Alvin Dark, 1922-2014

Alvin Dark, a star shortstop and a World Champion as player and manager, died Thursday. Obituaries ran in the S.F. Chronicle, the San Jose Mercury News, the N.Y. Times, and many others. Here is a stats-centric look at his baseball career.

 

Al Dark played 1,828 major-league games and amassed 43.1 Wins Above Replacement (WAR), or 3.82 WAR per 162 games. Not quite 200 retired modern players have both 40+ WAR and a rate per game as high as Dark’s. About half of those are in the Hall of Fame, with about a dozen more still on the ballot and another dozen yet to be considered. Players with very similar WAR totals and rates include:

(All stats herein built on data from Baseball-Reference.com.)

None of them is in the Hall of Fame.

Perhaps the most comparable shortstop in value was Phil Rizzuto (40.6 WAR, 3.96 per 162 G), elected by the Veterans Committee. Joining the Jints in 1950, Dark never quite reached the public stature of The Scooter or Pee Wee Reese, that might have made for a “Willie, Mickey or the Duke?”-type debate over shortstops in the Golden Age of NYC baseball. On defense, he was solid, not gifted; hard hitting was his calling card. But in the five years that all three were regulars in that market, 1950-54 — which, of course, excludes some peak years of all three, and catches the two HOFers in their later years — Dark rates a slight WAR lead among all shortstops:

Rk SS, 1950-54 WAR off def OPS+ Age G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA OBP SLG OPS Tm
1 Al Dark 25.3 22.8 7.8 107 28-32 770 3379 3113 509 920 173 27 87 367 183 212 39 .296 .340 .452 .792 NYG
2 Pee Wee Reese 25.1 23.2 7.0 105 31-35 725 3290 2784 491 779 119 36 50 324 430 301 97 .280 .377 .402 .780 BRO
3 Solly Hemus 19.9 17.9 5.4 118 27-31 560 2181 1804 327 501 94 31 33 172 314 157 15 .278 .396 .419 .815 STL
4 Phil Rizzuto 19.6 13.9 9.9 97 32-36 712 2917 2455 402 667 113 26 15 221 329 170 54 .272 .363 .357 .720 NYY
5 Granny Hamner 16.9 14.3 7.6 94 23-27 764 3255 3027 386 832 149 36 71 422 180 190 22 .275 .315 .418 .734 PHI

Expanding the timeframe to 1946-57 — post-War, pre-exodus — takes in two years that Dark missed on the front end, and three that Rizzuto mostly missed on the back end. It also finds a generational transition, with just 11 shortstops logging 3,000 PAs (compared to 16 in the dozen pre-War years):

Rk SS, 1946-57 WAR off def OPS+ Age G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS Tm
1 P. Reese 56.4 49.0 19.3 102 27-38 1720 7598 6440 1096 1772 268 64 112 741 989 722 .275 .373 .389 .761 BRO
2 Al Dark 38.5 37.0 11.5 100 24-35 1455 6343 5875 898 1717 309 56 112 632 318 428 .292 .332 .421 .753 BSN-NYG-STL
3 Phil Rizzuto 30.4 22.2 16.6 91 28-38 1384 5558 4748 733 1273 195 46 31 449 580 322 .268 .353 .348 .701 NYY
4 V. Stephens 28.6 25.9 7.9 114 25-34 1141 4787 4278 661 1212 195 29 167 793 480 435 .283 .356 .460 .815 SLB-BOS-CHW-BAL
5 Lou Boudreau 27.4 21.3 10.3 120 28-34 743 3043 2623 360 793 160 21 38 373 336 60 .302 .385 .423 .808 CLE-BOS
6 Eddie Joost 25.4 26.0 5.5 113 31-39 973 4348 3486 644 863 146 19 121 452 785 564 .248 .389 .404 .794 PHA-BOS
7 Johnny Logan 24.8 21.2 9.9 99 25-31 914 3851 3430 459 952 155 36 61 375 276 286 .278 .335 .397 .732 BSN-MLN
8 C. Carrasquel 22.8 14.6 14.8 84 24-31 1103 4514 3982 507 1048 148 24 47 412 422 399 .263 .338 .348 .686 CHW-CLE
9 Solly Hemus 22.8 21.1 5.4 115 26-34 832 2824 2343 404 637 121 38 43 226 397 211 .272 .388 .411 .800 STL-PHI
10 Ernie Banks 22.7 23.0 3.7 131 22-26 613 2601 2356 366 679 108 31 136 389 211 274 .288 .348 .534 .881 CHC
11 Luke Appling 19.2 17.7 4.9 116 39-43 619 2589 2202 282 668 96 16 14 222 362 136 .303 .402 .381 .783 CHW
12 G. Hamner 18.8 19.1 8.5 84 19-30 1410 5886 5457 670 1433 257 58 99 670 333 393 .263 .305 .385 .690 PHI

