The
Boston Red Sox are a member of the
Major League Baseball’s
American League Eastern Division.
Since ,
the Red Sox's home ballpark has been
Fenway
Park
. The "Red Sox" name originates from the
iconic uniform feature.
The club was founded in , as one of the American League's eight
charter franchises. They were a dominant team in the new
league—defeating the
Pittsburgh
Pirates in the first
World Series
in . They won four more championships by , and then went into one
of the longest championship
droughts in baseball
history, which ended in , when the team won their sixth World
Series Championship. Since , the Red Sox have competed in four
ALCS, have won
two World Series, and have emerged as arguably the most successful
MLB team of the last decade.
The Red Sox led all MLB teams in average road attendance in , while
the small capacity of Fenway Park caused them to rank 11th in home
attendance. Every home game since May 15, 2003 has been sold out—a
span of over six years and an MLB record.
Nickname
The name
Red Sox, chosen by owner
John I. Taylor
after the 1907 season, refers to the red hose in the team uniform
beginning .
Sox had been previously adopted for the
Chicago White Sox by newspapers
needing a headline-friendly form of
Stockings, as
"Stockings Win!" in
large type would not
fit on a page. The
Spanish language
media sometime refers to the team as
Medias Rojas for Red
Stockings.
The name originated with the
Cincinnati
Red Stockings, 1867–1870 member of the pioneering
National Association
of Base Ball Players. Managed by
Harry
Wright, Cincinnati adopted a uniform with white knickers and
red stockings, and earned the famous nickname, a year or two before
hiring the first fully professional team in 1869. When the club
folded after the 1870 season, Wright was hired to organize a new
team in Boston, and he did, bringing three teammates and the "Red
Stockings" nickname along (Most nicknames were then only nicknames,
neither club names nor registered trademarks, so the migration was
informal). The
Boston Red Stockings
won four championships in the five seasons of the new
National
Association, the first professional league.
Boston and a new Cincinnati club were charter members of the
National League in 1876. Perhaps in
deference to the Cincinnati history, many people reserved the "Red
Stockings" nickname for that city with the Boston team commonly
referred to as the "Red Caps" today.
Other names were
sometimes used before Boston officially adopted the nickname
"Braves" in ; that club is now based in Atlanta, Georgia
.

The Red Sox logo worn on uniforms in
1908, announcing the team's first official nickname
, the upstart
American League
established a competing club in Boston. (Originally, the team was
supposed to be the
Buffalo Bisons,
currently a minor league team, but league ownership at the last
minute removed Buffalo from the league in favor of the expansion
Boston franchise.) For seven seasons, the AL team wore
dark
blue stockings and had no official nickname. They were simply
"Boston", "Bostonians" or "the Bostons"; or the "Americans" or
"Boston Americans" as in "American Leaguers", Boston being a
two-team city. Their 1901–1907 jerseys, both home and road, simply
read "Boston", except for 1902 when they sported large letters "B"
and "A" denoting "Boston" and "American." Newspaper writers of the
time used other nicknames for the club, including "Somersets" (for
owner
Charles Somers), "Plymouth
Rocks," "Beaneaters," the "Collinsites" (for manager
Jimmy Collins)", and "Pilgrims."
For years many sources have listed "Pilgrims" as the early Boston
AL team's
official nickname, but researcher Bill Nowlin
has demonstrated that the name was barely used, if at all, during
the team's early years. The origin of the nickname appears to be a
poem entitled “The Pilgrims At Home” written by Edwin Fitzwilliam
that was sung at the 1907 home opener (“Rory O’More” melody). This
nickname was commonly used during that season, perhaps because the
team had a new manager and several rookie players.
John I. Taylor
had said in December 1907 that the Pilgrims “sounded too much like
homeless wanderers.”
The National League club, though seldom called the "Red Stockings"
anymore, still wore red trim. In , the National League club adopted
an all-white uniform, and the American League team saw an
opportunity. On December 18, 1907, Taylor announced that the club
had officially adopted red as its new team color. The 1908 uniforms
featured a large icon of a red stocking angling across the shirt
front. For 1908, the National League club returned to wearing red
trim, but the American League team finally had an official
nickname, and would remain "The Red Sox" for good.
The name is often
shortened to "Bosox" or "BoSox,"
a combination of "Boston" and "Sox" (similar to the
"ChiSox" in Chicago or the minor league
"PawSox" of Pawtucket).
Sportswriters sometimes refer to the Red Sox as the
Crimson
Hose, and
the Olde Towne Team. Recently, media has
begun to casually call them the "Sawx", reflecting how the word is
pronounced with a
New England
accent. However, most fans simply refer to the team as the
"Sox" when the context is understood to mean Red Sox.
History
1901–1919

