The end came for Clay Buchholz with one out in the fourth inning last night and the Sox trailing 1-0 on a first inning home run by Alex Rodriquez.
Manager John Farrell whistles for the cavalry….
In a game that can only be described as disappointing the 2015 Red Sox showed well…..not much.
What Buchholz did was predictable. It was his 17th career outing against the Yankees and he entered with a record of 5-8 against the pinstripers and an ERA of 6.08. The night ended with him 5-9 and that ERA still north of six!
And now help me here. I know I’m getting curmudgeonly as I tip toe into the winter of my days, but I do not recall a big game that he has gone out and simply got er done! Does anybody out there remember him winning a big game?
In that vein he’s 73-51 in his career, pretty good on the surface. But he’s 29-29 in July, August and September. Pretty mediocre! Oh and he’s 0-0 with a 4.21 ERA pitching 25 2/3 innings in five post season starts. Not exactly what one could call “step up” performances.
It actually all came undone in the fourth. A couple of boots in the infield; even one by everybody’s favorite dirt dog, Brock Holt!
I don’t know it just seemed to be an overall non-competitive effort across the board. I did not see the fire you thought would be present. It is after all the Yankees and there is after all the chance to really climb into this thing.
The next two days will tell us a lot……Win or lose I’ll invoke the words of Coach Raul Jose Velez….”JUST COMPETE!”
And as for Clay??? History tells us this……
Maybe tonight, this kid will step up and put his own stamp on the Red Sox/Yankee rivalry.
Talented 22 year old southpaw, Eduardo Rodriquez, will make his ninth career start tonight at Fenway!
Oh and by the way….Am I being picky here or is a professional sports trainer really supposed to look like this?
And so it is on this day, in Fenway history, July 11, 2015
I had tickets to last nights game at Fenway. To be honest, despite the fact that the Sox have been playing very well, I was not all that excited about going to see Rick Porcello on the bump. I mean he has been really getting waxed most of the year and there was no reason to think that it would not continue.
Rick Porcello has pitched like a deer in the headlights; entering Wednesday nights game versus the Marlins with a 4-9 mark and a 6.08 ERA. He’d surrendered 16 homers in 95 innings.
However, Tuesday morning I was listening to WEEI and I caught their segment with Curt Schilling. John Dennis, who courageously and quite publically has confronted some defining moments of his own, asked a very insightful question. “Schil…..Is it possible that tonight is a career defining moment for Porcello?” Dennis added the caveat that it was not a big game in the post season sense or even in a “gotta have it” sense. But……
Schilling responded; “Many of my defining moments came within games…….Nobody even knew about them…….I drew on them throughout my career.” He then added “This is as much pressure as there is……he’ll put it on himself.” Upon further review……I was now looking forward to my Wednesday night trip to Fenway.
John Hancock Towers; old and new.
So I made my way in. It was a solo flight as big bro had lots of work to do preparing for his move (That’s another story for another day). I found a meter on Bay State Road and headed over the Brookline Ave Bridge.
The Hancock brothers from the haaaaaht of Kenmore Square.
Jumped in a little early,
grabbed some BP
and had a great conversation with Frank.
Frank’s first trip to Fenway was in 1949 when he saw Mike Garcia of the Indians pitch against Mel Parnell. His uncle, who had just returned from the Navy, brought him to his first ever game.
A retired Boston cop, Frank has been working at Fenway for 10 years and his greatest thrill was an afternoon spent sitting with Johnny Pesky, a boyhood hero, talking about the greatest of games played in this the greatest park.
I walked through the guts of Fenway, which I have not done in quite some time and reminded myself that this lovely ballpark is, in and of itself, also a museum.
The walkway up to a bleacher section pays tribute to a speech made at Fenway by FDR in November of 1944. It was his last ever campaign speech.
The game began and my focus was on Porcello as I wanted to see how he would respond to the pressure, self imposed or otherwise.
He struggled with his command early but made a few pitches when he had to and with some defensive help got through three innings without giving up a run.
A Marlins error and a two run rocket shot into the Monster seats by Ortiz, gave Porcello and the Sox a 4-0 lead. It all looked good, until……It wasn’t!
In the fourth, he was bombarded with five straight hard hit singles and just like that it was 4-2 the bases loaded and one out. A nice play by Sandoval at third led to a force out at home and then Porcello himself ended the inning with a nice play on a hard comebacker. It was in this inning where Porcello’s defining moment may have come.
Red Sox pitching coach Carl Willis visited Porcello in the fourth inning with the bses jammed and one out. He had just surrendered five straight hard hit singles and the Marlins had cut the lead in half to 4-2.
Following this visit, Porcello set down eight straight Marlin hitters. EIGHT STRAIGHT! He did it by finding great command of a curve ball which had been non competitive and a slider which he used for consecutive swinging strikeouts on the last two hitters he faced in the sixth.
Now I’m not foolish enough to think that all is well inside the heart and mind of Rick Porcello. There’s a long way to go and the Marlins without Giancarlo Stanton are an abysmal hitting group.
BUT……
Last night he battled through a situation which, throughout this year has been an albatross.
Did he find within a defining moment which he can call upon down the road? Only he and he alone can answer that question……
But the Sox have won nine of 11 and the Yanks are coming. I like the feel of that!
And so it is on this day in history, Porcello defining time, July 9, 2015
On Thursday last I sat in Camden Yards with my son and watched the Texas Rangers battle the Orioles. We watched most of the game from third row seats just beyond third base. We then walked around a bit to capture the experience of the game from various places throughout the park.
Camden Yards from the right field bleachers.
It was a scoreless game and as I watched from this vantage point I was once again struck with the perfection which permeates this game that I so love.
Perfection is defined as; “the condition, state, or quality of being free or as free as possible from all flaws or defects…….Flawlessness.” And there are manifestations of perfection in and throughout the game of baseball. Where are they?
Let’s start with the 90 foot distance between bases. Next time you watch a game, take note of the ground ball outs to the infield. You will notice this; a big league player running as fast as he can after hitting a ground ball to an infielder will be thrown out by just about a step virtually every time. That is of course if and only if, the infielder fields the ball, flawlessly, throws the ball flawlessly, the first baseman (or playing covering first) is flawless in his receiving of the throw and the umpire is flawless in making the call.
The next time you watch, contemplate how different the game would be if the bases were 85 or 95 feet apart or for that matter even 89 or 91 feet apart.
Armando Gallarraga (ball in glove) fields a throw covering first. Three of the four flawless components were executed on this particular play. Guess which one was not.
As you watch the outfielders position themselves, take note of the distance between them and indeed how much ground those three guys cover. A batted ball must be perfectly placed in the proverbial gaps to elude them.
