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・ Johnny Adams (gridiron football)
・ Johnny Aguirre
・ Johnny Aitken
・ Johnny Aitkenhead
・ Johnny Alam
・ Johnny Albertsen
・ Johnny Albino
・ Johnny Alegre
・ Johnny Alegre Affinity
・ Johnny Alf
・ Johnny Allan
・ Johnny Allegro
・ Johnny Allen
・ Johnny Allen (American football)
・ Johnny Allen (arranger)
Johnny Allen (baseball)
・ Johnny Allen (EastEnders)
・ Johnny Allen (racing driver)
・ Johnny Almaraz
・ Johnny Almond
・ Johnny and Jonie Mosby
・ Johnny and Luther Htoo
・ Johnny and Mary
・ Johnny and the Bomb
・ Johnny and the Dead
・ Johnny and the Hurricanes
・ Johnny and the Moon
・ Johnny and the Moon (album)
・ Johnny and the Semitones
・ Johnny and the Sprites


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Johnny Allen (baseball) : ウィキペディア英語版
Johnny Allen (baseball)

John Thomas Allen (September 30, 1904 – March 29, 1959) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball for the New York Yankees, Cleveland Indians, St. Louis Browns, Brooklyn Dodgers, and New York Giants.〔John Weeks, ("Johnny Allen" ), SABR (accessed 2015-05-28).〕
Born in Lenoir, North Carolina, Allen spent part of his youth in the Baptist orphanage in Thomasville, North Carolina, and he attended Thomasville High School. Allen reached the Yankees in an unusual way. While working as a bellhop in a hotel, he was told to take some fans to the room of Yankee scout Paul Krichell. Allen told Krichell that he was a pitcher, and the scout arranged a tryout. Allen was an immediate success for the Yankees, debuting in with a 17–4 record and a 3.70 ERA for the world champions. He was less stellar in that year's World Series, starting Game 4 and leaving after giving up three runs off five hits in just two-thirds of an inning. He continued to post decent records for the Yankees, but a sore arm and his constant demands for more money threatened his career. For these reasons, he was dealt to the Indians before the season.〔
Allen turned things around in Cleveland, going 20–10 with a 3.44 ERA in 1936 and following that up by winning his first fifteen decisions of , one short of the record held by Walter Johnson. He lost his next start 1–0 on an unearned run, but his 15–1 mark that year set a winning percentage record that lasted until Roy Face bettered it with an 18–1 record in . In , he won his first twelve decisions and made his only All-Star team. During the All-Star break, he suffered an unknown injury, some claim he slipped on a bar of soap in the shower, and never did approach his earlier success again, finally retiring in after six mediocre campaigns. He became a minor league umpire after retiring, eventually becoming the umpire-in-chief of the Carolina League. He died at age 54 in St. Petersburg, Florida.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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