YANKEE MONIKERS & NICKNAMES, HOW THEY GOT THAT WAY
BY HARVEY
FROMMER
Nom de plumes, aliases, sobriquets,
catch words - nicknames, all time, all ways for Yankees. Through the
decades
sporting scribes, fans, friends and relatives, opponents and teammates
have
outdone themselves pinning nom de plumes, aliases, sobriquets, catch
words -
nick-names on Yankee personnel and experiences.
These
have run the gamut, from apt to asinine, from complimentary to crude,
from hero
worshipping to hellacious, from amusing to amazing. Herewith, a
sampler.
Babe
Ruth leads the pack in the
number of nick-names attached to him. Called "Babe" by
teammates on the Baltimore
Orioles,
his
first professional team because of his youth. Early on
he was also called “Infant
Swatagy,” G.H.Ruth
was also called "Jidge" by Yankee teammates, in German, short for
George.
Opponents
referred to him negatively as "The Big Monk" and "Monkey."
He was also called "Two Head, a negative nick-name used by
opponents
to describe the size of his head which seemed very huge to some. They
also
called him a lot
of unmentionables.
Sportswriters
glamorizing the big
guy came up with these monikers: “Home
Run King,” "The
Bambino", “Bammer,”
“the Bam, ” "the
Wali of Wallop", "the Rajah of Rap", "the Caliph of
Clout", "the Wazir of Wham", "the Sultan of
Swat", "The Colossus of Clout,” “Maharajah of
Mash", "The Behemoth of Bust,” “Behemoth
of
Biff,” "The
King of Clout" and the
“Goliath
of Grand Slams.”
"The Babe" - George Herman
Ruth leads off the list and pads it for most nick-names acquired. He
called
most players "Kid" because he couldn't remember the names of even his
closest friends.
In
spring training 1927, Babe Ruth bet pitcher Wilcy Moore $l00 that he
would not
get more than three hits all season. A notoriously weak hitter, Moore
somehow
managed six hits in 75 at bats. Ruth paid off his debt and Moore
purchased two mules for his farm naming them "Babe" and
"Ruth."
But enough of George Herman Ruth. Now onto the bon mots, aliases,
expressions
for all matter of Yankees:
A-Rod – Abbreviation for Alex
Rodriguez.
“All American Out” – What Babe Ruth
called Leo Durocher because of his limited hitting ability.
“Almighty Tired Man” - Mickey Rivers, for his slouching demeanor
"American
Idle" - Carl
Pavano was known as this because he could never stay on the field and
stay
healthy.
“An A-bomb from A-Rod” – classic
home run
call, John Sterling
“It
is high, it is far. It is gone! The
Yankees win. Thuuuuuuuuh Yankees
win!” -
another classic home run call, John Sterling
"Battle
of the
Biltmore" - 1947 World Series celebration in Manhattan's Biltmore Hotel
was a time and place where Larry MacPhail drunkenly fought with
everyone ending
his Yankee ownership time.
"Babe
Ruth's Legs" - Sammy
Byrd, employed as pinch runner for Ruth and "Bam-Bam" for Hensley
Meulens, able to speak about five languages, but had a challenging name
for
some to pronounce.
"Banty rooster" - Casey Stengel’s nickname for Whitey Ford because of
his style and attitude.
BOOKENDS:
Speaking of nicknames, “the Lip” was the favored one for Leo Durocher
for
obvious reasons. To read all about the feisty and sometimes outrageous
manager,
pick up a copy of Leo Durocher by
celebrated author Paul Dickson (Bloomsbury, $28.00, 304 pages). It is a
fabulous read with all kinds of new information. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
=======================================
Just
a sampling from The
Ultimate Yankee Book,
fall 2017
Pre-order
from Amazon
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Harvey Frommer, a professor at
Dartmouth College in the MALS program, is in his 41st year of writing books. A noted oral historian
and sports journalist, he is the author of 43 sports books including
the
classics: New York City Baseball, 1947-1957″ and Shoeless Joe and
Ragtime
Baseball,as well as his acclaimed Remembering Yankee Stadium and most
notable
and best-selling Remembering Fenway Park.
A
link to purchase autographed copies of Frommer Sports
Books is at: http://frommerbooks.com/