And that can and will only happen by a ball that is perfectly struck or “barreled up” as they say in baseball parlance. Balls that are not “squared up”, another term for perfectly struck, will simply not get into those gaps between the outfielders. The difference of fractions of inches where the ball meets the bat is the difference between a viciously hit line drive and a pop-up.
Pedro lets one go.
How many times throughout the course of the game is a pitcher called upon to execute the perfect pitch? The ball that he puts right where he wants inducing, the rolled over ground ball, the pop-up or that swing and miss. The battle between pitcher and batter is the ultimate chess match and is at its best in a low scoring game in which every time a batter reaches base, the game is in the balance! Each pitch is the constant pursuit of perfection.
Serenity is defined as “the state of being calm, peaceful and untroubled.”
One might think that serenity and the sweet perfection of baseball are incompatible incongruities that could not possibly co-exist let alone have one give birth to the other. The definition suggests that serenity is an inner journey coming to fruition from self reflection and evaluation; reached through hours of meditation, and all those self help exercises designed to calm the vexed spirit All may well be true but I recommend giving a shot at simply immersing oneself in the sweet perfection of America’s Pastime.
Or you could consider this….
There is sweet perfection in the birth of the day. It is a veritable symphony of life.
The sun peeks…..
Morning birds sing…..
The land awakes…..
Giving rise to a new day…..
Born of light…..
And in its serenity gives birth to that new day which brings new hope…..
Born of the simple complexity of life…..
And in the midst of our flawed existence we set about, seeking that ever elusive, sweet perfection and often elusive serenity.
Tonight, in a “lyric little bandbox” in Boston’s Back Bay, one sweet perfection will descend upon another.
And in the doing will bring a serenity to those open and willing.
Which may be more than we could imagine which is perhaps why, as recently as three years ago, the total attendance of Major League Baseball games was more than, football, basketball, soccer and hockey games COMBINED!
Seeking serenity through sweet perfection, and in it…hope!
I’m not sure which activity produces more serenity because the attendance stats on sunrises and sunsets were unavailable at press time.
So I suggest….Try both!
Oh and speaking of new days, the Red Sox enter tonight’s game winners of seven of their last 10 contests, the only AL East team above .500 in their last 10 games. And they are coming off a great win Sunday.
Hanley Ramirez “golfs” a two run homer which was the difference in the Red Sox 5-4 win Sunday against Houston.
Does that mean, could it be, have they turned that proverbial corner?
Good Morning and a Happy 4th to you all! Before I begin with a heartfelt thank you to my friend Jordan Rich who hosted me in his studio on WBZ Radio to talk about the 1975 Red Sox. My son Josh made his Boston radio debut and Jordan’s son Andrew was in the producers booth so it was quite a night. Jordan will be emceeing all the events at the Esplanade in Boston tonight.
Today the United States celebrates its 239th birthday. Wow, that’s a lot of candles. Now I don’t want to be a stick in the mud, nor do I want to diminish the accomplishments of those 56 guys who autographed that spectacular document, however the real birthday of this great nation is June 21st! What? Yup, it’s true.
In fact it’s June 21, 1788, for that was the day that the great state of New Hampshire ratified the Constitution of the United States making it the law of the land and creating the entity of the United States. But that’s OK, I don’t always celebrate my birthday when it really occurred, in fact sometimes I don’t think I was really born until a November night 36 years after I got here but that’s another story for another time.
Best state motto in the country!
Last night the Red Sox stumbled, bumbled and fumbled their way to a 12-8, 10 inning loss to the Astros. Today they will take on those same Astros at 1:30 with the ever erratic Clay Buchholz on the hill.
Well this morning I did a little July 4th research on the Sox. After all, there is nothing more American than baseball on the Fourth right?
So here’s the results of my short July 4th research foray. In this century the Red Sox are 7-7 on July Fourth! They did not play on the Fourth last year. Hmmmm, don’t remember why so I’ll guess rain was a factor. Anyway, they have played six of the games at Fenway and are 3-3 and eight games on the road and they are 4-4! Now the optimist in the group will say that they have been the model of consistency, the realist might say they are very mediocre!
The last time the Sox played on July 4th was in 2013 (Nice Year!) They pummeled the Padres for 18 hits, at Fenway, in an 8-2 rout. The winning pitcher that day was Allen Webster! Who?
Allen Webster was acquired from the Dodgers in that get rid of all those guys trade in 2012. He was 1-2 with the Red Sox in 2013 and was traded to the Diamondbacks as part of the Wade Miley deal. His one Sox win came on July4th, 2013.
After discovering the mediocrity of the Red Sox on July 4th in the 21st century, I decided to look at how they made out on our country’s birthday in years they were pennant winners.
Well here goes….Their record in the years they were AL Champs is 12-6! From 1903 through 1946, the played doubleheaders on July 4th each pennant winning years with the exception of 1915. (No baseball allowed on Sundays in Boston back in those days)
In 1946,1918 and 1916 they played the Philadelphia Athletics in Philly in ’46’ and ’18’ and at Fenway in ’16’. Nice touch I think, Boston, Philly, July 4th!!!! I LIKE IT!
Shibe Park/ Connie Mack Stadium 1909-1976 home to the Athletics and the Phillies.
As I clicked my way through July 4ths I stumbled, bumbled and fumbled on to something worth passing on….
Although the 1915 World Champion Boston Red Sox did not play on July 4th that year, I found it interesting what they did do! Now before you go on…….Take a deep breath!
On June 26th they split a doubleheader with the Yankees at Fenway. The following day no games, Sunday. On Monday they split another doubleheader with those same Yankees. They played a single game on Tuesday beating New York 4-3 in 10 innings.
Philadelphia arrived in Boston Wednesday and the Sox swept a double-header. That made nine games in seven days. And it gets better!
Rain claimed Thursday and Friday forcing a double-header on Saturday July 3rd, a split! A train ride to Washington on Sunday the Fourth, and then double-headers on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday against the Senators, all sweeps by the Red Sox.
Another breath!
Thursday it was the train to Detroit for a respite, four straight days of only single games. The last one was a 10 inning game which they won 15-12 following which they boarded a train for Cleveland to play, you guessed it, a double-header the next two days making in 24 games in 18 days!!
But in the immortal words of the lovely Miss Vito in My Cousin Vinny, “There’s moah!”
Breath!
