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  • : November 7, 2008

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    From Our Archives: Looking Back at the 1939 Yankees

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    So here was the deal: Shortly after this team opened the season, management learned it\'s second best player, the second best player in the history of the franchise, had contracted an incurable, deadly disease. Then the team\'s best player, the best young player in all of baseball, went on the disabled list for a month. The lineup had to struggle along with, by far, the worst hitting first baseman and shortstop in baseball. Yet it won the pennant in a romp. Power, On-base percentage and pitching were the ingredients New York Yankees manager Joe McCarthy mixed to create the most dominant team in baseball:

    1939 New York Yankees

    106-45 (.702)

    Manager: Joe McCarthy

    Won AL pennant by 17 games over the Boston Red Sox.

    World Series: Swept the Cincinnati Reds in four games.

    1939 promised to be an exciting year for New York, home of the World\'s Fair, the All-Star Game, and the three-time defending champion Yankees. But the season began tragically for the Bronx Bombers. The death of long-time owner Colonel Jacob Ruppert was followed by the news that Lou Gehrig\'s streak of 2,130 consecutive games was coming to an end because of a terminal illness. Even worse, star centerfielder Joe DiMaggio was lost for a month after tearing muscles in his right leg a week into the season. But spurred on by the intensity of manager Joe McCarthy and DiMaggio\'s unmatched production down the stretch, the Yankees overcame their early-season obstacles to win 106 games and sweep the Cincinnati Reds for their fourth consecutive World Series victory.

    Much less celebrated than their 1927 counterparts, the 1939 Yankees dominated their league to an almost equal extent; during the year, sportswriters constantly referred to the rest of the league as "The Seven Dwarfs." In every season from 1936 through 1939, the Yankees led the league in both runs scored and fewest runs allowed. So infuriated were opposing owners that they passed a rule after the season forbidding any American League team from trading with the previous season\'s pennant winner. Within a year, the rule was appealed; after dropping to third place in 1940, the Yankees rebounded to win the pennant in 1941.

    Joe McCarthy\'s \'39 squad continued the Yankees\' proud tradition of excellence. The Yankees led the league in runs, home runs and slugging average; five regulars batted over .300 (not including pitcher Red Ruffing, who hit .307 and drove in twenty runs in 114 at bats). They made 41 fewer errors than any other team, while their pitchers\' 3.31 earned run average also topped the league; no other American League team had an ERA below four runs a game.

    McCarthy\'s regular lineup featured five players who hit over .300 and four who drove in over 100 runs, but the big star was indubitably Joe DiMaggio. In only his fourth big-league season, the "Yankee Clipper" hit 30 homers, drove in 126 runs, and flirted with .400 for most of the year. Were it not for a September eye ailment that lowered his batting average to a career-high .381, DiMaggio might well have beaten Ted Williams to the magic plateau.

    The only challenge to the Bombers\' dominance came in early July. As Lou Gehrig stood in front of a Yankee Stadium crowd and pronounced himself the "luckiest man on the face of the earth," the Yankees were in the midst of an uncharacteristic slump, losing nine out of twelve, including a five-game sweep at the hands of the second-place Red Sox. But they regained their form after the All-Star break, winning 35 out of their next 49 games to knock Boston out of the pennant race for good. DiMaggio led the charge by hitting .405 with 14 homers and 52 RBIs in the month of August alone.

    A fine supporting cast surrounded the Yankees\' stellar centerfielder. Future Hall-of-Fame catcher Bill Dickey followed Joe D. in the Yanks lineup, hitting .302 with 24 homers and 105 RBI. All-Stars Red Rolfe, Charlie Keller, George Selkirk, and Joe Gordon did their share of hitting as well, each having career years. Pinch-hitter Tommy Henrich, later dubbed "Old Reliable" for his penchant for getting big hits in key situations, found his way into 99 games and drove in 57 runs.

    Twenty-one game winner Red Ruffing headed a Yankee pitching staff which featured some of the more consistent winners in the game. Ruffing, who was chosen to start the All-Star Game, hurled a league-best five shutouts before finishing the year with a respectable 2.94 ERA. Following Ruffing in the rotation was thirteen game-winner Atley Donald and twelve game-winners Monte Pearson, Bump Hadley and Lefty Gomez, who were just as tough. Playing in an era before specialized relief pitching became the norm, Johnny Murphy posted a league\'s best nineteen saves, while sometimes relievers Steve Sundra and Oral Hildebrand earned eleven and ten victories, respectively.

    LINEUP

    Frank Crosetti, SS

    .233, 10 HR, 56 RBI, 11 SB

    Red Rolfe,3B

    .329, 14 HR, 80 RBI

    Charlie Keller, RF

    .334, 11 HR, 83 RBI

    Joe DiMaggio, CF

    .381, 30 HR, 126 RBI

    Bill Dickey, C

    .302, 24 HR, 105 RBI

    George Selkirk, LF

    .306, 21 HR, 101 RBI

    Joe Gordon, 2B

    .284, 28 HR, 111 RBI, 11 SB

    Babe Dahlgren, 1B

    .235, 15 HR, 89 RBI

    Pitching Staff

    Starters



    Red Ruffing

    21-7, 2.94 ERA, 233 IP

    Lefty Gomez

    12-8, 3.41 ERA

    Bump Hadley

    12-6, 2.98 ERA

    Atley Donald

    13-3, 3.71 ERA

    Monte Pearson

    12-5, 4.50 ERA

    Oral Hildebrand

    10-4, 3.05 ERA

    BULLPEN

    Johnny Murphy

    3-6, 4.43 ERA, 19 SV

    Steve Sundra

    11-1, 2.75 ERA

    Marius Russo

    8-3, 2.41 ERA

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