_____

With the 1948 Braves, Dark won the second Rookie of the Year Award, the last one covering both leagues, and ran a strong third in that MVP vote — just as he’d done the year before, his lone year in the minors. He hit .322 with 48 extra-base hits, ranking 2nd and 3rd among that year’s shortstops. It was a big lift over the three-headed SS monster that hit .241 with 22 XBH for Boston in ’47, and a big piece of their first pennant since 1914. Dark went just 4 for 24 as the Braves lost the World Series to Cleveland in six games, but he was over .400 in two Series trips with the Giants, for an overall .323 average in 16 Series games.

After 1949, Dark was dealt to New York along with Eddie Stanky, in a rare trade of a whole keystone combo. The Giants sent slugging outfielders Sid Gordon and Willard Marshall in that deal, clearing the way for an upcoming group of pasture-minders that would include Willie Mays. Dark, named team captain late in his first Giants season, would be linked with Mays throughout much of their baseball careers. Willie remembered him fondly: “It’s a sad day for me with all the help he gave me. He was such a mentor to me. A very nice man.”

_____

From 1920-60, only five shortstops had more team wins and a better percentage in their starts at short: The HOFers Rizzuto, Reese and Joe Cronin, and two dynasty stalwarts:

For SS Starts, 1920-60 W L W%
Phil Rizzuto 991 566 .636
Frankie Crosetti 922 543 .629
Pee Wee Reese 1224 759 .617
Marty Marion 924 590 .610
Joe Cronin 1023 799 .561
Al Dark 755 620 .549

_____

Dark was the fourth shortstop to hit at least 14 HRs five times, after Cronin, Stephens and Joost. Before Cal Ripken came along in the ’80s, that club would admit just one more member, Ernie Banks.

He became a power hitter by exploiting the short foul lines in the Polo Grounds. Over his first two years, with the Braves, Dark batted .299, but with just 6 homers. In six full years in New York, he averaged 16 HRs, and led all Giants in Polo Grounds HRs, RBI (!), doubles, and extra-base hits. In those years, Dark hit 73 HRs at home, 23 away — the biggest homeward tilt of the 40 MLB men with at least 40 HRs. Here are the nine Giants regulars for 1950-55, ranked by greatest net OPS between home (H) and away (A); team leaders in bold:

NYG 1950-55 OPS-H OPS-A OPS-Net HR-H HR-A HR-Net RBI-H RBI-A RBI-Net
Al Dark .846 .722 .124 73 23 50 253 159 94
H. Thompson .892 .791 .101 70 42 28 198 216 -18
Davey Williams .714 .629 .085 22 9 13 78 80 -2
Wes Westrum .779 .721 .058 51 30 21 140 119 21
Willie Mays .994 .966 .028 57 59 -2 157 171 -14
W. Lockman .737 .729 .008 53 18 35 199 154 45
Don Mueller .742 .751 -.009 40 13 27 192 225 -33
B. Thomson .826 .841 -.015 56 51 5 201 200 1
Monte Irvin .829 .916 -.087 36 48 -12 163 225 -62

The Polo Grounds wasn’t a great hitter’s park, overall. The 1950-55 Giants scored about 5% more runs per game at home, just below the NL average. To see how the park effects varied, note that Monte Irvin — a right-hander, like Dark — had a large deficit in home production over those same years. Irvin’s .916 road OPS ranked 6th out of 131 players with 1,500 PAs in that time, but his -.087 home net was 7th-worst.

