Yaz Debuted 57 Years Ago Today

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Today is the 57th anniversary of Yaz's debut in 1961. The kid from Southampton, NY had some pretty big shoes to fill taking Ted's place in LF. By the end of the 1962 season Yaz was a top 20 MVP candidate and finished 6th in 1963.

By the time I got to watch him, he was the guy on the right. May dad told stories of watching him, the 1967 season and so I was awestruck when I went to my first game in 1981. Even though I never really saw him do much of anything memorable other than retire, I became a fan and started collecting his cards. Still have them today. He and Bird were the first superstars I remember.



Anyway, figured it's as good a day as any to celebrate the old man.
 

Mugsy's Jock

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After a brief dalliance with George Scott, Yaz was my first favorite player and "Yastrzemski" was basically the same thing as "baseball" to me for 20 years. I sent him a homemade birthday card every year until I was 12 or so. Later, when I was in college, Yaz was chasing his 3000th hit, and I remember making the trek over to Fenway three nights in a row (when I definitely had better things to do at school) because I just had to be there.

His late career renaissance was a testament to his determination.

I don't think I'd have cared much for Yaz personally, never the kind of guy I'd love to go have a beer with. (George Scott, on the other hand...) But I don't know that I ever admired a player more than him.
 

joyofsox

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My first game at Fenway was on Yaz's 37th birthday. He went 4-for-5. ... I was 15 when I got to shake his hand at an appearance at a Burlington, VT car dealership about two weeks before he got his 3,000th hit.
 

ledsox

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Nov 14, 2005
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Great Yaz set there! Debuted the same year as I did.
Got to meet him at our Vermont Little League state championship banquet in 1974. He was guest of honor.
That was a great night. I have to find that pic.

My first game at Fenway was on Yaz's 37th birthday. He went 4-for-5. ... I was 15 when I got to shake his hand at an appearance at a Burlington, VT car dealership about two weeks before he got his 3,000th hit.
Nice! I also met him at a car dealership in Burlington, probably the same one. Not sure of the year. I think he may have been a part owner.
 

E5 Yaz

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. ... I was 15 when I got to shake his hand at an appearance at a Burlington, VT car dealership about two weeks before he got his 3,000th hit.
So ... you met him when he was stuck on 2,999?

A couple of notes about his debut: He threw out a runner at home, and he was caught stealing second ... by KC catcher Haywood Sullivan.

My three favorite Yaz moments

3. His defense in LF during the 1975 AL playoff series against the A's.
2. Yaz, who usually skips the thing, shows up for Jim Rice's HoF induction, hears Rice's speech, then ducks out and drives home. (at least that's how Gammons tells it, and it's too good not to believe)
1. Two words ... Balor Moore
 

Bergs

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Jul 22, 2005
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Yaz was my absolute hero as a kid. Recycled content from another Yaz thread below:

Yaz' B-Ref page:
http://www.baseball-...yastrca01.shtml

He was top 20 in MVP voting 12 times. His 7-year peak was ridiculous. He was flat-out the best player in Baseball over that stretch, leading the league in OPS 4 out of 6 years while leading the league in outfield assists most of them. He was 5th in OPS as late as 1974. Seven guys in baseball history have more hits. One guy in baseball history has played more games. No one has played more for the Boston Red Sox. He was the first player in AL history with 3,000 hits and 400 HR, in a career that saw his peak during a severely scoring-depressed environment.

He put together a season that quite literally changed the future of the Boston Red Sox. He was an absolute icon. He was on the cover of Life magazine, had bread named after him, and had every kid in New England taking some of the goofiest swings trying to copy whatever his stance was that week. Also, you may have noticed there's a fucking statue of him at Fenway Park. A Statue.

I fucking LOVE Carl Yastrzemski. Love. Him.
 

TheYaz67

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May 21, 2004
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Another huge fan here (obviously), despite only being old enough to see the second half of his career in person at Fenway as a kid.... he was the Boston Red Sox to me growing up (despite also falling in love with Lynn and Rice)...
 

mauidano

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Aug 21, 2006
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Three letters and every true baseball fan knows who you are talking about.

Iconic doesn't measure up to who he was to the many, many fans who idolized him and still do.

I sent him some 3 x 5 cards to sign when I was a kid. He sent them back with various signatures as well as a personalized 5 x 7 picture that I didn't send! You can bet those are framed with the best matting and u/v glass money can buy.
 