A single game on Thursday, a train ride to Chicago Friday for a double-header Saturday and then another respite! They only played single games on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Following their third win in a row Tuesday, they took the train to St. Louis and beat the Browns Wednesday, Thursday and Friday before playing double-headers both Saturday and Sunday! They won the first game of Saturday’s twin bill, lost the night-cap and the first game on Sunday before closing out the road trip with a 1-1 tie; Ran out of sunlight!
WHEW!!
From June 26th until July 25th they played a total of 34 games including 12 double-headers in four cities. Oh, and there were six days in that stretch in which they did not play and on two of them they were on a train.
The longest game took them 3:06 minutes to play and that was the 10 inning 15-12 game in Detroit. The shortest, 1:35 minutes.
Smoky Joe Wood lost to Cleveland 3-2 in an hour and 35 minutes in the first game of he July 14, 1915 double-header. He gave up 13 hits walked one and struck out only one.
So what does this all mean? Hmmmmmm, not a damn thing; except that the Red Sox will take the field today and play the Astros at 1:30.
But I have an idea. How about a new tradition for major league baseball? Each year the Red Sox and the Phillies play each other on July 4th! It switches parks every year and they wear the throwback uniforms from 1915, the last time they played each other in the World Series.
1915 World Champion Boston Red Sox
Oh and on the 4th….they play a double-header!
And so it is on this day in history, July 4th 2015…..Happy Birthday America
Yesterday’s 533 mile ride on the road less traveled brought us down Interstate 26 west through a beautiful mountain drive through here.
Cherokee National Forest Tennessee
In all of my sojourns north and south, I had never driven this road and although it was cloudy with showers, there is something quite inspiring in watching the clouds spoon with mountain tops right outside your window.
Caught a glimpse of this fair city on a drive through. I had never seen it. Planned to once but life intervened and you know how that works.
Ashville North Carolina nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains is fast becoming a popular retirement spot among Baby Boomers.
We arrived in Baltimore and made our way to Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
The Babe
George Herman Ruth greets you at the main gate. George was a Baltimorean and in fact his Dad’s saloon was once located approximately where centerfield is located today. His first pro team was th minor league Baltimore Orioles from were he was purchased by the Boston Red Sox.
Josh fell in love with the place and who wouldn’t?
Josh taking in the park and the Rangers taking BP.
The Orioles retired numbers looking down on Josh, sporting his new Bird’s cap.
The Orioles retired numbers are Hall of Famers, Frank Robinson #20, Brooks Robinson #5, Earl Weaver #4, Jim Palmer #22, Eddie Murray #33 and Cal Ripken #8. And of course Jackie #42. Their spots on the façade indicate the order in which they were retired.
I attempted to coerce him to getting his picture snapped with the Oriole’s mascot but he wouldn’t bite.
He did however pose with one of Dad’s all time favorite players.
Josh and Cal
We saw a very well pitched game which is baseball at it’s best and I learned a little technology as well. Josh taught me how to take a panoramic picture with my phone. Yikes! Who knew? I thought you needed a panoramic lens for that kind of stuff.
The “panoramic view” from our seats.
The “panoramic view” from right field.
It was wonderful to watch my boy, whose passion and love for the game oozes from him, enjoy one of the games great venues. It was the bottom of the seventh and we were at the end of a looooong day. It was nothing to nothing oops, excuse me Fran, zero to zero. Josh looked at me and said “Do you want to go?’ I said “Are you sure?” “Dad we didn’t come here to see who won.”
So we strolled the half mile back to the hotel and couldn’t find the game on TV. As I was drifting off Josh said, Texas scored in the top of the ninth and as I write this in Friday’s pre dawn, I don’t know who won.
What I do know is that the game of baseball has a sweet perfection to it that is best played out in a contest in which few runs are scored. We saw no runs scored and in that sweet perfection I found serenity. Baseball has always brought to me serenity even through life’s most trying times. And last night she did it again!
In a few moments it will be off to Boston and if I may paraphrase Paul Simon, to “New England, where my heart lies.”
Tonight at midnight, I will join my good friend Jordan Rich on WBZ Radio 1030.
We will be talking about my new book, just released on June 22nd. The Red Sox of 1975!
Sooooo, if you are having trouble sleeping or if you’ve just come in from a night out or if you just want to hear some reminiscings about that great year, tune here, hear and give us a call.
It was June 4, 1989, when my son and I attended our first baseball game together. It was a Florida State League game between the Charlotte Rangers and the Winter Haven Red Sox in Port Charlotte Florida. All I can tell you about that game is that the Rangers won 4-2. Now the only reason I know that is because, as I take steps toward my retirement I am in downsize mode. Soooo I’ve been rummaging, foraging through stuff….Lots of stuff and I came across these ticket stubs with a note in them that told me what I just told you. The note said, in part, “I wish I could find the words to express to you how I felt…..It triggered so many memories of my first visit with Papa.”
This week my son and I embark upon a road trip to Boston which we will make through Baltimore where we will watch the Orioles take on the Rangers and we will, pay homage to the Babe Ruth statue. Then on Friday morning we will shuffle up to Boston.
But before we do that we will take a fork in the road through North Carolina and we will spend a couple of days chasing one of these;
through the mountains of North Carolina!
So, on Tuesday morning we left Venice Florida at 0 dark thirty to make a 3:30 tee time 467 miles away. We were 45 minutes early and played this beautiful little course tucked away near North Greenville South Carolina, right on the North Carolina border.
Dad and Josh from tee to green, at Cherokee Valley in Travelers Rest South Carolina.
The mountain views were spectacular, the golf, not bad….The company, fantastic. It had been a while since I played mountain golf and the mountain factor has to be taken into consideration when putting. I kept forgetting that part. The course, indeed the mountains, were ours and we played 18 holes in a bit over three hours.
We spent the night in quaint little Hendersonville North Carolina. Founded in 1838 it sports a population of a tad over 13,000 folks which counts among its most famous residents, Lincoln biographer and poet Carl Sandburg and Howdy Doody’s buddy, Buffalo Bob Smith.
Carl Sandburg died in Hendersonville County.
Buffalo Bob Smith and Howdy Doody. Smith retired to Hendersonville, not sure if Howdy came with him.
On Wednesday morning we headed about 20 miles west to play at Connestee Falls Golf Club in Brevard North Carolina. But before we did, we ate breakfast here…
Mikes opened as an apothecary in Hendersonville in 1882.
We teed off at 9:30 and this lovely piece of the world was one breath taking site followed by another.
The Cumberland Gap is off in the distance but a mountain haze blanketed it throughout most of the day.
I have become convinced that a key to staying young is to seek and revel in seeing and doing new things. I always will go out of my way to see something I have never seen and do something I’ve never done. That is why I never tire of the open road for a new wonder awaits literally around the next corner.
