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		<title>Today In History &#8211; Tom Yawkey Purchases The Red Sox</title>
		<link>https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2013/02/25/today-in-history-tom-yawkey-purchases-the-red-sox/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[fenfan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Today In History]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.fenwayfanatics.com/?p=3525</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[25 February 1933 &#8211; On this day eighty years ago, in the midst of the Great Depression, Bob Quinn sells the Red Sox franchise for $1.5 million to Thomas Austin Yawkey, who had celebrated his 30th birthday four days earlier. Yawkey served as the sole owner of the team for the next 44 years and became a &#8230; <a href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2013/02/25/today-in-history-tom-yawkey-purchases-the-red-sox/" class="more-link">Continue reading<span class="screen-reader-text"> "Today In History &#8211; Tom Yawkey Purchases The Red Sox"</span></a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>25 February 1933</strong> &#8211; On this day eighty years ago, in the midst of the Great Depression, Bob Quinn sells the Red Sox franchise for $1.5 million to Thomas Austin Yawkey, who had celebrated his 30th birthday four days earlier. Yawkey served as the sole owner of the team for the next 44 years and became a Boston institution as well as a pillar of Major League Baseball, though the legacy of his ownership was not without controversy.</p>
<p><span id="more-3525"></span>Yawkey&#8217;s first order of business after purchasing the club was to renovate the rapidly aging <a title="Fenway Park" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/fenway-park/">Fenway Park</a>. He spent another $1.5 million on a near-total reconstruction, employing thousands of laborers who had been affected by the Great Depression; his efforts had the park turned into a palace when the gates opened in April of 1934.</p>
<p>Trying to build contenders, Yawkey would pull out his wallet on several occasions to pay big money for talent, sometimes wisely but more often foolishly; he mistakenly believed that his inheritance would solve any problem and often threw unheard-of amounts of money at players who were either unproven or past their prime. He also strongly resisted integration in baseball; as a result, Boston became the last club to field a black player, twelve years after Jackie Robinson&#8217;s rookie season, and continued to be dogged by charges of unspoken racial policies even after Yawkey&#8217;s death in 1976. As a result of his short-sightedness, only three times during his tenure as owner did the Sox win a pennant.</p>
<p>Even still, he managed to bring Hall-of-Fame talent into the fold over the years in the form of <a title="Joe Cronin" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/joe-cronin/">Joe Cronin</a>, <a title="Jimmie Foxx" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jimmie-foxx/">Jimmie Foxx</a>, <a title="Lefty Grove" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/lefty-grove/">Lefty Grove</a>, <a title="Bobby Doerr" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/bobby-doerr/">Bobby Doerr</a>, <a title="Ted Williams" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/ted-williams/">Ted Williams</a>, and <a title="Carl Yastrzemski" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/carl-yastrzemski/">Carl Yastrzemski</a>. Yawkey also did his part for the local community; over the years, he funneled much of his time and money into groups like the <a title="Jimmy Fund" href="http://jimmyfund.org/">Jimmy Fund</a>, which continues to raise money for sick children through its affiliation with the Red Sox.</p>
<p>A sportsman in the truest sense of the word and regarded highly by his peers, Yawkey was later the first person elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame who had never served as a player, a manager, or a general manager.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">3525</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>Did You Know? – David Ortiz and His Home Run Totals</title>
		<link>https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2012/07/05/did-you-know-david-ortiz-and-his-home-run-totals/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[fenfan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jul 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.fenwayfanatics.com/?p=3450</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[On Wednesday afternoon in Oakland, Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz hit career home run number 400, making him the 49th player in MLB history to reach this milestone.  It was also his 342nd home run in a Boston uniform, which ranks him fifth all-time in team history behind Ted Williams (521), Carl Yastrzemski (452), &#8230; <a href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2012/07/05/did-you-know-david-ortiz-and-his-home-run-totals/" class="more-link">Continue reading<span class="screen-reader-text"> "Did You Know? – David Ortiz and His Home Run Totals"</span></a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Wednesday afternoon in Oakland, Red Sox designated hitter <a title="David Ortiz" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/david-ortiz/">David Ortiz</a> hit career home run number 400, making him the 49th player in MLB history to reach this milestone.  