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Old-Timers' Day

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Old-timers day generally refers to the tradition in Major League Baseball of a team, especially the New York Yankees, devoting the afternoon preceding a weekend day game to celebrate the baseball-related accomplishments of its former players who have since retired. The pattern has been copied intermittently by other sports but because most sports, with the exeception ofamerican football and football/soccer, usually don't play day games (and don't have as many home games), it is not a regular feature of the season the way it is for baseball teams. Within baseball, although other teams may from time to time make use of this tradtion in some form or another, it is generally accepted, especially when specifically reffered to as "Old-Timers' Day", that this is a tradition of the New York Yankees.

History

The New York Yankees started this tradition in the early 1940s, when they held individual days to celebrate the lives of Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth while each was near death, but still very much beloved by their fans. Quite possibly the most well-known of these is Lou Gehrig Day, held on July 4, 1941. After hearing tearful speeches from friends and former teammates who had seen his career cut short by the ilness ALS which would come to bear his name, Gehrig delivered a short speech refered to by many as the Gettysburg Address of baseball. To this day, Gehrig's declaration that he was the luckiest man on the face of the earth is thought by many to be the most famous line ever uttered by a baseball player.

The first official New York Yankees Old-Timers' Day was held in 1946, and it has been held once a year (usually sometime between mid-June and mid-August) in each year since. Nowadays, the Yankees are the only team that has a strong annual tradition of Old-Timers' Day, though other teams employ similar concepts from time to time.

Though most fans would be reluctant to agree, many Yankee fans assert that the lack of annual Old-Timers' Day celebrations by other teams is due to those teams having a lack of players or accomplishments to celebrate, especially compared to the Yankees' relative abundance of such accompllishments. Conversely, fans of most other teams would insinuate that the Yankees as an organization are somewhat full of themselves and somewhat too quick to celebrate even fairly insignifficant players and acheivemets. Either way, it has hard not to be impressed with the dozens of stars and legends the Yankees are able to put together each year for Old Timers Day.

Current Old-Timers' Day Format

Every year, the Yankees invite up to 50 (sometimes more) former players to be introduced to the crowd in the hours leading up to the scheduled game. For this reason, the actual game played on Old-Timer's Day is often scheduled for 4:00 pm, and the festivities of the day begin aroud 2:00. The Old-Timers' Day ceremony involves each of the players being introduced, wearing a Yankees uniform with their number on the back, as their name, position, and a short synopsis of their triumphs as a Yankee are read to the crowd. For the last decade, this ceremony has been conducted jointly by John Sterling, the Yankees radio play-by-play announcer, and Michael Kay, formerly Sterling's radio partner, and currently his play-by-play couterpart for television broadcasts of Yankees games. By way of being introduced in a certain order, the old-timers are split into two teams, often called the Pinstripers and the Bombers (both of which, especially the latter, are common nicknames of the Yankees), although other names have been used. Hall of Famers or specific honorees are traditionally introduced last.

After the old-timers have been split into teams, they gather (often greeted by a standing ovation from the crowd) for a group picture. They then head into their respective dugouts to begin a two inning game (assuming time and the weather permit). This "Old-Timers' Day Game" is a defining feature of the Yankees' Old-Timers' Days. Because of the age of many of the players, and the game's relative lack of meaning, the game is not for true competition as much as it is a spectacle for fans nostalgic to see their favorite players from earlier decades (the game is also great for players yearning for one more inning on a Major League field).

 


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