Well Wednesday unveiled new wonders to me.
Albino Squirrel.
I had never heard of or knew that there was such a thing but on the second hole Josh called to me and said, take a look and pointed. There it was; a little guy scrambling around in the rough. There are a few places in North America where they hang out so to speak; Marion Missouri, Olney Illinois, Kenton Tennessee, Exeter Ontario, Charlotte and Brevard North Carolina. I’m not sure how and why they chose these particular locations but from what I saw around Brevard North Carolina, I trust their judgment.
The coolest thing of the day however was this little event which I happened to capture on video. It will speak for itself. It occurred as we approached the 14th green.
No wait…..This was the coolest thing of the day.
Josh hammered this drive on a 524 yard hole to within 170 yards of the green which can be seen at the top of the hill. He crushed one!!!!
So on early Thursday morning we will leave early to make the 531 mile, 8 hour drive to Baltimore where Josh will see Camden Yards for the first time.
Baseball, golf, me and my boy……Nice combo!
I will leave you with this…..
When you come to a fork in the road….Take it!
Who could have said it better than Yogi?
And so it is on this day in history……July 1, 2015…..Road Trip Day III
I want to thank all of you who took the time to reach out in response to yesterday’s story about my Dad. I received emails, calls and texts. Dad’s energy literally spread yesterday from coast to coast; serving as a reminder to us all that life is lived in moments and it truly is about the energy we emit, the energy we leave and the circle of energy in which we choose to run.
A friend reached out to tell me of her Mom’s passing last December. She lives in Florida, her sister lives in Italy and Mom was in New Jersey. They simultaneously arrived in the hospital parking lot. Mom passed within an hour after they had arrived, settled in and told her it was OK and it was time for her to go and “be with Dad”. The power in those words.
Another called on his way home from a day of little league baseball All Stars. A day spent with his Dad and his son. “I was reading it and thought “how blessed are we?” A good man who knows it’s all in the moments. His all star team lived to fight another day!
Then there came an email from a long lost cousin and next week we will have lunch in Boston. We have not seen each other in almost 50 years. Dad still at work.
As for yesterday’s 18th hole at the Lake Venice Golf Club…..
I hit three balls from the tee 167 yards away. The six iron was my club of choice for this par 3 closing hole….I registered a 3 and a pair of 4’s……Not bad.
The toast….”To the Greatest Man I’ve ever known.”
And……
The Moment…..Happy birthday Mook……
And so it is on this day…..TODAY…June 28, 2015…Capture a moment.
This is a long story. I write it to you today because there are several people in my world who, are currently in the midst of hospice situations or have just come through them. Their journeys have reminded me of mine and though it occurred 17 years ago it is an experience I still draw upon. There is no greater service a human being can give to a loved one than to help them die. Thus I offer this to you in the hope that you may find a nugget which will help your journey; if you have the patience to muddle through it. It is a moving tale of life, death and above all…….it is a story of love.
“Death will claim us all and before it does, it will mark us.” R Sinibaldi
Seventeen years ago today, the Red Sox were in south Florida taking on the Florida Marlins in Pro Players Stadium, the home of the Miami Dolphins. Their lineup that night had Darren Lewis leading off in right. John Valentin (he of unassisted triple play fame) playing third and batting second. Nomah hit third, remember how good he was then? Damon Buford was the cleanup hitter and he played centerfield; I have zero recollection of him in a Red Sox uni. Troy O’Leary hit fifth and played left; he had some very nice years with the Sox. Rookie catcher Jason Varitek hit sixth and first baseman Reggie Jefferson batted seventh. Mike Benjamin (?) hit eighth and played second and Tim Wakefield pitched and batted ninth.
Nomah hit .323 and averaged 20 homers and 77 RBI a year in Boston
The Sox won that night 9-4; Nomah went 2-3 with an RBI and the immortal Mike Benjamin had a double and three RBI. Wakefield got the win to go 9-3 on the year, his 39th win of what would become 186 wins in a Red Sox uniform.
Today I tell you I remember absolutely none of this, not a smidgeon. You see, seventeen years ago today I became a man.
I had been preparing for that day for quite a while for Dad was living on borrowed time; 22 years of it to be exact. A victim of Rheumatic fever as a kid in the 1920s, a damaged mitral valve had left him with a life expectancy of “about 50”. That was before such things as penicillin, open heart surgery and valve replacements. At the age of 55 he underwent valve replacement surgery at Mass General Hospital in Boston. A stainless steel valve replaced his damaged mitral valve and he was told that he could expect to get eight years of good use from it.
The quick math equation told him that would get him to 63 and that led him to another decision; he would retire. So although his impetus for the surgery was his new position with the Social Security Administration he now knew those eight years would be spent in leisurely pursuits, golf at the top of the list.
Three generations of golfers: Dad, Yours Truly, Willie, and Eric.
Within a year he was back under the knife, following a bout of bacterial endocarditis which nearly took him and left his new valve “leaking.” He recovered and got on with his life. Eight years removed from his new valve, his heart in fact did break when he found himself in a place he never imagined he would be. In an incredible irony, my mother died on the operating table at Mass General Hospital, undergoing the exact same valve replacement procedure he had survived, twice. She too had been a victim of Rheumatic Fever in the 1920s. I can still see him in the kitchen of my childhood home hanging up the phone after speaking with McDonald’s Funeral Home; “I never thought I would be doing this” he said as he hung his head and wept.
Ray and Mary Sinibaldi in September of 1984, 6 months before Mary’s passing.
Ever the warrior, he carried on. There were the joys, trials and tribulations of life which befell he and his family. There were marriages, divorces, grandchildren and a new woman entered his life, the lovely, genteel Marie. The years ticked by, and Dad prevailed. His valve was performing wonderfully and he grew quite adept at living alone. Oh there was Pepper the cat and then Maggie the Corgi who shared his space, and then came the time when son number two appeared at his door step, beaten, battered and lost he came home to find his way, repair and reinvent.
I spent two and a half years with Dad as I worked my way through grad school and out from under the financial mountain which divorce creates. Enduring the anguish of being separated from my children, I was rewarded; for I came to know Raymond Sinibaldi, the man, I was rewarded, for my father became my mentor, my friend.
When I came in at night I would peak down the hall and hope his light was on. When it was I would give a knock and then I would sit at the end of his bed and we would talk; sometimes for just a few minutes and sometimes for an hour. We both came to look forward to those nights.
It was there where life’s truths came into focus.
