Time
 to post up my 1973 “Nicknames of the 1970’s” card for one of my 
favorite underrated players of the era, Al “Scoop” Oliver of the 
Pittsburgh Pirates:
Oliver was the model of all-star consistency through the decade, from 
his rookie year of 1969 when he was robbed of the Rookie of the Year 
Award (losing to the Dodgers’ Ted Sizemore), straight through to his 
being colluded against in the mid-80’s with many others, prematurely 
ending his MLB career.
All he did was hit between .280 and .300 every season, racking up hits, 
doubles, runs batted in, while other players got the accolades: Roberto 
Clemente, Willie Stargell, Dave Parker, Tim Raines, Andre Dawson, Gary 
Carter.
Of course when you get to play alongside these guys, it’s understandable
 how a man who put up the numbers year after year like Oliver did could 
go under-appreciated like he did.
But come on! Look at his career!
The seven-time All-Star finished his Big League tenure with 2743 hits, 
529 doubles, 219 homers, 1326 RBIs, a .303 batting average, with ONLY 
756 strikeouts over 9049 at-bats.
In 1982 he had his best season, leading the National League in batting, 
doubles, total bases and RBIs while also hitting 22 homers and scoring 
90 runs, finishing third in MVP voting.
In 1980, thanks to guys like George Brett, Rickey Henderson and Reggie 
Jackson in the American League, Oliver’s season went almost unnoticed as
 he collected career-highs with 209 hits, 96 runs scored, 117 RBI’s and 
43 doubles while hitting .319.
I always felt he, Cecil Cooper and Miguel Dilone had great years at the wrong time (if there is such a thing), in 1980.
Seemed Oliver had a few of those years throughout his 18-year career.
Oliver for the Hall of Fame? I don’t know. I’d put him in along with 
Steve Garvey, Dave Parker, Vada Pinson and even Bob Johnson from the 
1930’s, in appreciation for the HIGH level of play these guys put in 
over a long period, with brief moments of top-notch play.
Seems silly to see these careers get lost in the non-HOF shuffle for no other reason than not hitting those “magic numbers”.
