Red Sox Triviology: Fascinating Facts from the Bleacher Seats
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Red Sox Triviology - Christopher Walsh
To the Red Sox Nation, but especially those from the University of New Hampshire
All I want out of life is when I walk down the street people say, ‘There goes the greatest hitter that ever lived.’
—Ted Williams
Contents
Introduction
1. The Basics
2. Major League History
3. Famous Firsts
4. Fenway Park
5. Nicknames
6. The Greats
7. Jersey Numbers
8. The Records
9. Quotes
10. More Than 100 Years, More Than 100 Questions
11. Drafts, Trades, and Free Agency, Oh My!
12. Opening Day Lineups
13. The Postseason
14. The Babe
15. Miscellaneous
16. The Hot Box
About the Author
Introduction
It was the fall of 1986 and I was a freshman the University of New Hampshire. I had grown up a sports nut and for years my birthday was celebrated with a trip to Met Stadium to see the Minnesota Twins face the Boston Red Sox or New York Yankees, but nothing had quite prepared me for my first couple of months on campus when the New York Mets and the Red Sox were on a collision course to meet in the World Series.
The whole region went nuts. I mean really, really nuts, which was fitting considering the way things played out on the diamond, yet that was my first taste of what people meant when they said that Boston and New York were baseball cities. With each big victory along the way impromptu celebrations broke out and lasted well into the morning hours.
Two friends down the hall had a TV and we’d all cram into their room to watch every game, with those rooting for the Red Sox on one side and the Mets fans on the other (being the foreigner
from Minnesota, I sat in the middle). When the ball went between Bill Buckner’s legs in Game 6 everyone screamed, some in joy, others in absolute horror. My roommate, who had been making celebration plans, froze and sat in shock staring at the TV for about 90 minutes after we turned both it and the lights off.
Thankfully, the Red Sox came back and eventually won the World Series in 2004, and New England has had more than its fair share of championships in other sports as well. But I never looked at October and November baseball the same way again.
Hopefully some of that will come through in the pages to follow.
In putting this book together my aim wasn’t to be overly easy or difficult, or have it serve as a quiz to measure the baseball IQ of even the most die-hard fans, but rather to celebrate, honor and inform. The Red Sox are one of the most interesting and colorful franchises to have ever existed, and it’s hard to believe sometimes that they’ve been around for more than 100 years.
The book is organized into sections, and sometimes subsections, to make it easy to use. The questions range in difficulty from No, duh
to extremely difficult, and those in the Hot Box section are practically impossible.
Above all else, I hope you enjoy it and learn a few things along the way.
1. The Basics
To really understand the origins of the Red Sox, one really has to go back to the late 1800s, when Boston was really at the center of the baseball world.
At the time the idea of professional baseball was in its infancy and the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players was anything but stable. Created in 1871, its franchises were unstable and many were located in cities that were too small to support such a venture.
There was also a lack of central authority and one team in particular, the Boston Red Stockings, who won the championship every year between 1872–75, dominated the league.
In part because five of his star players were on the verge of being kicked out of the NAPBBP, Chicago businessman William Hulbert started rallying support for the creation of a new league. It took him several years to convince enough owners to make the switch, but finally in 1876 the National League was born. The American League would join it in 1901.
The Red Stockings were mostly known as the Red Caps their first few years and then as the Beaneaters. Now they’re known as the Atlanta Braves.
The 1999 All-Star Game at Fenway will always be remembered for the pre-game appearance of Ted Williams, who players gathered around to meet. Here, Tony Gwynn helps Williams throw the ceremonial first pitch. (Matt York)
The Basics
1. What was the team’s nickname in 1901?
2. Name two of its other nicknames during its initial years.
3. When was the team first called the Red Sox?
4. Who came up with the Red Sox nickname and when was it first used?
5. What move by another team precipitated the change?
6. Why did that team make such a change?
7. What is that team known as now?
8. Where did the team play home games before Fenway Park?
9. What other team did Charles W. Somers also own?
10. Who did Boston face in its first official game?
11. What well-known pitcher got the franchise’s first win?
12. In what place in the standings did Boston finish during its first season?
13. True or false, in 1906 Boston was the first American League team to lose 100 games.
14. Through 2015 how many World Series has the franchise won?
15. How many times has it played in the World Series?
16. In what year did the Red Sox win the American League title but not play in the World Series?
17. How many times have the Red Sox hosted an All-Star Game?
18. Who are the four Red Sox named MVP of the All-Star Game?
19. What’s the name of the team mascot?
20. What Red Sox owner is in the National Baseball Hall of Fame?
Answers
1. Americans
2. Somersets (after owner Charles W. Somers), Plymouth Rocks, Speed Boys, Puritans or Pilgrims.
3. 1907 (December 18th to be specific).