Was (Not Wasdin)

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Jul 26, 2007
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I was working on a piece about Yaz that I was going to try to submit to the folks at the .com for consideration, but like everything else these days it gets pushed aside. But here was my lede:

Since 1900, there have only been five (5) seasons where a position player had greater than 12.0 WAR. One was Rogers Hornsby's ridiculous 1924 season (.424/.507/.696/1.203). Babe Ruth had three-1921, 1923 and 1927. And the fifth, with a WAR of 12.5 (tied for second highest all time by a position player) was Yaz in 1967. All the greats that have ever played, and it is Yaz who stands up there with Ruth for that one season.
 

nayrbrey

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Yaz was a huge part of my interest in the Sox during the 70s, the grizzled veteran amongst all the young kids. Another reason I loved watching him was that my maternal grandmother and her family immigrated from Poland. All the great uncles would talk about him and how proud they felt because of him.
The ESPN sports century show about Yaz is on YouTube, and thanks to this thread I just watched it. A lot of famous faces in this.
 

The Talented Allen Ripley

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Hiding behind Yaz's double-knits, cored-out earflap and lazy wrist twirl was the harsh reality that man is mortal and everything is going to end.

His immediate predecessor, Ted Williams, lived some kind of charmed life where he could accomplish whatever he wanted to through the sheer force of being Ted. He was a 6’ 3” live wire, a bulldog Picasso or Hemingway with a bat. Yaz? He was you or me, some guy who wouldn’t get two glances on the street, but was somehow able to push himself to the very limits of what he could do and live out there in that ether for 23 years. If Ted Williams was Superman, some freakish alien life form given powers by the yellow sun, then Carl Yastrzemski was Batman, a human residing on the edge of his own capabilities because that is what he was driven to do. Williams left us by hitting a home run in his last at-bat, still lifting that car as effortlessly as he did on the cover of Action Comics #1. Yaz, on the other hand, bore the visible scars of battle, ones dealt not only by foes on the diamond but by time itself. And because of this we identified with him all the more.

I was 12 during Yaz's last season, when his Batman avatar began to pixellate and break down, a marker of the passage of time, leaving me to wonder what rooting for the Red Sox would be like without him. At that tender age, my fanhood was based solely on the identification with the players. The laundry hadn’t really come into focus yet because the turnover rate in my short window of rooting for the Sox was minimal; I was too young and disconnected to feel the pain of Tiant and Lee leaving, and only impotently aware of Lynn’s and Fisk’s departures. What else was there but to root for this man who had embodied not only being a Red Sox, but also represented the honor bestowed in the fight itself, as opposed to the outcome?

The funny thing is that for all my anxiety over Yaz’s impending retirement, it wasn’t like I was seeing anything remotely resembling his prime, as if I knew what I’d be missing. It’s just that he had Always Been There. Not just for me, but for my father. Particularly for my father. This worrying about my father’s feelings about any outside developments whatsoever was a shaky new concept. He had been a sophomore in high school the spring that Yastrzemski made his debut, for Chrissakes, surely some bell must have been tolling in his consciousness: if #8 was getting too old to hack it, then maybe so was my Dad. Which meant so would I at some point down the road. These aren’t things you want to think about when you’re 12.

Yaz occupies a curious spot in the Red Sox pantheon. A first ballot Hall of Famer who may have been an accumulator more than anything else. Owner of a Triple Crown and a multiple Gold Glove winner, but a reclusive and somewhat aloof person who did little off the field to endear himself to the fandom. Very few kids my age even liked him during his playing days, as they thought he was some old fart whose presence was somewhat comical in contrast to that of Lynn and Rice, and later on, Evans. You look at some of his years and it’s not surprising, these sentiments: .254 with 15 home runs in 1971? .264 with 12 home runs in 1972? His late-career renaissance perhaps coincided with the position change to first base, or with the rising fortunes of the team after its post-’67 doldrums, but as the ’70s progressed he became a cagey veteran. Mortal or not, no man was more fearless and determined once he put on that uniform. He was the original Dirt Dog.

The Yaz story that most defines him for me is one from the last-gasp winning streak at the end of the ’78 season which ultimately forced a one game playoff with the Yankees. On Sunday, September 24th, one game into said winning streak, the Sox had forced the Blue Jays into extra innings at Exhibition Stadium. Balor Moore had been pitching for 2+ innings, and in the top of the 12th Moore struck out Rice to bring Yastrzemski to the plate. Moore got a little cute and sailed a fastball up and in on Yaz, who sprawled to the ground to avoid being hit. He got up, slowly collecting himself, and stood in the batter’s box awaiting the next pitch, which he promptly launched for a triple. Blue Jays manager Roy Hartsfield yanked Moore from the game, and once they got to the dugout he dressed him down: “Pitching to Yaz is like being in a gunfight, only if you miss with yours, he never misses with his.”

