September 29 in Yankee History

  • The Yankees jumped all over 2020 AL Cy Young Award winner Shane Bieber in the opener of the teams’ three-game postseason Series, 12-3 on September 29, 2020. Although the most impressive thing about the Yankee offense was the tack-on runs (they scored in six of nine frames), Aaron Judge set the tone with a two-run bomb with no outs in the top of the first. Gleyber Torres, Brett Gardner, and Giancarlo Stanton also went yard, and Gerrit Cole cashed in the win while giving up just an rbi double, and a solo homer to Josh Naylor. Continue reading
  • September 28 in Yankee History

  • Brian Mitchell and Boston’s Clay Buccholz put up zeroes through seven innings in a September 28, 2016, battle in Yankee Stadium, but things looked bleak when the Red Sox plated three in the eighth on an error and Dustin Pedroia and Mookie Betts doubles. Closer Craig Kimbrell came on in the ninth to not only finish the win, but also give the visitors the opportunity to celebrate clinching the AL East title on the Stadium field. But Brett Gardner reached on a single, and Kimbrell walked the next three to force in a run. Once he was replaced by Joe Kelly, things looked bad again when the hard thrower got two quick outs on six pitches. But then in the defining moment of his final year, the retiring Mark Teixeira sent what was left of 35,000 fans dancing and cheering like we had just won the World Series with a grand slam home run to right field, 5-3 Yankees! Continue reading
  • September 27 in Yankee History

  • Surprisingly, journeyman righty Paul Byrd of the Red Sox delayed the almost relentless Yankee march to the 2009 AL East title for almost six innings in a rain-soaked Yankee Stadium on September 27, 2009, against a game Andy Pettitte who, because he completed six innings, got the win. After Byrd allowed two 2-out singles in the sixth, Hideki Matsui singled in two runs three pitches after a Takashi Saito wild pitch, to give the Bombers a 3-2 lead. Mark Teixeira homered for the final run in the 4-2 win in the eighth, Melky Cabrera went yard earlier, and the Yanks earned the division crown at exactly 5:00 pm New York time. Continue reading
  • September 26 in Yankee History

  • Although the visiting Marlins got to young Deivi Garcia for three runs in the third on September 26, 2020, the rookie got his third win once the Yankees used Aaron Hicks and Luke Voit home runs in a seven-run sixth inning that carried the home team to an 11-4 victory. Righthander Miguel Yajure, who would be traded to Pittsburgh for Jameson Taillon in the coming offseason, struck out four in the final two innings. Continue reading
  • September 25 in Yankee History

  • September 25, 2014, put an exclamation point on the career of Hall of Famer-to-be Derek Jeter, Yankee captain and shortstop, who manned that infield position for the last time on that day, his final home game in pinstripes. Derek was honored by ex-teammates Mariano Rivera, Andy Pettitte, Gerald “Ice” Williams, Tino Martinez, and Bernie Williams, and manager Joe Torre, in pregame ceremonies. Baltimore threatened to run away with the game on this prized occasion, rocking starter Hiroki Kuroda with back-to-back leadoff home runs from Nick Markakis and Alejandro de Aza to begin the game, but Jeter would not hear of it; his rbi double deep to left off young Kevin Gausman keyed the tying rally in the inning’s bottom half. The game remained tied until the bottom of the seventh when the Yanks scored three, two on a Jeter grounder mishandled at short and one on a sac fly. Though key to the tying rally, and in the middle of the go-ahead one, it was a bit of a letdown that it was on an error and not a hit that Derek knocked in the lead run. Then amazingly, closer David Robertson gave up a two-run and then a singleton home run, to Adam Jones and Steve Pearce, respectively, to tie the game in the ninth. The stuff of legend followed, as Jose Pirela singled to start the bottom half, pinch runner Antoan Richardson was sacrificed to second, and “Derek Jeter, Derek Jeter” singled in Richardson on the next pitch, 6-5 Yankees! Continue reading
  • September 24 in Yankee History