It was also his 342nd home run in a Boston uniform, which ranks him fifth all-time in team history behind <a title="Ted Williams" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/ted-williams/">Ted Williams</a> (521), <a title="Carl Yastrzemski" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/carl-yastrzemski/">Carl Yastrzemski</a> (452), <a title="Jim Rice" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jim-rice/">Jim Rice</a> (382), and <a title="Dwight Evans" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/dwight-evans/">Dwight Evans</a> (379).  “Big Papi” also ranks second behind <a title="Manny Ramirez" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/manny-ramirez/">Manny Ramirez</a> in number of at-bats per home run at 14.7, just ahead of <a title="Jimmie Foxx" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jimmie-foxx/">Jimmie Foxx</a> and Williams.</p>
<p><span id="more-3450"></span>Known early in his Red Sox career for the dramatic, Ortiz has hit 10 walk-off home runs; all but one have come with the Red Sox, though the latest on 26 August 2009 against Chicago White Sox reliever Tony Pena (no relation to former catcher <a title="Tony Pena" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/tony-pena/">Tony Pena</a> or his son, Tony).  Three of those came in 2006, which was the same season that he set the single-season franchise record for home runs with 54.  In total at <a title="Fenway Park" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/fenway-park/">Fenway Park</a>, he has left the yard 164 times, all but one time with the Red Sox.</p>
<p>Most of his home runs have come as a DH; 46 have come with him playing first base.  Two home runs have come as a pinch-hitter; his only one with Boston happened 29 May 2011 against Tigers reliever Jose Valverde.</p>
<p>In total, his home runs have plated 627 runners; about one-third of his home runs have come with runners on base.  Ortiz has 11 grand slams in his career, all but one with Boston; his latest came 20 June 2012 off Miami Marlins pitcher Chris Hatcher.  42 of his home runs have come with two runners on base; 110 have been hit with one runner on base.</p>
<p>The pitcher who has surrendered the most home runs to Big Papi is current Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Roy Halladay, who has given up six; all came while Halladay was with the Toronto Blue Jays.  Current Toronto pitcher <a title="Jamie Moyer" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jamie-moyer/">Jamie Moyer</a> is second with five; seven other pitchers have allowed four.  In his career, the left-handed Ortiz has shown more success against right-handed pitchers, with only 89 home runs coming off southpaws.</p>
<p>Of the 58 Ortiz hit with the Minnesota Twins, with whom he played between 1997 and 2002, four were against Boston pitchers.  The last came against former teammate <a title="Pedro Martinez" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/pedro-martinez/">Pedro Martinez</a>, who served up an offering to Big Papi on 16 August 2002.  Ortiz also hit one against the Red Sox off Pedro’s brother <a title="Ramon Martinez" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/ramon-martinez/">Ramon Martinez</a> on 07 September 2000, which proved to be the one grand slam he would hit with the Twins.</p>
<p>Not surprisingly, most of his home runs have come against American League East Division opponents; Toronto has been victimized 46 times.  Outside Boston’s division, the Texas Rangers lead opponents with 27 home runs surrendered to Ortiz.  The National League franchise with the highest total is the Miami Marlins, who have allowed eight.</p>
<p>Source: <a href="http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/event_hr.cgi?id=ortizda01&amp;t=b">David Ortiz Career Home Runs – Baseball-Reference.com</a></p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">3450</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Did You Know? &#8211; Red Sox MVP Honorees</title>
		<link>https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2009/03/03/did-you-know-red-sox-mvp-honorees/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[fenfan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Mar 2009 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/?p=193</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The 2009 season begins with second baseman Dustin Pedroia set to defend his title as American League Most Valuable Player, the first since former first baseman Mo Vaughn began the 1996 season in the same position. In team history, only ten Boston players have received the AL MVP award. The first was outfielder Tris Speaker, &#8230; <a href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2009/03/03/did-you-know-red-sox-mvp-honorees/" class="more-link">Continue reading<span class="screen-reader-text"> "Did You Know? &#8211; Red Sox MVP Honorees"</span></a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The 