Yet for all of that, he never won a ring, and to add insult to injury, he made the last outs of the ’75 and ’78 seasons, both with the Sox behind by a mere run (and in the case of ’78, with Remy on third).

The Kid had the same “didn’t win it all” collar around his neck (and had lesser numbers in what would be considered the “clutch” times during his career), but he is not cast in the same light. To me, Ted was Zeus, hurling lightning bolts from on high. Yaz? He was Sisyphus. I learned about the myth of Sisyphus in 11th grade English and I immediately thought of Yaz. Then I extrapolated it out to simply being a Red Sox fan. But then again, none of us were actually rolling that rock up the hill. Yaz was.

In John Updike’s famous essay “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu,” he sums up Ted quite nicely as he observed that Ted didn’t tip his cap after his career-ending clout, despite the impassioned pleas of the few thousand who were in the stands that day: “Gods do not answer letters.”

On the other hand, Yaz took a lap around Fenway Park the day before his last game, exchanging high-fives and handshakes with anyone lucky enough to be sitting in the first few rows. A far more stoic man than Ted ever was, he nonetheless placed himself into the open palms of Boston and said, “This is what I can offer you as thanks.” On his last day, as he walked off the field for one last time after being pulled during the top of the 9th, he unbuttoned his jersey and gave it to a boy in the front row behind the dugout before he descended down the steps for good. Carl Yastrzemski was not Superman or Zeus. But he showed us that a man battling against that which limits him — whether it was his own physical attributes or the unyielding opponent of time itself — is as compelling as any myth, while displaying an honor that was actually earned.
 

Was (Not Wasdin)

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Jul 26, 2007
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I was working on a piece about Yaz that I was going to try to submit to the folks at the .com for consideration, but like everything else these days it gets pushed aside. But here was my lede:

Since 1900, there have only been five (5) seasons where a position player had greater than 12.0 WAR. One was Rogers Hornsby's ridiculous 1924 season (.424/.507/.696/1.203). Babe Ruth had three-1921, 1923 and 1927. And the fifth, with a WAR of 12.5 (tied for second highest all time by a position player) was Yaz in 1967.
 

mauidano

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Aug 21, 2006
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On his last day, as he walked off the field for one last time after being pulled during the top of the 9th, he unbuttoned his jersey and gave it to a boy in the front row behind the dugout before he descended down the steps for good. Carl Yastrzemski was not Superman or Zeus. But he showed us that a man battling against that which limits him — whether it was his own physical attributes or the unyielding opponent of time itself — is as compelling as any myth, while displaying an honor that was actually earned.
What great post! Thank you. Can you imagine the kid who got that jersey? What that means to a mortal human?
 

Harry Hooper

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Bill Lee had a great line about Yaz being able to tap into the powers of infinity when he slept because of the number on his uniform.
 

Bergs

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Jul 22, 2005
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Bill Lee had a great line about Yaz being able to tap into the powers of infinity when he slept because of the number on his uniform.
Bill Lee is one of the funniest dudes I have ever gotten drunk with. The first 60 seconds of this clip kills me:
 

Philip Jeff Frye

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Oct 23, 2001
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Hiding behind Yaz's double-knits, cored-out earflap and lazy wrist twirl was the harsh reality that man is mortal and everything is going to end.

His immediate predecessor, Ted Williams, lived some kind of charmed life where he could accomplish whatever he wanted to through the sheer force of being Ted. He was a 6’ 3” live wire, a bulldog Picasso or Hemingway with a bat. Yaz? He was you or me, some guy who wouldn’t get two glances on the street, but was somehow able to push himself to the very limits of what he could do and live out there in that ether for 23 years. If Ted Williams was Superman, some freakish alien life form given powers by the yellow sun, then Carl Yastrzemski was Batman, a human residing on the edge of his own capabilities because that is what he was driven to do. Williams left us by hitting a home run in his last at-bat, still lifting that car as effortlessly as he did on the cover of Action Comics #1. Yaz, on the other hand, bore the visible scars of battle, ones dealt not only by foes on the diamond but by time itself. And because of this we identified with him all the more.

I was 12 during Yaz's last season, when his Batman avatar began to pixellate and break down, a marker of the passage of time, leaving me to wonder what rooting for the Red Sox would be like without him. At that tender age, my fanhood was based solely on the identification with the players. The laundry hadn’t really come into focus yet because the turnover rate in my short window of rooting for the Sox was minimal; I was too young and disconnected to feel the pain of Tiant and Lee leaving, and only impotently aware of Lynn’s and Fisk’s departures. What else was there but to root for this man who had embodied not only being a Red Sox, but also represented the honor bestowed in the fight itself, as opposed to the outcome?