In the winter of 1992 bacterial endocarditis struck again and one morning I entered his hospital room to find three doctors and three nurses tending to him, an Ambu bag on the table next to his bed. I took a seat in the corner and watched. I watched as the crises passed and he “stabilized.” For the next couple of days he was not present. Oh he was breathing and would occasional nod but it was clear that his mind, his energy were in other places. On the third morning I got out of work and drove in to find him sitting up and eating breakfast, he was back! AGAIN!
This experience gave birth to many a conversion about, you know, the big stuff. Life, death, where do we go, what happens. All the big stuff. “He was right there” he told me, “the Grim Reaper was right at that door and I told him to go way…..I told him I want one more summer of golf.” I now understood where all that energy was those couple of days and I marveled at what would prove to be a prelude to the singular most remarkable thing I have ever witnessed.
Dad came home and as my graduation approached I was ever mindful of how blessed I was that the accident of birth had delivered me to Ray and Mary Sinibaldi. A few weeks before I left, I was sitting in the rocking chair in the living room. Dad was in his chair peeling an orange. We were watching Jeopardy. As I looked at him it occurred to me that I was, at that moment, missing him. There he was, 10 feet away from me and I was missing him. “You know what Dad” I said, “What?” ” I just realized something….I will never miss you more than the day I die….If I am fortunate enough to grow old and die in my bed…I will want to talk with you about it.” He smiled and unveiled yet another one of his truths. “Son, we come into this world naked and alone and we go out naked and alone……Don’t misunderstand me, you have great loves, great relationships……It’s all part of life’s package….But in the end, there’s you.”
Finishing grad school in August , I was on my way back to Florida, to my children and to my career.
These conversations would become a part of our weekly Sunday calls and with me now 1500 miles away, I wanted to be sure that he knew that I would be there when he died. We made a deal….He would “hang on” till I got there.
In January of 1998 he somehow mustered the energy and strength to visit me in Florida. He took the time to gather us all in the living room because he wanted to show us something. He played a video tape of Andre Bocelli singing with Sarah Brightman the song Time to Say Goodbye. He told us the story of this man who had become his favorite tenor but his message was clear. “I won’t see the end of the summer” he said to me, “I’m running out of gas.” We laughed when he added, “and the Red Sox will probably win the World Series…the bastards.” We solidified our deal and the calls from then forward were poignant discussions as each of us rung every minute from every conversation. Nothing would be left off the table.
The call came on Thursday night June 18, 1998. It was my brother Willie and he was in Dad’s hospital room at Mass General. “It’s not good Ray” he said “I’m not sure he’ll make it through the night.” “Can he talk” I asked and in a moment I heard Dad’s failing voice…”When can you get here….I’m slipping.” I’m on my way Dad, I’m on my way.” The next morning the entire family was heading north up I 95!
Dad was in congestive heart failure, had been for a couple of years and it was now taking him away. The valve, which was now 22 years old, had grown ineffective and he was, in fact, in need of a heart transplant. Heart transplants are not performed on 77 year old people.
Fathers Day was Sunday and Dad actually rallied. Everyone of his grandchildren were there and visited with him, all four of his kids were there with their spouses and he was great. He was alert, he was happy, he was Papa.
Papa with all his grandkids on his 75th birthday.
Each of us siblings took turns being with Dad as the week rolled on. He was weak but he seemed to be getting better. His Doctor of 25 years was on vacation and would not be back until Thursday. I was off for the summer so I took the night shift. Everything was on hold until Dr. Hughes arrived on Thursday. Dad actually had “stabilized” and there was talk that he would be discharged at the end of the week.
Thursday morning Dr. Hughes came through the door. In their 25 years together these two men had become friends. They chatted a bit about this and that and then Dad said,” I have an idea…..I know I’m not a normal candidate for a transplant…..But…….If you have any experimental stuff you want to try, you know, you want to try an old heart in an old man, or something….I’m the guy…..You can do it.” “Ray my old friend.” Dr. Hughes began, “I would lose my license to practice if we did that…..There is a 99% chance you would not get off the table….Not the kind of odds they’re looking for to OK such a surgery…..Ray we are where you and I have talked about for a lot of years……You have stabilized, you have about 60-90 days left…….We’re going to get hospice involved…..You will be staying with Nancy (my sister)….There’s nothing more we can do but keep you comfortable.”
Although not unexpected, the finality of the words, for an instant, took my breath. The intellectual thought of Dad dying had now become all too real.
Dad looked up at Dr. Hughes and said, “So how was your vacation?” As they chatted I went to that surreal place you go when monumental life moments arrive. As Dr. Hughes was leaving the nurse arrived informing Dad that he was scheduled for a cat scan on the second floor and they needed to get him ready. They prepared him and I wheeled him down to the second floor.
We were gone about an hour and when returned to the 25th floor, the summer sun was shining brilliantly in his cleaned room. From his wide open windows, Harvard University could be seen across the north side of the Charles River and to the west the Citgo sign of Kenmore Square. As I helped him get back into bed he looked at me and said, “What do we do now?” “Anything you want Pop” I replied, “you want me to get you a hot fudge sundae, a bottle of Scotch, what do you want?” He looked me dead in the eyes and said, “I wanna die.” “You can do that too,” I said and from that moment I became witness to the singular most remarkable feat of human will and courage I have ever seen, read about, heard about or experienced.
A meeting was scheduled for Friday morning. It involved the hospital social work team, a hospice representative and of course my brother, two sisters, and I. They were looking at discharging him on Saturday or Monday and this was to line up all the proverbial ducks in the proverbial rows.
Dad had other plans!
The night came and Pop was a bit restless. He didn’t want to go to bed so he sat up in a “hospital chair” where he found it easier to breathe. The Red Sox were playing in Philly and I was struck that he didn’t want to watch the game. In fact he didn’t want the TV even on. I asked him if he wanted me to play Bocelli on the CD player and he said no to that as well. This was a surprise, he loved his opera, he loved his tenors and he loved none more than Andre Bocelli. He just wanted quiet. So I took a seat in the chair and read my book. I still remember Slaves in the Family by Edward Ball. My eyes passed over the words but I don’t think I really read that much. Dad drifted off and so did I.
It was about two hours later when I was awakened with a start as Dad was trying to get out of the chair. He was agitated and he wanted to get into bed. I helped him get to bed and within ten minutes he wanted back in the chair, so it was back in the chair where again he was able to drift off to sleep. I didn’t go back to sleep, I just watched Dad and I could see the restlessness even as he slept and I was struck at what was taking place.
“He’s dying” I said to myself; as it occurred to me that I was watching a man, my father, the most important man I would ever know, wrestle between the physical and spiritual world. Throughout his golden years he’d extended so much energy willing himself to live, he now was using all he could muster to will himself to die. I remembered what a hospice nurse once told me about people who are dying. “You can help them by reassuring them that you and all their loved ones will be OK……In a sense give them permission to go.”