2009 season begins with second baseman <a title="Dustin Pedroia" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/dustin-pedroia/">Dustin Pedroia</a> set to defend his title as American League Most Valuable Player, the first since former first baseman <a title="Mo Vaughn" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/mo-vaughn/">Mo Vaughn</a> began the 1996 season in the same position. In team history, only ten Boston players have received the AL MVP award. The first was outfielder <a title="Tris Speaker" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/tris-speaker/">Tris Speaker</a>, who received the Chalmers Award in 1912, created as a promotional gimmick by an automobile company owner, Hugh Chalmers, in recognition of a player from each league who proved himself as “…the most important and useful player to his club and to the league at large in point of deportment and value of services rendered.”[1] Speaker was one of only eight players recognized over a four-year span in which the honor was made, which included the awarding of a Chalmers Model 30 automobile for that player’s efforts. (The award was discontinued after the 1914 season due to diminished interest.)</p>
<p>Efforts by the Baseball Writers Association of America eventually led to the creation of the MVP award as it is recognized today, decided by 28 seasoned sportswriters using a positional voting system where each voter ranks his or her top ten players. <a title="Jimmie Foxx" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jimmie-foxx/">Jimmie Foxx</a> was the first Boston player recognized by the baseball writers who gave him the honor in 1938, though for him it was his third award after having been recognized twice before with the Philadelphia Athletics in 1932 and 1933. <a title="Ted Williams" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/ted-williams/">Ted Williams</a> remains the only Red Sox player to have been named twice (1946 and 1949). Other winners have included <a title="Jackie Jensen" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jackie-jensen/">Jackie Jensen</a> (1958), <a title="Carl Yastrzemski" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/carl-yastrzemski/">Carl Yastrzemski</a> (1967), <a title="Fred Lynn" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/fred-lynn/">Fred Lynn</a> (1975), <a title="Jim Rice" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jim-rice/">Jim Rice</a> (1978), and <a title="Roger Clemens" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/roger-clemens/">Roger Clemens</a> (1986). Clemens remains the only Boston pitcher to earn the distinction, though since 1967 only seven pitchers have been so honored.</p>
<p>Of course, due to the subjective native of the MVP vote, Red Sox players have found themselves the focus of controversial outcomes, more often as the odd man out. Though Williams was honored twice in his illustrious career, there were also four instances in which he finished second in the voting where he might have been considered the more deserving candidate. In 1941, he batted .406, the last player to hit .400 or better in the regular season, but lost to New York Yankees outfielder Joe DiMaggio, who has amassed a 56-game hit streak that same year. The next year, he finished second again, this time to Yankees second baseman Joe Gordon, despite having won the batting Triple Crown with more hits in fewer at-bats, twice the number of home runs, and an OPS almost 250 point higher. In 1947, Williams again won the batting Triple Crown, the only player other than Roger Hornsby to win that recognition twice, yet he again lost to DiMaggio by a single point in the vote, again with far better numbers across the board. Finally, in 1957, he won the batting title with an impressive .388 average and hit 38 home runs while setting a modern-day record of reaching base in 16 consecutive at-bats, all at the age of 39, yet finished second once more to another legendary Yankees outfielder, Mickey Mantle.</p>
<p>Other Boston players who fell just shy in the voting include <a title="Pedro Martinez" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/pedro-martinez/">Pedro Martinez</a>, who had one of the best seasons ever by a pitcher in modern baseball history and won the pitching Triple Crown and the Cy Young award. Yet, despite having more first-place votes, he lost to catcher Ivan Rodriguez from the Texas Rangers by a narrow 13-point margin in the vote. It was later discovered that two sportswriters, which included George King from the New York Post, had omitted Martinez from their ballots with the argument that the contributions made by pitchers were not significant enough to earn MVP consideration, though King had included <em>two</em> pitchers on his ballot the previous season. <a title="David Ortiz" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/david-ortiz/">David Ortiz</a> also fell just short of the honor in 2005 as he finished behind Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez in the vote. Though both players finished the season with impressive numbers, the argument was made that Ortiz, as a designated hitter, did not contribute as much to his team’s success as Rodriguez, so much that two sportswriters left Ortiz off their ballots.</p>