The funny thing is that for all my anxiety over Yaz’s impending retirement, it wasn’t like I was seeing anything remotely resembling his prime, as if I knew what I’d be missing. It’s just that he had Always Been There. Not just for me, but for my father. Particularly for my father. This worrying about my father’s feelings about any outside developments whatsoever was a shaky new concept. He had been a sophomore in high school the spring that Yastrzemski made his debut, for Chrissakes, surely some bell must have been tolling in his consciousness: if #8 was getting too old to hack it, then maybe so was my Dad. Which meant so would I at some point down the road. These aren’t things you want to think about when you’re 12.

Yaz occupies a curious spot in the Red Sox pantheon. A first ballot Hall of Famer who may have been an accumulator more than anything else. Owner of a Triple Crown and a multiple Gold Glove winner, but a reclusive and somewhat aloof person who did little off the field to endear himself to the fandom. Very few kids my age even liked him during his playing days, as they thought he was some old fart whose presence was somewhat comical in contrast to that of Lynn and Rice, and later on, Evans. You look at some of his years and it’s not surprising, these sentiments: .254 with 15 home runs in 1971? .264 with 12 home runs in 1972? His late-career renaissance perhaps coincided with the position change to first base, or with the rising fortunes of the team after its post-’67 doldrums, but as the ’70s progressed he became a cagey veteran. Mortal or not, no man was more fearless and determined once he put on that uniform. He was the original Dirt Dog.

The Yaz story that most defines him for me is one from the last-gasp winning streak at the end of the ’78 season which ultimately forced a one game playoff with the Yankees. On Sunday, September 24th, one game into said winning streak, the Sox had forced the Blue Jays into extra innings at Exhibition Stadium. Balor Moore had been pitching for 2+ innings, and in the top of the 12th Moore struck out Rice to bring Yastrzemski to the plate. Moore got a little cute and sailed a fastball up and in on Yaz, who sprawled to the ground to avoid being hit. He got up, slowly collecting himself, and stood in the batter’s box awaiting the next pitch, which he promptly launched for a triple. Blue Jays manager Roy Hartsfield yanked Moore from the game, and once they got to the dugout he dressed him down: “Pitching to Yaz is like being in a gunfight, only if you miss with yours, he never misses with his.”

Yet for all of that, he never won a ring, and to add insult to injury, he made the last outs of the ’75 and ’78 seasons, both with the Sox behind by a mere run (and in the case of ’78, with Remy on third).

The Kid had the same “didn’t win it all” collar around his neck (and had lesser numbers in what would be considered the “clutch” times during his career), but he is not cast in the same light. To me, Ted was Zeus, hurling lightning bolts from on high. Yaz? He was Sisyphus. I learned about the myth of Sisyphus in 11th grade English and I immediately thought of Yaz. Then I extrapolated it out to simply being a Red Sox fan. But then again, none of us were actually rolling that rock up the hill. Yaz was.

In John Updike’s famous essay “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu,” he sums up Ted quite nicely as he observed that Ted didn’t tip his cap after his career-ending clout, despite the impassioned pleas of the few thousand who were in the stands that day: “Gods do not answer letters.”

On the other hand, Yaz took a lap around Fenway Park the day before his last game, exchanging high-fives and handshakes with anyone lucky enough to be sitting in the first few rows. A far more stoic man than Ted ever was, he nonetheless placed himself into the open palms of Boston and said, “This is what I can offer you as thanks.” On his last day, as he walked off the field for one last time after being pulled during the top of the 9th, he unbuttoned his jersey and gave it to a boy in the front row behind the dugout before he descended down the steps for good. Carl Yastrzemski was not Superman or Zeus. But he showed us that a man battling against that which limits him — whether it was his own physical attributes or the unyielding opponent of time itself — is as compelling as any myth, while displaying an honor that was actually earned.
What a fantastic post. This should be published somewhere.
 

Red(s)HawksFan

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Jan 23, 2009
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I wasn't old enough to see Yaz play (he retired when I was 4), but he has always been one of my favorite players. I wore #8 in Little League when everyone else wanted 21 or 26. Two of my prize possessions when I was a kid was a souvenir poster from Yaz Day that my grandfather snagged while in attendance and an autographed copy of Yaz's autobiography gifted to me by my uncle on my 11th birthday (he met Yaz at some work function with Kayam).