But it was the right park for Alvin Dark. In his last five seasons, away from New York, he totaled just 24 HRs.

_____

In 1961, Dark stepped right off the playing field to manage the Giants. A better opportunity could hardly be dreamt: Besides the game’s most consistent great player in Mays, the Giants had young talent in spades and a brand-new park, but they hadn’t won yet. They went 85-69 in Dark’s debut, their best mark since 1954, then won the ’62 pennant with a 9th-inning rally in the third playoff game. They lost that Series — the only one in their first 44 years in San Francisco — on a 1-0 nail-biter in Game 7. Dark did not repeat in ’63, despite fielding four prime Hall of Famers (over 30 WAR combined from Mays, Marichal, McCovey and Cepeda), nor in ’64, despite the emergence of a fifth in Gaylord Perry and the usual Mays epic. The Giants led that race a week after the All-Star Break, but went .500 thereafter to finish 3 games back. A racist quote was attributed to Dark that summer (matching his reputation among some he managed), and he was fired at year’s end. Dark claimed the remark was quoted out of context, but he would later apologize personally to the black and (especially) Hispanic Giants who felt offended.

In 1966, Dark signed on as Charlie Finley’s latest skipper/scapegoat, lasting a season and two-thirds — the longest consecutive tenure by a 1960s A’s manager. A stint with Cleveland began well — 86-75, a mark they wouldn’t match in the next quarter-century — but went downhill fast.

Dark returned to the A’s in ’74, after Dick Williams concluded that even two straight champagne showers weren’t worth suffering Finley’s foibles. Dark completed their “three-peat” with a cast of veteran stars, and oversaw their fifth straight division crown in 1975, a streak unmatched until either 1996 or ’99, depending on your view of the ’94 strike year. But Boston upset the A’s in a playoff sweep, and Finley’s broom followed close behind. Dark, an outspoken Baptist, helped seal his fate with remarks on his boss’s moral fiber, telling his congregation: “He has accomplished things, and I give him credit on building up the ball club. But to God, Charlie Finley is just a very little bitty thing that’s lost, and if he doesn’t accept Jesus Christ as his personal savior he’s going to Hell.” (Green & Launius, Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball’s Super Showman.)

Dark’s last tilt at the wheel came as caretaker of the 1977 Padres, after John McNamara was dismissed. That team logged one of the worst pitching performances of modern times, with an 80 ERA+. Even the 1930 Phillies, infamous yielders of 7.8 runs per game, came in at 82. Only four teams since those ’77 Pads have fared as poorly in ERA+: the ’96 Tigers (80, 53-109), the ’97 Padres (79), the fire-sale ’98 Marlins (78, 54-108) and the 2005 Royals (80, 56-106). Dark’s last firing left him six wins shy of one thousand as a manager (994-954). He stands 62nd in career wins, but only 40 have more wins and a better percentage.

Given Dark’s playing career, it’s a little ironic that he never managed a middle infielder who hit over .290 or more than 10 HRs in a season. His 26 regulars at SS and 2B averaged 4 HRs, a .249 BA and 79 OPS+, along with 1.3 WAR and -0.8 Wins Above Average. Keystone play was among the few flaws on the 1961-64 Giants, where SS Jose Pagan, 2B Chuck Hiller and others averaged a 73 OPS+, 1.1 WAR and -1.1 WAA. It was an era of low-offense midfielders, but these were worse than most. Dark’s only charges who mustered a 100 OPS+ were SS Bert Campaneris (112 in ’74) and 2B John Donaldson (106 as a semi-regular for the ’67 KC A’s).

