Wednesday, September 21, 2022

NICKNAMES OF THE 1970's: "SMOKEY" WALT ALSTON

Thought it'd be fun to create a "nickname" card for former Los Angeles Dodgers manager Walt "Smokey" Alston, so here goes:

 
Alston, whose playing career totaled one single at-bat in one game for the St. Louis Cardinals in 1936, parlayed his knowledge into a Hall of Fame managerial career that began in 1954 with the (then) Brooklyn Dodgers.
Over the next 23 years he brought home seven pennants, four world championships, and 2040 wins, with 10 90+ win campaigns.
Think about this: the man averaged 89 wins a season over almost a quarter of a century! Incredible!
Of course, Alston managed legends from Jackie Robinson and Roy Campanella to Duke Snider  and Gil Hodges to Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax right through to Steve Garvey and Ron Cey. What a tenure.
1976 would be his last season as manager, handing off to another lifer, Tommy Lasorda for the 1977 season.
In his last season of 1976, Alston won 90 games and had the Dodgers in second place, his 15th season of either a first or second place finish.
In 1983, his stellar career was topped off when he was voted into the Hall of Fame.

FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER...

@wthballs
Everything baseball: cards, events, history and more.