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Submissions

Yankees vs. Red Sox: Baseball's Greatest Rivalry

by Harvey Frommer


The New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox battle for first place in the American League East this Memorial Day 2002 weekend. At least that is what they say in Boston.

It's really far too early to make much of this upcoming series. For as everyone knows, it's a long season and the Yankees always break the hearts of the Red Sox and their loyal rooters. But in Red Sox country, hope springs eternal. You've got to give them that.

Until a few years ago, I was a life-long New Yorker. And then, I moved on to New England. Back in the Big Apple, I was always a witness and a keenly interested onlooker to the rivalry between the Yankees and the Red Sox. In fact, I even wrote a book about it, "Baseball's Greatest Rivalry". But it wasn't until I moved up into the mountains of New Hampshire that I realized via chance encounters, e-mails, letters, phone calls, general store conversations just how important "THE RIVALRY" is in New England.

But I am not alone in this reaction. Don Zimmer, involved with the national pastime now for more than half a century and the current confidante of Yankee manager Joe Torre, shares my view.

Zim was the manager of the Red Sox when Bucky Dent hit what they refer to in New England as "the home run". "I didn't even know there was a big rivalry until I came to the Red Sox," Zimmer says. "But I found out soon enough. I was coaching at third base in 1974 at Yankee Stadium, and the fans were throwing so much crap on the field that I had to put on a helmet for protection. The players don't really hate each other," Zimmer adds. "But the rivalry is there especially in New England - and it won't go away. It's really a rivalry of fans."

It is the fans, but it also is the media, the cities, and the players. It is a competition of two teams, two cities, two ballparks, two styles of living. Its roots reach back to Babe Ruth and Harry Frazee.

And the fact that both teams have been in the American League since the beginning of the century doesn't hurt the rivalry either.

Part of what makes up the rivalry is the different images of the two teams. The New York Yankees are the most successful franchise in baseball history, a team of legends such as Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Bill Dickey, Whitey Ford, Yogi Berra, Phil Rizzuto, Thurman Munson, Vic Raschi, Allie Reynolds, Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, Reggie Jackson. The list does not end. Winning has been as much a part of Yankee baseball as the pinstriped uniforms, the monuments and plaques.

Much less successful, much more human and vulnerable, the Boston Red Sox are a franchise whose fans seemed to regard winning at times not as important as beating the Yankees.

It's the Charles River versus the East River; Boston Common against Central Park. The rivalry is also a rivalry of the Babe and Bucky and Butch. It is Carl Yastrzemski during a game against the Yankees trotting out to left field at Fenway with cotton sticking out of his ears to muffle the boos of disheartened Sox fans.

It is the Scooter, the Green Monster, and the Hawk. It is Rich McKinney on April 22, 1972 making four errors on ground balls to third base that figured in Boston's scoring of nine runs to defeat the Yankees, 11-7. It is Joe D versus The Thumper, Yaz and the Commerce Comet, Mombo and King Kong.

The rivalry is Mickey Mantle slugging a 440-foot double at Yankee Stadium in 1958 and tipping his cap to the Red Sox bench. It's Williams spitting, Jackson gesturing and Billy Martin punching. Carlton Fisk's headaches from the tension he felt coming into Yankee Stadium. It is also the Yankees' Mickey Rivers jumping out of the way of an exploding firecracker thrown into the visitors' dugout at Fenway.

The rivalry consists of signs which read 'I LOVE NEW YORK, TOO, IT IS THE YANKEES I HATE,' or 'BOSTON CHOKES. BOSTON SUCKS. BOSTON DOES IT IN STYLE.'

Who knows what this weekend has in store as baseball's greatest rivalry takes center stage?

» Harvey Frommer is the author of 30 sports books, including "The New York Yankee Encyclopedia, "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," and "Growing Up Baseball" with Frederic J. Frommer. His A YANKEE CENTURY will be published by Berkley in October 2002, and you can see more of his work at http://www.dartmouth.edu/~frommer/sport.htm

Also by Harvey Frommer
» Celebrating Hank Greenberg
» Bobby Thomson's Famous Homer Lives On
» Remembering the Yankee Clipper: Joe DiMaggio
» Shoeless Joe Remains a Scapegoat
» The Mets Have Always Been Amazing

» More submissions


Copyright © 2002 by Harvey Frommer. Posted May 23, 2002.