New York’s Favorite Past Time: Baseball
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New York’s Favorite Past Time
“Take me out to the ball game,
Take me out with the crowd.
Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jack,
I dont care if I never get back,
Let me root, root, root for the home team,
If they dont win its a shame.
For its one, two, three strikes, youre out,
At the old ball game.”
New York City is well known for being an attraction for tourists. Whether it is Broadway shows or the Times Square, people are always moving around. New York has also been known for playing the game of baseball. There are two teams that play in New York and they are the New York Mets and the New York Yankees. The New York Yankees have been the most consistent team in history to win the World Series. Since there first World Series Win in 1923, the New York Yankees have won 26 World Series Championships and 39 American League Pennant titles.
The Yankees were actually founded in Baltimore, Maryland in 1901 then called the Baltimore Orioles, and was bought by Frank Farrell and Bill Devery who moved the team to Manhattan. The team was bought for $18,000 and renamed the New York Highlanders because their new stadium “Hilltop Park” occupied one of the highest spots in Manhattan. The Highlanders first game resulted in a loss in Washington, but eventually they recorded their first win which was also in Washington. At their inaugural home game in Hilltop Park, the Highlanders won 6-2 versus Washington. In 1912, the Highlanders’ uniform presented a new look: pinstripes, which would become the most famous uniform design. In 1913, the Highlanders are renamed again, this time as the New York Yankees. The name change was due to playing in the Polo Grounds and the name Highlanders no longer applied. In 1915, the Yankees were bought by Jacob Ruppert and Col. Tillinghast LHommedieu Huston for $1.25 million. The hiring of manager Miller Huggins and general manager Ed Barrow would cause a break between owners and eventually led to Ruppert buying Huston out for $1.5 million. Miller Huggins, the manager, would lead the Yankees to six A.L pennants and three World Series Championships. In 1929, the Yankees would make numbers a part of their uniforms. Casey Stengel became the new Yankee manager and under him the Yankees won 10 pennants and seven World Series titles. After losing the World Series in 1957, the Yankees became the New York’s only team after the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers left for California.
In 1964, CBS purchases 80% of Yankees for $11.2 million and later buys the remaining 20%. George Steinbrenner, purchased the club from CBS for $8.7 million. Within a year, Steinbrenner bought out most of his other partners and became the teams principal owner. Yankee Stadium needed remodeling, but if renovations took place the team would have to play elsewhere, and the Mets refused to open their home, Shea Stadium, to the Yankees. The city bought the Stadium and thus began a two-year renovation period. Since the city also owned Shea, the Mets had to allow the Yankees to play at Shea Stadium during renovation. Throughout the late 1970s, the race for the pennant often came to a close competition between the Yankees and the Red Sox and every game between the two became important. In 1978, the Yankees were 14.5 games behind the Red Sox and miraculously when the pivotal four-game series at Fenway Park came, they were only four games out. The Yankees would sweep the Red Sox in what would become known as the “Boston Massacre”. On the last day of the season, the two clubs finished in a tie for first place in the AL East. A one-game playoff between the two teams was held to decide who would go on to the playoffs, with the game being held at Bostons Fenway Park. The Red Sox took a 2-0 lead, but in the seventh inning, Bucky Dent drove a three-run home run over the “Green Monster”, putting the Yankees up 3-2. At this specific moment in time, the Yankees drove a stake through the hearts of their rivals fans. The Yankees won 5-4 giving them their 100th win and their third straight AL East title.
In 2000, the Yankees won their 26th World Series Championship vs. New York Mets. This was the first “Subway Series” since 1956 and the last time the Yankees would hold the title as World Champions. After this win, the Yankees joined the Yankee teams of 1936-1939 and 1949-1953 and the 1972-1974 Oakland Athletics as the only teams to win at least three consecutive World Series. After the losing the World Series to the Arizona Diamondback in 2001, the Yankees