<p>On the flipside, Vaughn finished a mere eight points ahead of Cleveland slugger Albert Belle in the 1995 vote, despite Belle having far more impressive numbers on offense, including a higher number of home runs, runs scored, RBI, slugging percentage, and total bases; he had also become the first player in major league history to hit 50 doubles and 50 home runs in the same season that same year. Vaughn, however, had a far better relationship with fans and the media, whereas Belle routinely refused to grant interviews to reporters and had engaged in several controversial incidents with fans both at and away from the park. Ted Williams was also well-known for his sour relationship with the media, whom he mockingly referred to as the “kinights of the keyboard,” and, like Belle, may have been the reason in part for losing several close MVP ballots.</p>
<p><small>[1] Deane, Bill, Thron, John, and Palmer, Pete. <em>Total Baseball</em>. HarpersCollins Publishers, New York, 1993.</small></p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">193</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>Ramirez Earns &#8220;B&#8221; For Baseball Hall Of Fame</title>
		<link>https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2008/06/16/ramirez-earns-b-for-baseball-hall-of-fame/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[fenfan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Jun 2008 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Between Innings]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/?p=158</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[When career home run number 500 left the bat of Boston Red Sox left fielder Manny Ramirez on 31 May versus the Orioles in Baltimore, two things were made clear. The first is that he is all but assured a spot in the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown when he makes his first appearance on &#8230; <a href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/content/2008/06/16/ramirez-earns-b-for-baseball-hall-of-fame/" class="more-link">Continue reading<span class="screen-reader-text"> "Ramirez Earns &#8220;B&#8221; For Baseball Hall Of Fame"</span></a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When career home run number 500 left the bat of Boston Red Sox left fielder <a title="Manny Ramirez" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/manny-ramirez/">Manny Ramirez</a> on 31 May versus the Orioles in Baltimore, two things were made clear. The first is that he is all but assured a spot in the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown when he makes his first appearance on the ballot; given the likelihood that he will play another four years, in Boston or elsewhere, that places him in line for 2018, so be sure to reserve your tickets now. The only question might be how they are going to design in those long-flowing dreadlocks he wears today, but I digress. The second is that when the time comes for the powers that be at the Hall to chose what cap Ramirez will be fashioned atop those dreads, it’s all but assured that he will be sporting the spoked “B” that he wears on his cap today as a member of the Red Sox.</p>
<p><span id="more-2156"></span>Looking at the numbers through Sunday, it is amazing how close his numbers compare between his eight seasons with the Cleveland Indians and his seven-plus with Boston. Having played 82 more games with Boston, he has 111 more hits, 33 more home runs, and 45 more RBI that he did in Cleveland, and his batting average (.312) and slugging percentage (.591) is nearly identical to his time with the Indians. That, my friends, is consistency over a 16-year stretch. So what will be the difference when the Hall prepares his plaque? How about All-Star honors in every season with Boston, which will include this season when the final votes are tallied? How about post-season totals that include a batting average of .321, 100 points higher than with Cleveland, and near equal or better numbers in hits, home runs, and RBI in nine fewer games? How about being on two World Series winners and earning MVP honors in the 2004 Fall Classic?</p>
<p>Should Ramirez remain in Boston through at least the 2010 season, he would also be eligible under the team’s strict guidelines to have his number (24) retired and posted on the right field façade, and it would be fitting to include him in the same company as another great Red Sox hitter, <a title="Ted Williams" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/ted-williams/">Ted Williams</a>, who defended the same position as Ramirez does today. Whether you love him or loathe him, it’s clear that his numbers put him in the same company as other great hitters like Williams, <a title="Jimmie Foxx" href="https://www.fenwayfanatics.com/player/jimmie-foxx/">Jimmie Foxx</a>, Mickey Mantle, and Frank Robinson, to name a few, all of whom have been permanently enshrined among the game’s greats. It should be equally satisfying for Red Sox fans who have seen him play here for seven-plus seasons and counting to know that he will enter the Hall wearing a Boston baseball cap.</p>
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