I must have read that book 50 times and the poster remained in the same place on my old bedroom wall well after I moved out of my parents' house. My only regret is I pinned the poster up with tacks instead of getting it framed. It's no longer in the best shape and not really wall-worthy anymore, but I still have it rolled up and stored in my attic. I can't ever part with it.
 

m0ckduck

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Jul 20, 2005
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His immediate predecessor, Ted Williams, lived some kind of charmed life where he could accomplish whatever he wanted to through the sheer force of being Ted. He was a 6’ 3” live wire, a bulldog Picasso or Hemingway with a bat. Yaz? He was you or me, some guy who wouldn’t get two glances on the street, but was somehow able to push himself to the very limits of what he could do and live out there in that ether for 23 years. If Ted Williams was Superman, some freakish alien life form given powers by the yellow sun, then Carl Yastrzemski was Batman, a human residing on the edge of his own capabilities because that is what he was driven to do. Williams left us by hitting a home run in his last at-bat, still lifting that car as effortlessly as he did on the cover of Action Comics #1. Yaz, on the other hand, bore the visible scars of battle, ones dealt not only by foes on the diamond but by time itself. And because of this we identified with him all the more.
This is a high watermark of SOSH posting, as others have pointed out. The whole post in general, but this paragraph and analogy in particular.
 

lexrageorge

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Jul 31, 2007
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I started following the Sox in the very early 1970's. As noted in Mr. Ripley's outstanding post, this was in the middle of Yaz's slump. He was being booed at the time, and I remember a lot of my uncles and even my dad saying that he wasn't that good anymore. So I couldn't quite figure out what all the hype was about; I was too young for 1967, and I had no idea what an OPS or even an OBP was. All I wanted to see at the time were home runs. And the fact that he won a batting title in 1968 with one of the lowest batting averages (0.301) seemed to me to be a rather dubious achievement when I was younger, when I was ignorant of the several other offensive categories in which he led the league that season (including OBP and OPS).

My opinion of him from those pre-teen years has obviously changed. And, while we do remember that he made the final outs in 1975 and 1978, we should also remember the following

September 1967: 0.417/0.504/0.760/1.2675 slash line with 9 HR's in one of the tightest and wildest pennant races of the modern era.

A 1.340 OPS in the 1967 World Series.

While Yaz hit only 12 HR's in 1972, 8 of those came in September, when he posted 0.300/0.381/0.558/0.940 slash line when the Sox were in a tight pennant race with the Tigers throughout the month. He had a similar September the following season, hitting 6 of his 19 HR's to go along with a 1.038 OPS.

His destruction of the A's in 1975. And while he hit a very pedestrian 0.693 OPS in the World Series, he did lead all players in runs scored with 7, and got on base 13 times, second only to Pete Rose's 15.

In September of 1977, the Sox were in yet another pennant race with the Yankees. And while the Sox did not prevail, Yaz did slug 6 HR's in the month of September.

By September of 1978, the 38 year old Yastremski was definitely tired. The previous season, the Sox had reacquired George Scott to man first base. So Dom Zimmer had Yaz play the majority of his games in LF, and made Jim Rice the DH. In 1978, Zimmer realized that full time LF was not ideal for Yaz's knees, so Rice was moved back to left. But Yaz still started 71 games in the outfield that year to go along with another 50 at 1B. Yaz missed 10 games in August, and while his batting average in September was only 0.207 (partially thanks to a 0.184 BABIP), he did belt 6 HR's. After the Sox had dropped their first 2 games in Yankee Stadium following the infamous Fenway massacre, Yaz did drive in the game's first run in a 7-3 victory that stopped the Sox skid and started their comeback. He followed that up with a 5 RBI night in Detroit 2 days later. And hit a key HR in an extra innings victory in Toronto in the middle of the 8 game winning streak that allowed the Sox to tie the Yankees. And, in that fateful Bucky Dent game, Yaz hit a home run off Ron Guidry (one of only 2 HR's by LHB's off of Guidry that entire season), and drove in a run and scored during the Sox comeback attempt in the 8th inning against Goose Gossage.

So, yes, Yaz's career, much like Ortiz's career with the Red Sox, is a career that transcends the actual raw stats.
 

bankshot1

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Feb 12, 2003
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From the impossible catch in Yankee Stadium on opening day to his spectacular Sat/Sunday last games of the season when he went 7-for-8, and won the triple crown, while winning the AL pennant, to his 400/.500/.840 World Series Yaz's '67 season was simply the greatest season I've ever seen any player ever have.

He was at a level I've never seen since.
 

The Talented Allen Ripley

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What a fantastic post. This should be published somewhere.
This is a high watermark of SOSH posting, as others have pointed out. The whole post in general, but this paragraph and analogy in particular.
Thanks for the kind words, it's appreciated. I once painted a picture of Yaz, and rather than choosing to depict him from his demigod '67-'70 stretch, I tried to be reflective of my memories of him, which were later. And purposely tried to imbue it with a golden glow that could either be construed as hagiographic or indicative of something that has aged/spoiled (or perhaps both at the same time). Polaroids and goldenrod pretty much sum up the '70s to me, anyway.