  • We who stood outside the Stadium’s gates for two hours-plus knew that no good was to be expected on the night of the — cue the dramatic organ flourish! — Mariano Bobblehead Disaster of ’13. Blaming the problem on a traffic mishap in poor ridiculed New Jersey, the Yanks were not ready to present the much-desired Mo tributes to thousands who showed up hours early for them, and eventually arranged a strange and unending collection line for the late-arriving replicas on the Stadium’s ramps in the later innings of the game, long after a Matt Joyce first-inning leadoff homer keyed a three-run Tampa first. The visitors tacked on two runs each in the sixth and ninth innings in their 7-0 win, and 43,407 fans went home convinced they had lived through one of the most stressful and least satisfying giveaway experiences ever. Continue reading
  • September 23 in Yankee History

  • The Yankees and visiting Red Sox battled through seven for the second straight day on September 23, 2022, with Boston taking a 1-0 lead, only to be tied in the third; the Yanks scored three in the fifth, matched by a three-spot in the top of the sixth. But with Harrison Bader pinch running in the bottom of the eighth, catcher Reese McGuire‘s throw on a steal attempt went into center field for an error. When Jose Trevino subsequently singled to center, it scored a fifth run the Sox would fail to match, 5-4 Yankees. Continue reading
  • September 22 in Yankee History

  • The details on the incredible life and career of the larger than life Yankee Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra will be talked about lower in this column where this sad aspect of the game is covered, but there can be no way to start a Yankee history post on September 22 than to share that it was on this day in 2015 that Lawrence Peter Berra passed away. Continue reading
  • September 21 in Yankee History

  • September 21, 2008, will be bittersweet to this Yankee fan as long as they continue to play the game, as it was the day they played the last game in old Yankee Stadium. The ballpark was open all day, with fans circling the infield and paying their final respects in Monument Park. In the pregame ceremonies Yankee employees, dressed as old-time ballplayers, portraying the starting nine from the opener in 1923, took the field along with Manager Miller Huggins. Then players from yesteryear were honored position by position. Several were invited to take to the field at their old positions, with Yankee widows and children taking the place of their deceased fathers and husbands in several spots. The bat that Babe Ruth used to hit the game-winning home run that day was laid across home plate, and Derek Jeter was presented with a silver bat in honor of his having eclipsed Lou Gehrig‘s record for most hits stroked in the old Stadium just weeks before. Ageless emcee Bob Sheppard greeted the fans from home on the video board several times, and recited a poem in honor of the old place. Broadcaster Michael Kay appeared on the Scoreboard in the fifth inning when it came time to reduce the games remaining in the old Stadium counter from the “1” displayed, changing it to Forever because the magic would be moving across the street to the new Stadium. Although not at his sharpest, Andy Pettitte got the start and the win. Johnny Damon‘s third-inning three-run home run wiped out an early 2-0 Birds lead, and once the visitors scored for a tying tally, unlikely offensive hero Jose Molina hit the last home run in the old Stadium for a 5-3 lead. Later, Jason Giambi stroked the last hit, and Brett Gardner scored the last run in the Cathedral pinch-running, on a sac fly by Robbie Cano, the last rbi in Yankee Stadium, in a 7-3 win. Aside from Gardner, other reserves Manager Joe Girardi let play in the historic game were Melky Cabrera, Wilson Betemit, Cody Ransom, and Ivan Rodriguez. Relievers who pitched in the game were Jose Veras, Phil Coke, and Joba Chamberlain, with the game started by Pettitte being finished by the one and only Mariano Rivera, of course. Once the game was over, Captain Jeter led the players around the field, and he exhorted us to bring Joey Gallo carried the Yankees to a 7-1 victory over visiting Texas on September 21, 2021.our memories to the new Stadium in 2009. People just hung out until well after midnight, as some just did not want to leave. Sitting in the Upper Deck at the new place across the street, I still can’t believe they have torn down the old structure, the House That Ruth Built, with its upper deck hanging right over the field, and not hundreds of feet back from the field like in the new place. Continue reading
  • September 20 in Yankee History

  • Roger Maris blasted his 59th home run of the 1961 season off Milt Pappas on September 20 in a 4-2 win over Baltimore. Because this was the Yanks’ 154th game of the year, AL Commissioner Ford Frick had determined that Roger neither tied nor broke Babe Ruth‘s single-season home run record of 60, because Roger would hit numbers 60 and 61 in the eight games that were to come, while Ruth had hit his during a season composed of just 154 tilts. It is worth adding, I think, that Rajah came close to no. 60 in this tilt, and that he lost a tater earlier that season in a Baltimore four-inning-plus rainout. The Yankees, meanwhile, clinched their 26th AL pennant with the win. Continue reading