The
Rivalry: Yanks vs Red Sox
By Harvey
Frommer
Babe Ruth at Fenway
Back then, as the story
goes, there was a get-together in the
woods. A Red Sox fan, a Cub fan and a
Pirate fan were there. They all wondered when their team would make it
to the
World Series again and decided to call on God for advice.
The Cub fan asked first:
“When will my team return to the
World Series?”
And God replied: “Not in
your lifetime.”
The fan of the Pirates
popped the same question.
And God replied: “Not in
your children’s lifetime.”
The
Red Sox fan, who had listened
quietly, finally worked up the nerve to ask: “When will my beloved Red
Sox
return to the World Series?”
God thought for a moment
and then answered: “Not in My
lifetime.”
But that answer was incorrect. As all
of us know, the guys from Fenway broke the “Curse of the Bambino” in
2004. For six straight seasons through
2003, the Sox
finished second to the hated New York Yankees, a combined total of 58 ½
games
behind. So it was a big deal for the BoSox to show up their rivals from
the Big
Apple.
Nowadays, the tables
seemed to have turned and favor the Sox
in a bitter rivalry that goes back to the first time the teams met on
May 7,
1903 at the Huntington Avenue Grounds in Boston.
They weren't the Yankees and Red Sox then.
They had more geographically correct names: the Highlanders who played
on the
heights of Manhattan; and the Pilgrims – a nod to their New England
heritage.
The competition
has always been much
more than a baseball team representing Boston going against a baseball
team
representing New York. It is a match-up between the provincial
capital of
New England and the mega-municipality of New York competing
The
New York Yankees are the sizzle and the steak, the glamour and the
glitz, the
most successful franchise in baseball history, perhaps in all sports
history. Through the years, winning has been as much a part of
Yankee
baseball as their monuments and plaques, as much as the pinstriped
uniforms,
the iconic intertwined “N” and “Y” on the baseball
caps.
The
rivalry is the Babe and Bucky and Butch and Boo. It is Carl Yastrzemski
trotting out to left field at Fenway Park after failing at the plate
against
the Yankees, cotton sticking out of his ears to muffle the noise of Sox
fans.
The rivalry is Mickey Mantle slugging a 440-foot double at Yankee
Stadium then
tipping his cap to the Red Sox bench.
It
is Carlton Fisk's headaches from the tension he felt coming into Yankee
Stadium. The rivalry is Ted Williams spitting, Reggie Jackson
jabbering, Luis
Tiant hurling for New York and Boston and smoking those fat Cuban
cigars.
It is the Yankees' Mickey Rivers leaping away from an exploding
firecracker
thrown into the visitors' dugout at Fenway.
It
is the Scooter, the Green Monster, and the Hawk, Yaz and the Commerce
Comet,
Mombo and King Kong. It is Joe Dee versus the Thumper. It is Roger
Maris
hitting number 61 off Red Sox pitcher Tracy Stallard, breaking the
Babe’s
record.
It's
Ted Williams spitting, Reggie Jackson gesturing, Billy Martin punching,
Roger
Clemens throwing inside.
The rivalry has been characterized by some of
baseball's
craziest moments. Incidents, anger, rage, occasionally violence, all
have been
there through all the long decades. Sometimes it has been triggered by
personality clashes. At other times the trigger has simply been the
"Blood
Feud."
The
Yankees of New York versus the Red Sox of Boston is the greatest,
grandest,
strongest, longest-lasting rivalry in baseball history – a competition
of
images, teams, cities, styles, ballparks, fans, media, culture, dreams,
and
bragging rights.
What
happened on
Since
that “cash deal” all sorts of Red Sox misfortunes followed. Just a few
include:
losing Game 7 of the World Series in 1946, 1967, 1975, 1986 (the ball
dribbling
through Bill Buckner's legs in Game 6); being done in by the Aaron
Boone
eleventh inning home run on October 17, 2003 that gave the Yankees a
stunning
6-5 come-from-behind triumph over the Bostons just five outs away from
winning
the American League championship.
