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Chili Dog MVP Events

Chili Dog MVP Book Launch

Harry Caray’s in Chicago, IL

A gathering to officially launch the Chili Dog MVP Book will take place on Monday, April 25, 2022 at Harry Caray’s in Chicago, IL.

Preliminary plans include:

  • Nancy Faust Organ Prelude
  • Introductions
  • Showing of the 2012 video produced by John Owens for the Chicago Baseball Museum. The video was previously shown at the June 26, 2012 Dick Allen Tribute.
  • Short talk from co-authors John Owen and Dr. David Fletcher.
  • Fergie Jenkins remarks about being Dick’s roommate on the road when they were in Little Rock. Additional topics are anticipated to include comments on the Black Lives Matter movement and how Dick Allen was ahead of his time.
  • Goose Gossage remarks.
  • Richard Allen II closing comments about his Dad.

Check back for more details!

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Chili Dog MVP Press Box: News & Media

Chicago Tribune: ‘Chili Dog MVP’ takes us back to the time Dick Allen electrified Chicago and the White Sox stayed in town

It was almost 20 years ago that I wrote a Tribune magazine cover story titled “Does Baseball Still Matter?” No doubt it does to some, and so you folks enjoy whatever this season brings. But I guarantee that the most excitement you’ll find — short of a World Series win on either side of town — is in the 400-some pages of “Chili Dog MVP: Dick Allen, the ‘72 White Sox and a Transforming Chicago” from publisher Eckhartz Press.

This is a wonder of a book, giving long-overdue justice to the title player, who electrified the team and its fans and the city for an all-too-brief time. Allen was only here for three seasons in a 15-year career that also included seven selections as an All-Star and the 1964 National League Rookie of the Year award.

But in 1972 he electrified. Here are some of the gaudy statistics: .308 batting average, 37 home runs, 113 runs batted in, .603 slugging percentage and 1.023 on-base plus slugging.

Those MVP accomplishments compelled Hall of Fame pitcher and former teammate, pitcher Richard “Goose” Gossage to write in the book’s touching foreword, “Dick Allen was the greatest player I ever had the privilege of playing with.” He calls Allen’s 1972 season “the best year of any baseball player I have ever seen in my 22-year major league career.”

Naturally, Allen is the centerpiece of this compelling and wildly enjoyable book, which is also an ambitious and clear-eyed look at the city in all its racial troubles, societal peculiarities, and messy political and media landscapes.

Read the full article by Rick Kogan at ChicagoTribune.com…

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Chili Dog MVP Press Box: News & Media

On Tap Sports Net: Give Him His Due: Dick Allen Belongs in the Hall of Fame

Dick Allen could be enshrined with the immortals of the game via the Golden Days Era Ballot. It’s an honor that is long overdue for the misunderstood slugger that helped to save baseball on the South Side.

Dick Allen was one of baseball’s most feared sluggers during the 1960s and 1970s. Once he became a full-time regular during the 1964 season with the Philadelphia Phillies, he would go on a decade of dominance where he established himself as one of the game’s most terrifying figures in the batter’s box. Allen, who was viewed negatively by his contemporary media members, has an opportunity to assume his rightful place in Cooperstown this weekend, albeit posthumously.

Allen’s larger-than-life persona was one that lent itself to being misunderstood during his day. But as time has passed since his playing days, many came to understand the man better than they did when he was swinging his famed 40-ounce bat. If Allen is to be enshrined in the hall of the immortals in upstate New York, it will be an honor that is long overdue.

Read the full article at OnTapSportsNet.com…

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Chili Dog MVP Press Box: News & Media

The late Jack Brickhouse on how his Hey Hey HR call got started…Jack a major character in my chapters

The Chicago Baseball Museum is presenting classic interviews from the archives of CBM historian George Castle’s “Diamond Gems” syndicated weekly baseball radio show, which aired from 1994 to 2010.

This edition features one of four consecutive segments taken from a retrospective on the career of famed Chicago announcer Jack Brickhouse, taped in Aug. 1997. In this segment, Jack recalls how his famed “Hey Hey” home-run call came about around 1950, in the first years of televised baseball at Wrigley Field. Brickhouse had been using the call for homers by Cubs slugger Hank Sauer without realizing it. Brickhouse also will be honored this season with a bobblehead day at Wrigley Field as part of its 100th anniversary. The Chicago Baseball Museum supports the Brickhouse family in the promotional effort.

>> Listen to the interview at ChicagoBaseballMuseum.org…

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Chili Dog MVP Press Box: News & Media

The late Bart Johnson remembering Goose Gossage and Terry Forster

The Chicago Baseball Museum is presenting classic interviews from the archives of CBM historian George Castle’s “Diamond Gems” syndicated weekly baseball radio show, which aired from 1994 to 2010.

This edition features a 1998 interview with Bart Johnson, one of a trio of home-grown hard-throwers the White Sox produced at the dawn of the 1970s. Bart, nicknamed “Mr. Smoke,” recalls the start of his career and that of Hall of Famer Goose Gossage and lefty Terry Forster. Johnson went on to a three-decade-long run as a scout, thanks to support from Sox GM Roland Hemond.

We have a transcript of the interview. You can also listen to the interview at ChicagoBaseballMuseum.org…

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Chili Dog MVP Press Box: News & Media

Nancy Faust on how some of her trademark organ programs began

The Chicago Baseball Museum is presenting classic interviews from the archives of CBM historian George Castle’s “Diamond Gems” syndicated weekly baseball radio show, which aired from 1994 to 2010.

This edition features a 2007 interview with all-time White Sox organist Nancy Faust, on the 30th anniversary of her inauguration of “Na, Na, Na, Hey, Hey, Hey, Good-bye” as a kind of team anthem when opposing teams pulled their pitchers. Faust began playing the 1969 Steam one-hit wonder during a July 29-31, 1977 showdown series with the Kansas City Royals at old Comiskey Park.

>> Listen to the interview at ChicagoBaseballMuseum.org…

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Chili Dog MVP Press Box: News & Media

Harry Caray interviews Dick Allen in 1972

The Chicago Baseball Museum is presenting classic interviews from the archives of CBM historian George Castle’s “Diamond Gems” syndicated weekly baseball radio show, which aired from 1994 to 2010.

All-time baseball announcer Harry Caray conducted interviews in spring training 1972 in Florida and early in the season in Chicago. Two superstars who’d go on to earn honors in ’72 are queried: the White Sox’s Dick Allen, the eventual American League MVP, and the Phillies’ Steve Carlton, the National League’s Cy Young Award winner.

>> Listen to the interview at ChicagoBaseballMuseum.org…