 
Last edited:

Marbleheader

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Every once in a while I'm reminded of how extraordinary our members are. Rip, just amazing work as a wordsmith and artist.
 

Martin and Woods

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Dec 8, 2017
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Hiding behind Yaz's double-knits, cored-out earflap and lazy wrist twirl was the harsh reality that man is mortal and everything is going to end.

His immediate predecessor, Ted Williams, lived some kind of charmed life where he could accomplish whatever he wanted to through the sheer force of being Ted. He was a 6’ 3” live wire, a bulldog Picasso or Hemingway with a bat. Yaz? He was you or me, some guy who wouldn’t get two glances on the street, but was somehow able to push himself to the very limits of what he could do and live out there in that ether for 23 years. If Ted Williams was Superman, some freakish alien life form given powers by the yellow sun, then Carl Yastrzemski was Batman, a human residing on the edge of his own capabilities because that is what he was driven to do. Williams left us by hitting a home run in his last at-bat, still lifting that car as effortlessly as he did on the cover of Action Comics #1. Yaz, on the other hand, bore the visible scars of battle, ones dealt not only by foes on the diamond but by time itself. And because of this we identified with him all the more.

I was 12 during Yaz's last season, when his Batman avatar began to pixellate and break down, a marker of the passage of time, leaving me to wonder what rooting for the Red Sox would be like without him. At that tender age, my fanhood was based solely on the identification with the players. The laundry hadn’t really come into focus yet because the turnover rate in my short window of rooting for the Sox was minimal; I was too young and disconnected to feel the pain of Tiant and Lee leaving, and only impotently aware of Lynn’s and Fisk’s departures. What else was there but to root for this man who had embodied not only being a Red Sox, but also represented the honor bestowed in the fight itself, as opposed to the outcome?

The funny thing is that for all my anxiety over Yaz’s impending retirement, it wasn’t like I was seeing anything remotely resembling his prime, as if I knew what I’d be missing. It’s just that he had Always Been There. Not just for me, but for my father. Particularly for my father. This worrying about my father’s feelings about any outside developments whatsoever was a shaky new concept. He had been a sophomore in high school the spring that Yastrzemski made his debut, for Chrissakes, surely some bell must have been tolling in his consciousness: if #8 was getting too old to hack it, then maybe so was my Dad. Which meant so would I at some point down the road. These aren’t things you want to think about when you’re 12.

Yaz occupies a curious spot in the Red Sox pantheon. A first ballot Hall of Famer who may have been an accumulator more than anything else. Owner of a Triple Crown and a multiple Gold Glove winner, but a reclusive and somewhat aloof person who did little off the field to endear himself to the fandom. Very few kids my age even liked him during his playing days, as they thought he was some old fart whose presence was somewhat comical in contrast to that of Lynn and Rice, and later on, Evans. You look at some of his years and it’s not surprising, these sentiments: .254 with 15 home runs in 1971? .264 with 12 home runs in 1972? His late-career renaissance perhaps coincided with the position change to first base, or with the rising fortunes of the team after its post-’67 doldrums, but as the ’70s progressed he became a cagey veteran. Mortal or not, no man was more fearless and determined once he put on that uniform. He was the original Dirt Dog.

The Yaz story that most defines him for me is one from the last-gasp winning streak at the end of the ’78 season which ultimately forced a one game playoff with the Yankees. On Sunday, September 24th, one game into said winning streak, the Sox had forced the Blue Jays into extra innings at Exhibition Stadium. Balor Moore had been pitching for 2+ innings, and in the top of the 12th Moore struck out Rice to bring Yastrzemski to the plate. Moore got a little cute and sailed a fastball up and in on Yaz, who sprawled to the ground to avoid being hit. He got up, slowly collecting himself, and stood in the batter’s box awaiting the next pitch, which he promptly launched for a triple. Blue Jays manager Roy Hartsfield yanked Moore from the game, and once they got to the dugout he dressed him down: “Pitching to Yaz is like being in a gunfight, only if you miss with yours, he never misses with his.”

Yet for all of that, he never won a ring, and to add insult to injury, he made the last outs of the ’75 and ’78 seasons, both with the Sox behind by a mere run (and in the case of ’78, with Remy on third).