And
the wind-blown homer that forever made the guy who hit it always
remembered in
New England as "Bucky F_____g Dent and adding another pennant playoff
loss
to one suffered through in 1948; Pedro Martinez and Don Zimmer, age 72,
going
at it and the Yankee coach tumbling end-over-end a few times, and more.
MIKE
STANLEY: Regardless of where
either team is in the standings, people mark off the Yankee-Red Sox
playing
dates on their calendars,
It's
the Charles River versus the East
River, Boston Common against Central Park, the Green Monster versus the
Monuments, Red Sox Rule versus Yankees Suck, WFAN versus WEEI, the New York Daily News matched up against
the Boston Herald.
It’s
"I LOVE NEW YORK, TOO - IT'S THE YANKEES I HATE" versus
“BOSTON CHOKES. BOSTON SUCKS. BOSTON DOES IT IN STYLE.”
Part
of the rivalry is the glaring contrast in the images
of the teams. The New York Yankees are the glitz and glitter that comes
with
being the most successful franchise in baseball history. The Bronx
Bombers
boast an “A” list legacy that includes: Yogi Berra, Bill Dickey, Joe
DiMaggio
Whitey Ford, Lou Gehrig, Goose Gossage, Ron Guidry, Reggie Jackson,
Derek Jeter
Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, Don Mattingly, Thurman Munson, Vic Raschi,
Allie
Reynolds, Mariano Rivera, Phil Rizzuto, Alex Rodriguez, Babe Ruth...
Through the
years, winning has been as
much a part of Yankee baseball as the monuments and plaques in deep
center
field, as much as the pinstriped uniforms, the iconic intertwined “N”
and “Y”
on the baseball caps.
The
Sox have had also had their share of stars like Cy Young, Joe Cronin,
Ted
Williams, Dom DiMaggio, Mel Parnell, Johnny Pesky, Carlton Fisk, Carl
Yastrzemski, Dwight Evans, Jim Rice, Wade Boggs (he also played for the
Yankees) Babe Ruth (also a Yankee), Roger Clemens (same), Manny
Ramirez, Pedro
Martinez, Nomar Garciaparra, Big Papi.
MEL
PARNELL: The Red Sox Yankee
rivalry was one of the most unique things in baseball history,
especially in my
time. We were criticized as being a country club ball club being
pampered by
Mr. Yawkey, our owner. The differences in our ball clubs, Yankees and
Red Sox,
were that we were probably a step slower than the Yankees. They also
had more
depth.
LOU
PINIELLA: I was always aware of the mix at Fenway Park. There was
always a lot
of excitement in that small park that made it special. You might have
20,000
Red Sox fans at Fenway and 15,000 Yankee fans. Their rivalry helped our
rivalry. It excited the players who had to respond to it.
MICHAEL DUKAKIS: (former governor of Massachusetts and 1988 presidential nominee): The games between the Yankees and Red Sox are always intense. I get a sense that the players feel it too. No matter who they are, or where they come from, how long or little they’ve been with the team, there’s something about those series.
This weekend another
series, another match up. Times
change. Rosters change. The rivalry continues.
=
About
Harvey Frommer:
One of the most prolific and
respected sports journalists and oral historians in the United States,
author
of the autobiographies of legends Nolan Ryan, Tony Dorsett, and Red
Holzman,
Dr. Harvey Frommer is an expert on the New York Yankees and has
arguably
written more books, articles and reviews on the New York Yankees than
anyone. In 2010, he was selected by the City of New York as
an
historical consultant for the re-imagined old Yankee Stadium site,
Heritage
Field. A professor for more than two decades in the MALS program at
Dartmouth
College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their alumni
magazine.
His
ULTIMATE YANKEE BOOK debuts this fall. PRE ORDER from AMAZON:
http://www.frommerbooks.com/ultimate-yankees.html .