_____

In Dark’s 10 full years with the Giants, as player or manager, they won three pennants. Their other 41 seasons from 1938-88 produced no pennants.

In 1954, their only world title in a 76-year stretch (1934-2009), Dark hit in all four games of the sweep (7-17), including three hits and two runs in the 7-4 clincher. On the last day of the ’51 schedule, he had three hits with a double, a steal, and the deciding run in a 3-2 win that forced the playoff with Brooklyn. In that playoff finale, Dark’s leadoff hit in the 9th began the rally from 4-1 down.

In ’53, Dark had 126 runs, 23 HRs, 70 extra-base hits, and 316 total bases. The first remains a Giants SS record, while the others were topped in 2001 by Rich Aurilia.

_____

Dark’s Hall of Fame teammates (as a player) include Warren Spahn and Billy Herman in his first Braves tenure; Willie Mays and Hoyt Wilhelm with the Giants; Stan Musial with the Cardinals (also Wilhelm again); Ernie Banks and Billy Williams with the Cubs; Robin Roberts with the Phillies; and Spahn, Hank Aaron, Eddie Mathews and Red Schoendienst (for whom he was once traded) in his final tour with the Braves.

Dark’s passing leaves only two men alive from the ’48 Braves and from the ’51 Giants.

  • The Braves are Clint Conatser, then a part-time rookie outfielder, now age 93; and Johnny Antonelli, now 84, then an 18-year-old bonus baby who got into four games, and later re-teamed with Dark on the ’54 Giants, winning the ERA crown.
  • The Giants are Willie Mays, now 83; and Monte Irvin, 95 years young, one of 18 living players born before Babe Ruth left the Red Sox.
  • The other surviving participants of the ’51 playoff finale are Dodgers pitchers Don Newcombe and Ralph Branca, both 88.

My late father, another Al, reminds me that Dark was a three-sport star at (now) Louisiana-Lafayette and at LSU while Dad was growing up on the bayou. Pro football wanted him, but he chose baseball and never looked back. “Baseball was my business and my life. I gave it all I had,” Dark once told the SF Chronicle. “I feel very fortunate. And very happy. God blessed me.”

Rest in peace.

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Hartvig
Hartvig
10 years ago

In the NBJHBA there’s an article on which ballplayers most likely missed out on a HOF career because of WW2 and Dark is #8 on James’s list. That also led me to do a little checking on a few other shortstops that played around that time and one thing that I was a little amazed to find was how much support Marty Marion received in HOF voting even though outside of the war years there was only one year that he produced as much as 3 war and 3 others were he produced as much as 2. Yet he was… Read more »

David P
David P
10 years ago
Reply to  Hartvig

Looking at Marion, I thought “Omar Vizquel in a shorter career.” Turns out they’re almost dead ringers. You could easily switch their stats and no one would notice. Here are their respective triple slash lines from ages 22-32: Marion: .264/.323/.346 (OPS+ = 82) Vizquel: .275/.338/.350 (OPS+ = 83) Both had exactly 34 homeruns. PAs were 5925 and 5888. Both bunted a lot – 147 SH for Marion, 131 for Vizquel. Total runs and RBIs were 1191 for Marion and 1183 for Vizquel (Marion drove in 156 more runs but Vizquel scored 148 more). The main offensive difference is that Vizquel… Read more »

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
10 years ago
Reply to  David P

Marion was a key member of the Cards’ pennant winners of 1942-1944 (3 consecutive seasons of 105+ wins) and also 1946. His fielding was so good that his nickname was Mr. Shortstop. He received his 1944 MVP award with an OPS+ of 90. Obviously it was his fielding that the writers remembered.

