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Yankees-Red Sox rivalry

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The Yankees-Red Sox rivalry is one of the longest and most bitter rivalries in American professional sports. For nearly 90 years, baseball's New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox of the American League have been chief rivals, compounded by their geographic proximity and the relative success of the Yankees in comparison to the relative frustration of the Red Sox. The Yankees have the advantage in the all-time series with a record of 1,060-879 (.547) through the 2005 season. The Yankees also hold lopsided advantages in World Series Championships (26 to 6) and World Series appearances (39 to 10). Since the inception of the wild card team and an added Division Series, the American League East rivals have squared off in the American League Championship Series three times, the Yanks winning twice in 1999 and 2003, and the Sox winning once in 2004. In addition, the teams have met in the last regular season series of a season to decide the title, in 1904 (where the Red Sox won), and 1949 and 2005 (where the Yankees won). In 1978, the teams finished tied for first, and the Yankees won a one-game playoff that most Red Sox fans who were alive then vividly remember to this day.

History

Since before the start of the American Revolution, Boston and New York had shared a rivalry. When the Sons of Liberty stirred up the flames of revolution in Boston, Tories (loyalists) in New York argued that America should stay loyal to the crown. When Boston was liberated from the English the citizens of Boston celebrated widly. When George Washington faced defeat in New York, the people there welcomed the British troops with open arms.

For more than a century afterwards, Boston was arguably the educational, cultural, artistic, and economic power in the United States. Its location as the closest American port to Europe and its conentration of elite schools and manufacturing hubs helped maintain this image for several decades. During this time period, New York was often looked down upon as the upstart, over-populated, dirty cousin to aristocratic and clean Boston.

At the start of the 20th Century this dynamic was shifting as New York became more industrialized and became the focus of American capital (especially on Wall Street), and the change was reflected in the new national pastime. The Red Sox were one of the most successful teams in baseball at the turn of the 20th Century and through the first two decades. The team won the inaugural World Series in 1903 and four more between 1912 and 1918. During this period, the Yankees were called the Highlanders, in reference to playing their games in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, and routinely finished near the bottom of the standings. The one exception was 1904 when the Highlanders, led by pitcher Jack Chesbro who won a record 41 games, met the Red Sox on the final game of the season to decide the pennant. Chesbro threw a wild pitch and the Sox won the pennant, but there was no World Series that year as the Giants refused to play. That would be the last time the Red Sox would defeat the Yankees franchise in game to decide a title for 100 years.

Babe Ruth, prior to his trade to the Yankees
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Babe Ruth, prior to his trade to the Yankees

In 1916, the Red Sox were purchased by Harry Frazee on credit for $500,000. Though the team won the World Series in 1918, Frazee was hard-pressed to pay off the loans he accrued by purchasing the team and by producing Broadway shows. After the Red Sox finished sixth in the American League in 1919, Frazee sold several Red Sox players, including pitcher-turned-outfielder Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees. Frazee received $125,000 and a loan of $300,000 - secured on Fenway Park, the Red Sox' home stadium - for Ruth.

Ruth's arrival in New York simultaneously launched the Yankee dynasty while ravaging the Red Sox. While the Red Sox' five World Series titles were a record at the time, 1918 would be the team's last championship for 86 years. Meanwhile, Ruth's home run hitting prowess anchored the Yankee line-up, which became known as "Murderer's Row" in the mid-1920s. After his trade to the Yankees, Ruth's new team reached the World Series seven times during his career in New York, winning four. This abrupt reversal of fortunes for the Boston Red Sox marked the beginning of the supposed "Curse of the Bambino."

