way the Pirates are going to get back to the World Series.
Stargell, Parker and Tekulve, probably the three most important players on the team, would have priced themselves out of Pittsburgh long before 1979 under the current system. They would have left as free agents or been traded for prospects.
Madlock won four batting titles before being traded to the Pirates by the San Francisco Giants for pitching prospect Ed Whitson in June 1979. Guys who win four batting titles don’t come to Pittsburgh in 2019. Too expensive.
Players like Bibby and Lacy would have had Pittsburgh way down on the list of places they’d like to play if Stargell, Parker and Tekulve had left to play for big-market teams.
It’s a shame only old fans have a real appreciation for what it’s like to experience the Pirates making a World Series run.
Seeing the reaction from the fans Saturday at PNC Park and the feeling that still exists among the remaining members of that team should tell fans who have no memory of it just how special it is.
And there’s a good chance that it won’t happen again in their lifetime.
• My favorite memory of covering the 1979 World Series is from my trip to Baltimore for Game 6. The Pirates had been given almost no chance to win before the series started, and everybody outside of Pittsburgh said it was over after the Orioles went up three games to one.
But the Pirates won Game 5.
I was working for WTAE-TV, and in Baltimore, we were doing our production at our sister station, WBAL.
When I walked into the WBAL newsroom on the day between Games 5 and 6, I noticed every person was wearing an Orioles cap and a T-shirt. These words were written on both: Baltimore Orioles 1979 World Champions.
Oops.
John Steigerwald is a Tribune-Review contributing writer.


Monday, July 22, 2019

Once baseball’s best, Dave Parker belongs in Hall of Fame


By Kevin Gorman
https://triblive.com/sports/kevin-gorman-once-baseballs-best-dave-parker-belongs-in-hall-of-fame/
July 21, 2019

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When the Pittsburgh Pirates celebrated their 1979 World Series champions on Saturday at PNC Park, there was only one other place in the world Dave Parker would have rather been.
That’s Cooperstown, N.Y.
Parker was regarded as the best player in baseball from the mid-1970s until the early ‘80s, a five-tool player who was a two-time NL batting champion and a three-time Gold Glove winner.
That Parker was being honored in Pittsburgh but not in Cooperstown is disappointing, especially with the timing of the 40th anniversary of his All-Star Game heroics and the World Series victory. And it has left Parker disillusioned.
That he’s not in the Baseball Hall of Fame is as much of a black eye for the game as Parker was front and center of the cocaine scandal of the infamous Pittsburgh drug trials in 1985.
Baseball deemed him the game’s best player in his prime.
It shouldn’t blackball him.
“General managers had a poll, and they were asked who would be the first guy they would begin a franchise with, and it was me,” Parker said. “I did everything that you can do. I journeyed some things twice. They said I was the best player in the game, so live up to it and do what’s right: Make me the Hall of Famer that I should be.”
Parker fell short of the milestone markers that can clinch a Hall of Fame candidacy, with 2,712 hits, 339 home runs, 1,493 RBIs and a career .290 batting average.
But he was a seven-time All-Star, an NL MVP and a two-time World Series champion.
Just like Willie Stargell.
Where Stargell had superior power numbers, with 475 homers and 1,540 RBIs, he also had 480 fewer hits than Parker in 106 fewer games. That’s not to suggest Parker was as good as Pops, just that he resided in the same stratosphere and should have a bronze bust in Cooperstown.
“I think I should be there,” Parker said. “Most people that know me and played against me, they look at me as a Hall of Famer anyway. I don’t think that there was anybody from 1975 to ’81 that was a better player than me.”
Over that seven-year span, Parker compiled 1,157 hits, 140 home runs, 617 RBIs and slashed .313/.364/.517. Problem is, he didn’t sustain that momentum. Parker batted below .300 and hit fewer than 20 homers every season from 1980-84, despite becoming one of baseball’s highest-paid players.
Yet in 15 years on the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot, he never received more than 24.5 percent of the vote. A candidate who receives 75 percent of votes is elected.
Parker is hardly alone in his belief he belongs in Cooperstown, a sentiment shared by his teammates from the ’79 World Series champions for which he was a catalyst.
“I can’t disagree with that statement,” former Pirates pitcher John Candelaria said. “Should he be in the Hall of Fame? Absolutely, with some of the people they’re letting in today. No offense to some of them. They’ve got the votes, but I believe Dave was better than some who have gotten in.”
In 2017, Parker was one of nine former players on the ballot for the Modern Era vote. Only pitcher Jack Morris and shortstop Alan Trammell were elected. Trammell was a six-time All-Star, four-time Gold Glove winner and 1984 World Series MVP who had a career .285 batting average, 2,365 hits and 185 homers.
What’s more, the 2019 class includes a pair of borderline candidates in Harold Baines and Edgar Martinez. Both spent a good portion of their careers as designated hitters, and neither ever was considered the best player in the game like Parker.
Martinez had 2,247 hits, a career .312 batting average and 309 home runs over 18 seasons with the Seattle Mariners. A seven-time All-Star, he benefited by being a designated hitter but had only one 30-homer campaign and never won a World Series.
Baines, voted in by the Veterans Committee, was a six-time All-Star who had 2,866 hits and 384 home runs over 22 seasons but never had 30 homers and only topped 100 RBIs three times.
“He ain’t no Dave Parker,” Parker said pointedly.
Neither was Dale Murphy, despite similar statistics and an eight-year stretch where the former Atlanta Braves outfielder was regarded as one of baseball’s best players. A seven-time All-Star, five-time Gold Glove winner and a two-time MVP, Murphy had 2,111 hits, 398 homers but a career .265 average.
If Murphy is left out because of his hitting, Parker could be punished for his power numbers. He had only two 30-homer seasons and three with 100-plus RBIs.
But there’s no room for discounting his defense. Parker possessed one of the most dangerous arms in the game, as evidenced by his throwing out Jim Rice at third and Brian Downing at home plate in the 1979 All-Star Game, for which Parker was named MVP. But Parker’s arm also prevented many runners from taking an extra base, just by the sheer threat. And he had 154 career stolen bases and batted .345 in the 1979 World Series.
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Parker played hard and he played through pain, wearing first a football facemask and then a hockey goalie mask upon returning from a broken jaw after a collision with Mets catcher John Stearns in 1978. That was his NL MVP season.
“I felt like a bad dude because of the way I played the game,” Parker said. “I never ran a ball halfway to first base. I hit the ball to second base and guys would barely throw me out. I had outstanding speed, above-average throwing arm. I did everything. No more you can do. You just sit back and wait.
“It’d be great to be there, but I’m in the Reds Hall of Fame, the Negro (Leagues Baseball Museum) Hall of Fame. It would be nice to get into the regular Hall of Fame, but you just sit and wait, just sit and wait.”
Parker has waited long enough. There was a time when he was baseball’s best. The black eye has healed. It’s time the game honors him for it by putting Parker where he has long belonged.
Kevin Gorman is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Kevin by email atkgorman@tribweb.com or via Twitter .
Categories: Sports | Pirates | Kevin Gorman Columns