Hartvig
Hartvig
10 years ago

No doubt that is it.

But of course Mark Belanger was a key component of the 1969-71 Orioles teams that won an average of 106 games per year and the 2 division winners a couple years later as well and he got next to no love in the MVP voting or for the HOF when the time came either.

At the very least it would appear that the BBWAA standards changed a fair bit in the decades between their careers.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
10 years ago
Reply to  Hartvig

Also the presence of Brooks Robinson at 3B may well have drawn attention away from Belanger. Robinson certainly drew much more attention than Belanger. Marion did not have a similar problem.

bstar
10 years ago
Reply to  Hartvig

Marion may have won his MVP in 1944 because Musial had won the season before and Mort Cooper the year prior. I’d guess that Marion had a strong personality and was considered a team leader to take down the award. The fact that he went into managing right after his player career ended supports that idea.

Also, Marion was the Cards’ best hitter in the 1943 World Series loss to the Yanks (1.185 OPS), perhaps raising his profile even further.

Belanger? Maybe he was considered more of a small piece to the O’s puzzle.

Luis Gomez
Luis Gomez
10 years ago

John, thanks for this article. It´s a really enjoyable and respectful way to summarize Dark´s accomplishments, and for us readers, a nice way to learn about him.

I knew about him because his card was on the first Ted Williams Card Collection, (1993?) and in the back of those cards, only the stats of the 5 best season appeared on it.

Doug
Doug
10 years ago

Marvelously good tribute, John.

Looking at Dark’s player page, I now know the answer to the trivia question “Who was the last Cubs’ third baseman before Ron Santo?”

oneblankspace
oneblankspace
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Banks led the ’57 Cubs in starts at SS (98) and at 3B (58) in a league-leading 156 GP. Adams had 46 stars at third, Kindall 18, Baker 12, with Bolger, Goryl, Bobby Morgan and Winceniak starting less than 10 games (but at least one).

The Cubs played 156 because they had two ties that year: Game 2 of a Sunday doubleheader in Philadelphia was called in the top of the 10th due to curfew, and game 2 of a DH at Wrigley against Pittsburgh was called after 11 innings due to darkness.

no statistician but
no statistician but
10 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Actually, Doug, Don Zimmer played the first third of the 1960 season at third for the Cubs. Santo came up at the end of June. I’m fairly certain I saw his debut on TV from down in Danville. He was very young, just 20 with a little over a year of pro ball under his belt, and wasn’t exactly tearing up the American Association, fielding questionable. To Cubs followers he probably seemed like just one more desperation move to get some pop in the lineup. Well—he did that.

zafrom
zafrom
10 years ago

Thanks very much John for covering the stats side of Dark’s career. After his MLB career seems to have ended in the mid 1980’s with the White Sox, I vaguely wonder what he did sportswise for the last 30 years of his life. Play golf? Berate his grandkids? The Daniel Brown and Elliott Almond article in the San Jose Mercury News mentions Dark’s intensity. The news about Dark, and maybe also about José Canseco, reminded me of June 26, 1961 — http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/PHI/PHI196106260.shtml — the 68th regular-season game managed by the 39-year-old Dark. The Phillies beat the Giants 1-0 in 8-1/2… Read more »

Doug
Doug
10 years ago

I see that Dark had one pitching appearance, as the starter in the final game of the 1953 season against the last place Pirates. Dark allowed a HR to Frank Thomas in his one inning of work, then gave way to Giant pitchers to take it the rest of the way.

That home run was the 30th of Thomas’s season as he became the first Pirate to reach that level in a first qualifying season. It would be more than 50 years before Jason Bay and, later, Pedro Alvarez matched that feat.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
10 years ago

Dark’s 23 consecutive game hitting streak in 1948 tied the NL record for a rookie (post 1900). Goldie Rapp did it in 1921 and Richie Ashburn did it also in 1948 but earlier in the year than Dark.