It was not long before Dad was awake again with a start and struggling to get up, only this time he wanted to walk. I stood before his chair and wrapped my arms around him. “No more fight Dad” I said to him and I eased him back in his chair. “The fight’s over Pop, it’s OK….I’ll be OK….We’ll all be OK…You can stop fighting.” I kissed him on the head and eased him back in his chair. The long night was spent with Dad waking with a start and me just intercepting him, hugging him and reassuring him that all would be well and it was OK to go.
As morning approached he got back in his bed and asked me to set it so he could sit up a bit. Now comfortable he drifted off to sleep, and so did I.
We all attended Dad’s “discharge meeting” however I didn’t last. I left the meeting telling all that Dad would not be getting discharged and I went back to his room.
The specifics of that day have left me, I remember that there were med students who examined him early in the morn. And I was angry as I watched him struggle to comply with their requests, but that was Dad, teaching to the very end. And I remember Dr. Hughes coming to us late in the day and saying “He’s taken a turn for the worse….We’re going to put him on a morphine drip and keep him comfortable.”
The end was imminent!
Friday night into Saturday morning was interminably long matched only by Saturday day. The family gathered and we all sat, talked, walked and sat, talked more and sat, all waiting for the inevitable. Morning grew into afternoon and my brother Willie and his lovely wife Paula had to leave to go to a wedding which was in the city. I was leaning against the wall in the family waiting room just staring out over the city; the city that Pop so loved. My sisters and my aunt were sitting by Dad’s bedside. Gazing out at the city I had an epiphany. “He’s not going to die with a room full of people,” I thought to myself, for months, actually longer, Dad and I had talked about this very moment. My mind was clear and I knew what I had to do. It was 4 PM when I went back to the room and I said, “I’d like to be alone with Dad, do you mind giving me about an hour or so?” My sisters and Aunt graciously parted the room.
Dad had not spoken since Friday afternoon and as I took the seat beside his bed, I remembered again what a hospice nurse told me….”They will hear you to the very end.” I took his hand. “Dad” I began…. ” I want you to know how honored I am to be your son……How honored I am that we shared our birthdays…….How honored I am to carry your name……If I can grow to be half the man you are, I will die a very successful man …. I promise I will carry you with me every step of every day for the rest of my life…..We’re going to be fine Dad….We’re all gong to be fine.” And I simply held his hand and I watched him breath. He was averaging about six breaths a minute. I sat with my head resting next to his hand and in about 20 minutes, I heard a soft guttural sound come from him and then I heard his breath escape. The Mass General logo of his hospital gown was directly over his heart and I watched it flutter…..flutter again……..flutter again…….and then it was still. I looked at his face and one solitary tear fell from the corner of his eye.
He was gone. It was 4:40 PM June 27th, 1998…..I was a man!
I sat in the quiet stillness, lay my head upon the bed next to his hand and wept.
Dad was cremated and he had only two places he wanted some of his ashes spread and after that he said “I don’t care what you do with the rest of me.”His wishes were carried out and as for the “rest of me.” Well, he’s in a shrined cabinet in my home, some of him was spread at the foot of Pesky’s pole at Fenway Park. Some are on Mom’s grave in Weymouth Massachusetts. And some are in the Lake in Venice Florida in front of the 18th hole at the Lake Venice Golf Club; the last golf course he visited.
Dad’s last day on a golf course. He drove while my sister-in-law Paula and I took on my brother Willie and a friend John. Paula and I WON!!! Everyone signed the card.
Pop was one of those guys who never saw the Red Sox win the World Series. On that glorious night in October of 2004, I went to the enshrined cabinet in my house, took out his ashes and placed them upon my lap. I called my son, who was away at college and the three of us were together when Edgar Renteria grounded back to Keith Foulke making the Red Sox World Champs.
Pop’s enshrined cabinet!
This afternoon, at 4:00 PM this miserable rendition of the Red Sox will be 45 minutes away from me at Tropicana Field to take on the Rays, but I won’t really care. For tonight I will carry out a long standing tradition as I will make my way to the Lake Venice Golf Club at about 6:30. I will put on my golf shoes and I will take my 5, 6 and 7 irons, my putter and three balls. I will walk to the 18th tee and I will play it in.
And on my way in, I will look for green golf balls, but that’s another story for another day.
The 18th hole at Lake Venice Golf Club. One of Dad’s many resting places.
I will return to my living room, open Dad’s enshrined cabinet, remove Pop’s wine class and drink to him….
My Father, My Friend….The greatest man I’ve ever known!
Then I will be off to dinner for a delayed birthday celebration for his youngest grand-daughter. We will toast Papa!
Oh and Dad…….I’ve kept my promise.
Dad’s all time favorite musical piece, his choice to open his funeral service. It will take you to a peaceful place.
And so it is on this day, June 27, 2015, 17 years to the day, I became a man.
We have all heard of Whoville I presume! You know that wonderful creation of the remarkable Theodore Geisel, more commonly known as Dr. Seuss.
Well, “Whoville” took on a different flavor these past few months in a lovely little town on Florida’s gulf coast. The town is Venice which today claims home to the reigning 6A Baseball High School State Champions!
During the summer and fall of 2014 and into the winter of 2015, all of us involved in the Venice High Baseball Program were continually asked about the upcoming season. After all, we were coming off of a stretch of three straight visits to the State Final Four and back to back championship seasons of 2012 and 2013! We heard things like, “Boy what a great run you guys had.” Or “A little bit of a building year coming up?” It seemed clear to those not in the know, that the Venice High School Baseball program was facing a paradigm shift for the 2015 season. And in fairness to all those folks, their questions appeared natural. After all, the talent which left Venice High School following the 2014 season are playing on college diamonds throughout the state of Florida from JUCOs to the 5th ranked University of Florida, to D-1 schools throughout the southeast and into the organization of the Boston Red Sox! They are not only playing, they are making impactful, significant contributions to their new teams!
Therefore those not in the know lowered their expectations for the 2015 season. What those “not in the know” didn’t know was that the 2015 season began in the weight room in the summer of 2014, literally days after the 2014 season ended. What those not in the know didn’t know was that it was during that time that the slogan for 2015 was born; the slogan which you will find on the Venice High School Baseball web site which says simply “when names change and expectations don’t….results won’t.” What those not in the know, didn’t know was that their continued question about who was going to replace this guy and who was going to replace that guy, was creating energy and started a fire. A fire that began as a slow burn, begin to spread and would build to raging inferno engulfing the state of Florida, claiming its last victim last Saturday night in Jet Blue Park!