Between 1920 and 2003, the New York Yankees won 26 World Series championships and 39 American League pennants, compared to only 4 American League pennants and no World Series titles for the Boston Red Sox. During this time, the Red Sox finished second in the standings to the Yankees on 12 occasions - in 1938, 1939, 1941, 1942, 1949, 1978, and every year from 1998 to 2003. During the 84 year period, the Yankees finished with a better regular-season record than the Red Sox 66 times, leading to an oft-heard analogy in New York that the rivalry with the Red Sox was much like the rivalry "between a hammer and a nail." In 1949, the Red Sox were up by one game with two games left against the Yankees, and the Yankees won both of them to capture the pennant and then the 1949 World Series, which started a record run of five straight World Series for the Yankees. New York also won a one-game playoff to decide the 1978 AL East title following the teams ending up in a tie for first after the end of the regular season. Since the advent of the wild card and the Division Series in 1995, which enabled both teams to make the playoffs simultaneously, they have faced each other three times in the American League Championship Series - in 1999, 2003, and 2004, the first two won by the Yankees.

In 2004, the Red Sox won the season series against the Yankees, but still finished second to their rivals in the AL East for the seventh straight season. Both teams would advance to the ALCS for the second straight year.

The Yankees, who had home field advantage for the second year in a row, started out strong, winning the first three games, putting an exclamation point on their Game 3 victory with an eleven run win. Most observers believed that "the Curse of the Bambino" was still going strong, as no team had ever come from being three games down to win any series in the history of baseball. Everything seemed to be going the Yankees' way entering the ninth inning of Game 4 at Fenway, when Mariano Rivera came in to seal the victory with his team up by a run, three outs away from a sweep. However, he walked leadoff batter Kevin Millar. Pinch-runner Dave Roberts stole second and came around to score on an RBI single by Bill Mueller, tying the game. The Red Sox would go on to win the game in the bottom of the 12th inning with a home run by David Ortiz.

From there, the Red Sox went on to win three more games in a row, winning Game 7 at Yankee Stadium by seven runs. This is the only time a baseball team has come back from a 0-3 deficit in a best of seven series. After having finally achieved a major victory over the Yankees, the World Series seemed almost pedestrian and anticlimactic, with the Red Sox over-powering the St. Louis Cardinals in four games for their first World Series crown in 86 years.

With the World Series triumph by the Red Sox, many have pronounced the "Curse of the Bambino" to be dead and buried. Some have remarked that the "curse" may even have been transferred to the Yankees, having been within only a few outs of winning the 2001 World Series and the 2004 ALCS, both in instances slightly reminiscent of the Red Sox' heart-breaking collapse in the 1986 World Series.

It remains to be seen whether the 2004 triumph of the Red Sox has permanently altered the face of the rivalry. In the 2005 season, the Yankees again won the American League East crown, for the eighth straight time, while the Red Sox finished second to them for the eighth straight year. (Both teams finished with identical records and the Yankees won by virtue of a tiebreak: a 10-9 season record vs. the Sox.) Though the teams were poised to face off in a third straight ALCS, both were eliminated in the ALDS.

Fan involvement

Generally speaking, Red Sox fans, known collectively as "Red Sox Nation", tend to have a more intense dislike of the Yankees than Yankees fans have for the Red Sox. This is likely a function of the Yankees' historical success at the Red Sox expense; in other words, Yankee fans have generally disliked the Red Sox less simply because the Red Sox were not the thorn in the Yankees' side that the Yankees were for Red Sox fans. It was not uncommon to hear the "Yankees Suck" chant at Fenway Park even when the Yankees were not in town. This phenomenon also occurred in other ballparks. However, following the Red Sox's World Series championship in 2004 this practice has become less common. Yankees fans similarly chant "Boston Sucks" when the teams play each other, and most Yankee fans will admit that the Red Sox are easily their biggest rivals.

In 2005, Yankee outfielder Gary Sheffield was involved in an altercation with a Red Sox fan at Fenway Park. The fan was ejected and was stripped of his season tickets, while Sheffield was not punished, as MLB ruled that the fan instigated the altercation. This was the most recent of several player-fan incidents during Boston-New York games at either venue over the years.

Key moments

1900 - 1920

1920 - 1940

1940 - 1960

1960 - 1980

1980 - 2000

2000 - Present

External links

 


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