The Kid had the same “didn’t win it all” collar around his neck (and had lesser numbers in what would be considered the “clutch” times during his career), but he is not cast in the same light. To me, Ted was Zeus, hurling lightning bolts from on high. Yaz? He was Sisyphus. I learned about the myth of Sisyphus in 11th grade English and I immediately thought of Yaz. Then I extrapolated it out to simply being a Red Sox fan. But then again, none of us were actually rolling that rock up the hill. Yaz was.

In John Updike’s famous essay “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu,” he sums up Ted quite nicely as he observed that Ted didn’t tip his cap after his career-ending clout, despite the impassioned pleas of the few thousand who were in the stands that day: “Gods do not answer letters.”

On the other hand, Yaz took a lap around Fenway Park the day before his last game, exchanging high-fives and handshakes with anyone lucky enough to be sitting in the first few rows. A far more stoic man than Ted ever was, he nonetheless placed himself into the open palms of Boston and said, “This is what I can offer you as thanks.” On his last day, as he walked off the field for one last time after being pulled during the top of the 9th, he unbuttoned his jersey and gave it to a boy in the front row behind the dugout before he descended down the steps for good. Carl Yastrzemski was not Superman or Zeus. But he showed us that a man battling against that which limits him — whether it was his own physical attributes or the unyielding opponent of time itself — is as compelling as any myth, while displaying an honor that was actually earned.
I sat in tears on the floor of our family room as I watched Yaz take that lap around Fenway. How could the Sox POSSIBLY play next season without Yaz? How could the franchise continue? And so I learned one of life's lessons.

This is not the first time I've said this after reading one of your posts or articles, but you, sir, are a terrific writer.
 

Minneapolis Millers

Wants you to please think of the Twins fans!
SoSH Member
Jul 15, 2005
4,753
Twin Cities
Also my favorite player growing up, Yaz is conspicuously absent from my favorite memory of him. After slaying the three-time defending World Champion A's in the '75 playoffs, the Sox returned to Boston as conquering heroes, led by Captain Carl. Nine years old, I somehow convinced the family that we had to go to Logan airport early that school-day morning to cheer the team's series victory. We weren't alone - hundreds of people crowded the arrival gate area (long before 9/11 barred unticketed persons from meeting family, ball players, and other loved ones passed security gates). The crowd was so big, I had to climb up and stand on a phone booth (yes, another relic) to see the players as they emerged from the jetway. All passed by in a high-fiving procession. Rooster, Cahlton, Lynn... Like most, I suspect, I was searching for one person. Where's Yaz? He wasn't there. The parade of players finished. No Yaz.

I admit that disappointment and confusion clouded the euphoria. What happened? What was wrong? It wasn't until the ride home, listening to the radio, that we learned that Yaz and the team, fearing that he would be joyously mobbed, had him slip in unseen through a side door!
 
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Bergs

funky and cold
SoSH Member
Jul 22, 2005
21,766
Hiding behind Yaz's double-knits, cored-out earflap and lazy wrist twirl was the harsh reality that man is mortal and everything is going to end.

His immediate predecessor, Ted Williams, lived some kind of charmed life where he could accomplish whatever he wanted to through the sheer force of being Ted. He was a 6’ 3” live wire, a bulldog Picasso or Hemingway with a bat. Yaz? He was you or me, some guy who wouldn’t get two glances on the street, but was somehow able to push himself to the very limits of what he could do and live out there in that ether for 23 years. If Ted Williams was Superman, some freakish alien life form given powers by the yellow sun, then Carl Yastrzemski was Batman, a human residing on the edge of his own capabilities because that is what he was driven to do. Williams left us by hitting a home run in his last at-bat, still lifting that car as effortlessly as he did on the cover of Action Comics #1. Yaz, on the other hand, bore the visible scars of battle, ones dealt not only by foes on the diamond but by time itself. And because of this we identified with him all the more.

I was 12 during Yaz's last season, when his Batman avatar began to pixellate and break down, a marker of the passage of time, leaving me to wonder what rooting for the Red Sox would be like without him. At that tender age, my fanhood was based solely on the identification with the players. The laundry hadn’t really come into focus yet because the turnover rate in my short window of rooting for the Sox was minimal; I was too young and disconnected to feel the pain of Tiant and Lee leaving, and only impotently aware of Lynn’s and Fisk’s departures. What else was there but to root for this man who had embodied not only being a Red Sox, but also represented the honor bestowed in the fight itself, as opposed to the outcome?