4. Owner John I. Taylor before the 1908 season.
5. At the time most baseball teams were identified by a color. When the crosstown Boston Red Stockings changed their name to Doves
and switched from red to blue, the franchise quickly claimed the color and changed its nickname to Red Sox.
6. Manager Fred Tenney believed that the red dye in the socks could possibly cause infection in spike wounds.
7. The Atlanta Braves
8. Huntington Avenue Grounds, which is now part of the Northeastern University campus.
9. The Cleveland Indians
10. The Baltimore Orioles, who won 10–6.
11. Cy Young
12. Second, behind the Chicago White Stockings.
13. False. Boston lost 100 games, but the Washington Senators lost 113 in 1904.
14. Eight
15. 12
16. 1904
17. Three: 1946, 1961 and 1999
18. 1970 Carl Yastrzemski; 1986 Roger Clemens; 1999 Pedro Martinez; 2008 J.D. Drew
19. Wally the Green Monster
20. Tom Yawkey
2. Major League History
To put into perspective how long Major League Baseball has been around, consider what was going on when both leagues were created.
The National League was formed in 1876. That’s the year Colorado became the 38th state, General George Armstrong Custer was killed along with 264 of his Union Calvary after engaging the Sioux tribe at Little Big Horn, and Thomas Edison had yet to invent the light bulb.
The American league came around in 1901. That’s before the Wright Brothers made their first flight (1903), the San Francisco Earthquake (1906) and Ford introduced the Model-T car (1908). The president at the time was William McKinley, who was beginning his second term when he was shot and fatally wounded by an anarchist on the grounds of the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York, on September 6.
Theodore Roosevelt was promptly sworn in as his successor. Although he wasn’t a big fan of the game, in 1907 the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues issued him the first presidential lifetime pass, which was made of 14-karat gold.
Major League History
1. What was the original name of the National League?
2. Name the original eight teams.
3. Which two still exist?
4. Which two organizations were kicked out of the league during the first year, and why?
5. What happened to the other four teams that are no longer in existence?
6. Which two teams that are still in the National League joined in 1883?
7. Where was the first National League game played?
8. Who had the first hit in National League history?
9. Who is credited with scoring the first run?
10. Who had the first home run?
11. Who threw the first no-hitter?
12. What major innovation occurred in 1877?
13. Although many upstart leagues would challenge the National League, which was its first significant rival?
14. Which four teams switched allegiances and joined the National League prior to 1892?
15. When the two leagues essentially merged, which four franchises joined the National League in 1892?
16. Which one of those four continues to exist today?
17. Before it developed into a Major League what was the American League known as?
18. When the American League was formally organized in 1901 it had eight teams. Name them (nicknames included).
19. Which three original American Association clubs were dropped when the American League formed?
20. What future nemesis of the Red Sox was awarded a franchise in 1903 when the original Baltimore Orioles failed?
Answers
1. The National League of Professional Baseball
2. The Boston Red Stockings, Chicago White Stockings, Cincinnati Red Legs, Hartford Dark Blues, Louisville Grays, Philadelphia Athletics, Brooklyn Mutuals and St. Louis Browns
3. The Boston Red Stockings are now the Atlanta Braves. The Chicago Cubs are the only original team that never moved.
4. After falling behind in the standings the Athletics and Mutuals refused to make western road trips late in the season, opting to instead play local teams to save money. Hulbert expelled them.
5. Three of them folded within two years. The Cincinnati Red Stockings were expelled after the 1880 season.
6. The New York Gothams and Philadelphia Phillies. The Gothams are now known as the San Francisco Giants.
7. Philadelphia’s Jefferson Street Grounds, 25th & Jefferson. Boston defeated the hometown team 6–5.
8. Jim O’Rourke
9. Tim McGinley
10. Chicago’s Ross Barnes. Cincinnati’s William Cherokee
Fisher was the pitcher.
11. St. Louis’ George Bradley,