What those not in the know didn’t know was their questions, their lowered expectations, their seeming acceptance of a lowered paradigm gave birth to Whoville, a small little baseball community of 56 inhabitants which prepared to take on the baseball world of Florida!
As the season unfolded and wins began to pile up, more and more people began to show up in our press box and more and more questions began to be asked. The main one being, “What the devil is Whoville?” Apparently these media types never read Dr. Seuss! I would often simply say, “you’re looking at it’”
On Sunday, as I sat around the house talking with friends and family up north, folks who had peeked in on Whoville throughout the year and got caught up in it. I began to absorb a bit of “what had just happened.” And I began to think….”What the devil is Whoville?
Whoville is….
A marine, a new kid and two old guys who share a passion for the game and the young men they mentor.
Guys named Dwayne, and Josh and Mike and Tim and Bryon and Rob and Rich; Indians all, who take Tuesday night rides to Miami or Hillsboro County or some God forsaken place in the middle of the state to gather a scouting report which may never be needed!
Whoville is a group of young men who had the toughest assignment in all of baseball and that is to prepare for something every day which may not happen and most often doesn’t. When called upon, they will be asked to perform a task that is usually in a key situation and in fact could often be when the game is on the line. These players are charged with the primary responsibility of being good teammates and as these young men battled each other for time on the field, and struggled through some difficult times, learning some of life’s toughest lessons, through it all they remained the best teammates they could be!
Whoville is 2015 state champions Ryan Gumbs, Ryan Dinka, Josh Evans, Jacob Louke, Marcus Tarrantino, Austin Collins, Jacob Zito and Evan Carvalho.
Carvalho, Gumbs, Collins, Tarrentino, Louke, Dinka and Kragel.
Whoville is three guys who were not on the post season roster at all yet never stopped working whether in the bull pens, or in inter squads, performing the thankless tasks that those not in the know do not see but which are essential to the success of any baseball team. They hid in the bathroom of the bullpen at Jet Blue during the weekend’s first lightning delay simply because they were not going to take the risk of not being allowed back on the field and they wanted to be there.
Whoville is 2015 state champions Eric Brown, Tyler Dumont, Matt Blow.
Brownie
Blow and Evans.
Dumont.
Jakob “Baked” Zito
Whoville is an exuberant young man who exudes a joy of life which is simply infectious; willing to do whatever was needed of him, he earned the respect of fellow Whoville residents by always preparing! And he hit the bomb of the year at our home field.
Whoville is 2015 State Champion Riley Buckmaster.
Big Buck
Whoville is a guy who made the transition from the infield to the outfield without batting an eye and with the words, “whatever you need from me coach.” And he made that transition as smooth as silk making what some have called the greatest catch a Venice outfielder has ever made and he was a consistent contributor with his bat!
Whoville is your Indian in left field……2015 State Champion Tyler Gardner
Tyler Gardner
Whoville is a leader both on and off the diamond! A young man who holds the distinction of lettering in three varsity sports! A player whose contributions on the field can be measured with great defense, key hits, unselfish play and whose contributions off the field are immeasurable.
Whoville is your Indian in centerfield……2015 state champion co-captain, Langston Provitt!
Langston goes and gets in in the first inning!
Whoville is a young man whose outfield play last year brought him to the varsity team during the playoff run and which continued to blossom this year. He was on fire during championship weekend and on Friday night when our season hung in the balance and a fly ball was hit to right field, I immediately said to myself, that’s a good thing and we all saw why!!!! Yet another runner thrown out at the plate!
Whoville is your Indian in right field…….2015 state champion Brent Killam!
Killam scores
Whoville is a man who gives countless hours to this program, who is a well of knowledge about playing the outfield, running the bases, bunting the baseball and life. A bright light to guide your boys!
Whoville is a freshman who arrived on the scene with the savvy and confidence that belied his tender age; which was exhibited by a play in the state semi-final game that had those in the know say simply, did you see that?
Whoville is your Indian at third base…..2015 State Champion Mitch Donofrio!
Mitch Donofrio
Whoville is sophomore arrival who began to harness the energy of a wild mustang coming more and more under control as the year progressed; who elevated his play at the plate and on the field to championship level during championship weekend!
Whoville is your Indian at shortstop……2015 State Champion Shane Shifflett.
Shane Shifflett
Whoville is a junior who played solid defense all year long and barreled up baseballs the entire season, and has now placed himself in the discussion as the best pure hitter to ever wear an Indian uniform.
Whoville is your Indian at second base……2015 State Champion Scotty Dubrule
Scotty Dubrule scoring
Whoville is a junior who went from one corner of the diamond to the other and after struggling a bit at first became a very good defensive player who made some key plays at crucial times. The secret, he never stopped working!
Whoville is your Indian at first base……2015 State Champion Trevor Holloway!
Trevor Holloway
Whoville is a crusty old Pollock who rides with a tight bit that is only matched by the depth of his generosity, the size of his heart and his absolute refusal to ever, ever give up on anybody!
Whoville is a saucy Latino who is anything but typical and whose knowledge of hitting a baseball is exceeded by his love of the game and his desire to teach young men not only how to hit but how to become men.
Whoville is a sophomore lefty who arrived on the scene for the Sarasota Classic and never left. A kid with ice water in his veins he was given the daunting task of taking the ball on the biggest stage in the year’s biggest game and he delivered! Leaving no doubt that he belonged.
Whoville is 2015 State Champion Caleb Williams.
Caleb Williams winning pitcher!
Whoville is a senior lefty who rode a knuckleball to 5 big wins. When he struggled a bit, as all knuckleballers will…..He did not get the ball as much as he wanted because he is a competitor. The value of his contribution was recognized when it was he who was chosen to finish this championship season in the middle of the diamond.
Whoville is 2015 State Champion Kade Hunkapillar!
Grubbsy and Hunk, THE MOMENT
Whoville is a Papa Smurf who would find the positive aspects of a nuclear attack and pours that positive energy into those in his charge every minute of every day!
Whoville is a junior catcher who caught virtually every inning of every game. A young man who never ever gave in he topped an outstanding season with championship play on championship day; gunning out a runner to drive a stake through the heart of Bartram Trail and kissing the Green Monster for a double.
Whoville is 2015 State Champion Jake Grubbs!
Catcher Jake Grubbs
Whoville is a senior who simply became the most dominant pitcher in the history of Venice High School baseball winning more games than any other Venice pitcher in history and doing it with pure dominance. When he got the ball, everybody knew an Indian win was but a couple of hours away.