The funny thing is that for all my anxiety over Yaz’s impending retirement, it wasn’t like I was seeing anything remotely resembling his prime, as if I knew what I’d be missing. It’s just that he had Always Been There. Not just for me, but for my father. Particularly for my father. This worrying about my father’s feelings about any outside developments whatsoever was a shaky new concept. He had been a sophomore in high school the spring that Yastrzemski made his debut, for Chrissakes, surely some bell must have been tolling in his consciousness: if #8 was getting too old to hack it, then maybe so was my Dad. Which meant so would I at some point down the road. These aren’t things you want to think about when you’re 12.

Yaz occupies a curious spot in the Red Sox pantheon. A first ballot Hall of Famer who may have been an accumulator more than anything else. Owner of a Triple Crown and a multiple Gold Glove winner, but a reclusive and somewhat aloof person who did little off the field to endear himself to the fandom. Very few kids my age even liked him during his playing days, as they thought he was some old fart whose presence was somewhat comical in contrast to that of Lynn and Rice, and later on, Evans. You look at some of his years and it’s not surprising, these sentiments: .254 with 15 home runs in 1971? .264 with 12 home runs in 1972? His late-career renaissance perhaps coincided with the position change to first base, or with the rising fortunes of the team after its post-’67 doldrums, but as the ’70s progressed he became a cagey veteran. Mortal or not, no man was more fearless and determined once he put on that uniform. He was the original Dirt Dog.

The Yaz story that most defines him for me is one from the last-gasp winning streak at the end of the ’78 season which ultimately forced a one game playoff with the Yankees. On Sunday, September 24th, one game into said winning streak, the Sox had forced the Blue Jays into extra innings at Exhibition Stadium. Balor Moore had been pitching for 2+ innings, and in the top of the 12th Moore struck out Rice to bring Yastrzemski to the plate. Moore got a little cute and sailed a fastball up and in on Yaz, who sprawled to the ground to avoid being hit. He got up, slowly collecting himself, and stood in the batter’s box awaiting the next pitch, which he promptly launched for a triple. Blue Jays manager Roy Hartsfield yanked Moore from the game, and once they got to the dugout he dressed him down: “Pitching to Yaz is like being in a gunfight, only if you miss with yours, he never misses with his.”

Yet for all of that, he never won a ring, and to add insult to injury, he made the last outs of the ’75 and ’78 seasons, both with the Sox behind by a mere run (and in the case of ’78, with Remy on third).

The Kid had the same “didn’t win it all” collar around his neck (and had lesser numbers in what would be considered the “clutch” times during his career), but he is not cast in the same light. To me, Ted was Zeus, hurling lightning bolts from on high. Yaz? He was Sisyphus. I learned about the myth of Sisyphus in 11th grade English and I immediately thought of Yaz. Then I extrapolated it out to simply being a Red Sox fan. But then again, none of us were actually rolling that rock up the hill. Yaz was.

In John Updike’s famous essay “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu,” he sums up Ted quite nicely as he observed that Ted didn’t tip his cap after his career-ending clout, despite the impassioned pleas of the few thousand who were in the stands that day: “Gods do not answer letters.”

On the other hand, Yaz took a lap around Fenway Park the day before his last game, exchanging high-fives and handshakes with anyone lucky enough to be sitting in the first few rows. A far more stoic man than Ted ever was, he nonetheless placed himself into the open palms of Boston and said, “This is what I can offer you as thanks.” On his last day, as he walked off the field for one last time after being pulled during the top of the 9th, he unbuttoned his jersey and gave it to a boy in the front row behind the dugout before he descended down the steps for good. Carl Yastrzemski was not Superman or Zeus. But he showed us that a man battling against that which limits him — whether it was his own physical attributes or the unyielding opponent of time itself — is as compelling as any myth, while displaying an honor that was actually earned.
Adding to the pile-on. Wonderful piece of writing.
 

Hawk68

New Member
Feb 29, 2008
172
Massachusetts
Yaz, on the other hand, bore the visible scars of battle, ones dealt not only by foes on the diamond but by time itself. And because of this we identified with him all the more.
Sir,
I wanted to write of Yaz, baseball and the ties that bind me to my late father who was buried many years ago on his 96th birthday. Then I read your work.

I have no words.

Were they with us still, John Updike and Bart Giamatti would remove their hats.

There are no words.

Respectfully,
Hawk
 

jaytftwofive

New Member
Jan 20, 2013
1,182
Drexel Hill Pa.
Loved him as a player, but off the field not my favorite. He had aloofness like Mike Schmidt seemed to have in Philly. Not always loved. I was at his last Sox-Yanks game at Yankee Stadium late September 1983. Many fans Yankee and Sox fans stayed outside to get a glimpse of Yaz for the last time. When he finally came out to get on the bus everybody cheered and yelled his name. He didn't acknowledge or even wave at the fans and just walked straight on the bus. I wasn't happy needless to say.