Bill Almon

William Francis Almon (born November 21, 1952) is an American former professional baseball infielder. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the San Diego Padres, Montreal Expos, New York Mets, Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Philadelphia Phillies.

Bill Almon
Almon in 1978
Infielder
Born: (1952-11-21) November 21, 1952
Providence, Rhode Island
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 2, 1974, for the San Diego Padres
Last MLB appearance
June 14, 1988, for the Philadelphia Phillies
MLB statistics
Batting average.254
Home runs36
Runs batted in296
Teams

Career

Almon played collegiately at Brown University, and in 1972 and 1973 he played collegiate summer baseball with the Falmouth Commodores of the Cape Cod Baseball League.[1]

He was the first overall pick in the 1974 amateur draft by the San Diego Padres. After only 39 games in the minor leagues, he was promoted to the majors, debuting on September 2 as the Padres' starting shortstop. He made a critical error in the first inning, allowing two runs to score, giving the Atlanta Braves a lead they would not relinquish.[2]

Almon led all major league shortstops in putouts with 303 in 1977 and the National League in sacrifice hits with 20 that same year. The Padres traded him to the Montreal Expos after the 1979 season, and he was signed by the New York Mets midway through the 1980 season. He was picked up by the Chicago White Sox for the 1981 season, which proved to be his best season. As the starting shortstop for the White Sox, he hit .301 with 16 stolen bases, ranking 19th in Most Valuable Player voting.

Almon played in the Major Leagues until 1988, seeing playing time for the Oakland Athletics, Pittsburgh Pirates, the Mets on a second tour of duty, before finishing his career with 20 games for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1988.

gollark: You pick a "subcommand" with a capital-letter flag like `-S` (sync, which seems to be a fancy word for "Install packages"), `-Q` (query information aboud stuff) and then pass extra flags to configure how that works.
gollark: > what's a pacman-like CLI?Arch Linux (btw I use that) has a neat package manager called `pacman`.> what counts as package updating support?Updating packages without breaking things horribly, including not overwriting user-edited (config) files.> and library interface as in an API you can use from scripts?Precisely.
gollark: Oh, and a library interface.
gollark: Well, I would want a pacman-like CLI, probably configurable repos, multiple files in a package, good package updating support, and... other stuff?
gollark: If CC had symlinks, which it doesn't without a ton of FS hackery, you could make a busybox-type thing.

References

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