Whoville is 2015 State Champion co-captain Cole Kragel.
Cole Kragel set a Venice High record with 13 wins.
Whoville is another senior… A senior who was literally running all over the diamond which was epitomized in two instances…..After hitting a huge home run in the Estero regional game he crossed home and sprinted to the bullpen and after executing a perfect safety squeeze giving us the lead in the championship game, he sprinted to the bullpen to get ready to pitch. He played more positions this year than anybody.
Whoville is 2015 State Champion Colin Cristello.
Colin Cristello
Whoville is Darth Vader dressed in green and white who oozes with a force that often expects the sky to fall yet whose heart possesses a love of cultivating the talents of young athletes as players and men that is hard pressed to be matched anywhere!
Whoville is a senior manager who reminds us on a daily basis how blessed we are to be here, how life is meant to be lived in the moment! Who teaches us the meaning of loyalty for it is he who is the greatest Indian fan of all.
Whoville is the best baseball manager in the history of the game… 2015 State Champion Clint Faulkner!
Clint (green shirt) joins the dog pile to celebrate Venice’s State Championship!
And last and certainly not least…..Whoville is a man who understands more than any other that baseball is the greatest metaphor for life known to man. Whose understanding shapes, molds and prepares young men for the life which awaits them. He exudes a quiet strength which creates a confidence that is unconquerable and quite simply he makes those of us who have the privilege to be in his sphere of influence better men. He is the rock, the foundation upon which all this has been built and it is an honor to introduce to you…..
The Mayor of Whoville……
Co-captains Cole Kragel (L) and Langston Provitt pose in front of the team with the 6A State Championship trophy, Coach and Mayor of Whoville Craig Faulkner at Jet Blue Field in Ft. Myers FL on Saturday May 16th.
And so it is on this day in Venice High School Baseball history. Championship Day!
This was originally published in July of 2012. It recaps the entire rivalry and takes the story into the 70s. Enjoy….
The Sox head to Yankee Stadium tonight (the fake one) where their historic 2012 season could effectively be put to death. I have written a few times about the rivalry and thought this would be a good time for the eighth stanza.
Following the 1951 season, the Red Sox/Yankee rivalry went dormant, for the two franchises were, once again, headed in two distinctly different directions. The Yankees won their third consecutive World Series in ’51’, on their way to five straight. In fact, the 50s brought the greatest period of Yankee dominance in their history. Try this on for size, from 1949 through 1964 the New York Yankees won the American League pennant 14 times. Did you catch that? FOURTEEN TIMES! The only years they did not win was 1954 and 1959! They won the World Series in nine of those years!
Yogi Berra played in 14 World Series with the Yankees.
The Red Sox, on the other hand, were bound for another era of futility, no check that, they were plummeting into mediocrity on their way to abomination.
In 1952, Ted Williams re-entered the military to serve in the Korean War and with his departure went any Red Sox chances of derailing the Yankee juggernaut. In fact Ted would never see another season where his Red Sox actually challenged for the American League top spot. Oh they did finish in third place in both 1957 and ’58’ but they were 16 and 13 games behind in those years and abomination was just around the corner. In Ted’s final year (1960), the Sox finished seventh in an eight team league.
The following year brought expansion, Yaz and abomination. The addition of two teams to the American League in 1961 did nothing to help the Red Sox except keep them from finishing in the cellar. For from 1961 until 1967, they finished, in order, sixth, eighth, seventh, eighth, ninth and ninth and averaged 89 losses a year while doing so.
Following the Yankee pennant winning 1964 season, they too fell into the abyss and the only semblance of a Red Sox/Yankee rivalry came in 1966 when the Yankees finished in 10th place, a half game behind the Red Sox. Oh how the mighty had fallen!
In 1967, the Red Sox franchise was re-born as they captured their first American League pennant in 21 years in what is now recognized as the watershed year of the franchise. However, this did nothing to resurrect the rivalry with the Yankees as they were in the midst of a decade of their own futility and both teams were chasing the Orioles who won 109 games in 1969, 108 games in 1970 and 101 games in 1971.
In 1971, the Baltimore Orioles had four 20 game winners on their pitching staff, left to right, Jim Palmer, Dave McNally, Mike Cueller and Pat Dobson.
From 1968 through 1974 it was the Orioles and Tigers who took the top spots. The Tigers won in ’68’, the last year of just two ten team leagues and the O’s reigned in ’69’, ’70’, ’71’, ’73’ and ’74’. The ’72’ campaign brought the first players strike and the Red Sox (of course) paid the price for that. How you say, well when the strike was settled in late April, the decision was made to simply pick up the schedule where it was and no provisions were made to equalize the number of games each team played. Well when it was all said and done, the Red Sox finished in second place in the AL East, only one half game behind the Tigers. Why? Simple, Detroit played one more game than did the Red Sox!
Fred Lynn and Jim Rice.
In 1975 a couple of kids arrived in Boston. A rookie tandem the likes of which had not been seen in decades. They rejuvenated Yastrzemski, electrified the baseball world, led the Red Sox back to the promised land and derailed the three-time World Champ Oakland A’s on their way to the historic 1975 World Series. AND, gave birth to the eighth stanza of the Red Sox/Yankee rivalry.
The Yankees ran away from the field in 1976 finishing 10.5 games ahead of the second place Orioles and 15.5 ahead of the Sox but born in this year was a true animosity held between the Yankees and the Red Sox. It was fueled, primarily by these two guys.
Thurman Munson and Carlton Fisk.
You see they were both good, very good. In fact sometimes I think they may have been clones. Munson a hard-nosed tough kid from the mid-west, Fisk a hard-nosed, tough, lunch pail kid from New England. They both were excellent behind the plate, they both could hit and hit in the clutch and here’s the best part, they didn’t like each other and made no bones about making that clear!
They would, on occasion, run into each other.
And it would always seem to be in the same place.
They often disagreed.
And a lot of times their friends would get involved in their disagreements, like here.
And here.
And here.
And in 1977 both teams were also good, very good. They battled all season long, playing each other 15 times during the year with the Red Sox winning eight of them. Five of the games were one run affairs and it was the Red Sox and Yanks who were in and out of first place. The Sox won 97 games that year and were in first place for 49 days. The Yanks? Well they won 99 games and they rode the top of the AL East for 74 days and of course the most important day, the last day of the season.
In 1977 the Yankees won their first World Series in fifteen years, defeating the Dodgers in six games behind this guy’s five home runs.
In the World Series of 1977, Mr. October was born.
it also set the stage for 1978…..And that is for another day!
And so it is on this day in Fenway Park history, July 27, 2012.