American baseball player (born 1950)
Baseball player
Lloyd Cecil Allen (born May 8, 1950) is an American former professional baseball pitcher , who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the California Angels (1969 -1973 ), Texas Rangers (1973 -1974 ), and Chicago White Sox (1974 -1975 ). He was the first big league player born in the 1950s to appear in a regular-season game.
Early life
Allen was born in Merced, California . He is Jewish, having converted to Judaism.[ 1] [ 2] He attended Selma High School in Selma, California and Fresno City College .[ 3]
Baseball career
Allen was selected by the California Angels with its first round (12th overall pick) of the 1968 amateur draft .[ 4]
In 1969, Allen was the youngest player in the American League (AL).[ 5] In 1971, his 15 saves ranked seventh in the AL.[ 5] [ 2] He was traded along with Jim Spencer from the Angels to the Texas Rangers for Mike Epstein , Rich Hand and Rick Stelmaszek on May 20, 1973.[ 6] Arm problems led to him retiring from baseball, in 1979.[ 3] [ 7]
In seven MLB seasons, Allen had an 8–25 win–loss record, in 159 games, with 19 games started, 22 saves, 297+ 1 ⁄3 innings pitched, 291 hits allowed, 183 runs allowed, 155 earned runs allowed, 19 home runs allowed, 196 walks, 194 strikeouts, 11 hit batsmen, 27 wild pitches, 18 intentional walks, and a 4.69 earned run average (ERA).[ 5]
References
^ Bob Wechsler (2008). Day by Day in Jewish Sports History . ISBN 9781602800137 . Retrieved February 2, 2020 .
^ a b Lloyd Allen (May 8, 1950). "Lloyd Allen" . jewishbaseballmuseum.com . Jewish Baseball Museum . Retrieved February 2, 2020 .
^ a b Williams, Tyler (April 3, 2013). "Hall of Fame: Lloyd Allen — Experiences learned from baseball translate to business" . hanfordsentinel.com . Hanford Sentinel . Retrieved February 2, 2020 .
^ "Lloyd Allen Career highlights" . jewishbaseballnews.com . Jewish Baseball News . Retrieved February 2, 2020 .
^ a b c "Lloyd Allen Stats" . Baseball-Reference.com . Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 2, 2020 .
^ "Angels Get Epstein, Hand In 5‐Man Deal With Rangers," United Press International (UPI), Sunday, May 20, 1973. Retrieved December 4, 2021
^ "Lloyd Allen Player Card" . thebaseballcube.com . The Baseball Cube. Retrieved February 2, 2020 .
External links
1965 : Spencer
1966 : DeNeff
1967 : Nunn
1968 : Allen
1969 : Bannister
1970 : Dade
1971 : Tanana
1972 : Chalk
1973 : Taylor
1974 : Miley
1975 : Goodwin
1976 : Landreaux
1977 : Dotson
1978 : Brunansky
1979: None
1980 : Rasmussen
1981 : Schofield
1982 : Kipper
1983 : Doran
1984 : Pappas
1985 : Fraser , Cook
1986 : Hernández , Stevens , Carr , Fetters , Green
1987 : Orton , Holdridge
1988 : J. Abbott
1989 : K. Abbott
1990: None
1991 : Pérez , Fábregas
1992 : Janicki , Schmidt
1993 : Anderson
1994 : Christensen
1995 : Erstad
1996: None
1997 : Glaus
1998 : Etherton
1999: None
2000 : Torres , Bootcheck
2001 : Kotchman , Mathis
2002 : Saunders
2003 : Wood
2004 : Weaver
2005 : Bell
2006 : Conger
2007 : Bachanov
2008: None
2009 : Grichuk , Trout , Skaggs , Richards , Kehrer
2010 : Cowart , Bedrosian , Clarke , Lindsey , Bolden
2011 : Cron
2012: None
2013: None
2014 : Newcomb
2015 : Ward
2016 : Thaiss
2017 : Adell
2018 : Adams
2019 : Wilson
2020 : Detmers
2021 : Bachman
2022 : Neto
2023 : Schanuel
2024 : Moore
2025 : Bremner