Iconic photo of the Huntington Avenue
Grounds before the first modern World Series game

A season pass for the 1906
season.
In , the minor Western League, led by
Ban
Johnson, declared its equality with the
National League, then the only major league
in baseball. Johnson changed the name of the league to the American
League, leading teams in his league to be christened with the
unofficial nickname "Americans". This was especially true in the
case of the new Boston franchise, which would not adopt an official
nickname until .
The
upstart league placed franchises in and Buffalo
.
After looking at his new league Ban Johnson decided that he would
need a team in Boston to compete with the National League team
there and so cancelled the Buffalo club's franchise, offering one
to a new club in Boston.
Playing their home games at Huntington
Avenue Grounds
, the Boston franchise finished second and third
before capturing their first pennant in 1903 and repeating the next
year. Those teams were led by manager and star third baseman
Jimmy Collins, outfielders
Chick Stahl,
Buck
Freeman and
Patsy Dougherty and
pitcher
Cy Young, who in 1901 won the
pitching
Triple Crown with
33 wins (41.8% of the team's 79 games), 1.62 ERA and 158
strikeouts. His 1901 to seasons rank among the best four-year runs
ever.
In
1903,
Boston participated in the
first modern World Series, beating
the favored
Pittsburgh
Pirates, winners of the NL pennant by six and a half games,
winning the best-of-nine series five games to three. Aided by the
modified chants of
"Tessie" by the
Royal Rooters fan club
and by its stronger pitching staff, the Americans managed to
overcome the odds, and win the World Series.
The
1904 club was
almost as good as the previous team, but due to the surprise
emergence of the
New
York Highlanders, the Boston club found itself in a tight
pennant race through the last games of the season. A predecessor to
what would become a storied rivalry, this race featured such
controversial moves as the trade of Patsy Dougherty to the
Highlanders for
Bob Unglaub.
The climax
of the season occurred on the last, dramatic doubleheader at the
Highlanders’ home stadium, Hilltop Park
. In order to win the pennant, the
Highlanders needed to win both games. With
Jack Chesbro, the Highlanders' 41-game winner,
on the mound, and the score tied 2–2 with a man on third in the top
of the ninth, a spitball got away from Chesbro and
Lou Criger scored the go-ahead run on one of the
most famous wild pitches in history.
Unfortunately, the NL champion
New York Giants declined to play
any
postseason series, fearing it
would give their New York rivals credibility (they had expected the
Highlanders to win), but a sharp public reaction led the two
leagues immediately to make the World Series a permanent
championship, starting in .
The Huntington Avenue Grounds during a game.
Note building from which the famous 1903 "bird's-eye" photo
was taken.
These successful times soon ended, however, as
Boston lost 100 games in .
However, several new star players helped the newly renamed Red Sox
improve almost immediately.
By , legendary center fielder
Tris
Speaker had become a fixture in the Boston outfield, and the
team worked their way to third place. However, the Red Sox would
not win the pennant again until their 105-win
season, finishing with a
club record .691
winning
percentage. Anchored by an outfield considered to be among the
finest in the game—Tris Speaker,
Harry
Hooper and
Duffy Lewis—and superstar
pitcher
Smoky Joe Wood, the Red Sox
beat the New York Giants 4–3–1 in the classic
1912 World Series best known for
Snodgrass’s Muff. From to the Red
Sox were owned by
Joseph Lannin, who
signed
Babe Ruth, soon the best-known and
one of the best players ever. Another 101 wins in propelled the
Red Sox to the
1915 World Series, where they beat the
Philadelphia
Phillies four games to one. Following the season, Tris Speaker
was traded to the
Cleveland
Indians. His departure was more than compensated for, however,
by the emergence of star pitcher Babe Ruth. The
Red Sox went on to win the
1916 World Series, this time
defeating the
Brooklyn Robins.
In , Babe Ruth led his team to another
World Series championship. This time over
the
Chicago Cubs.
Sale of Babe Ruth
Harry Frazee bought the Red Sox from
Joseph Lannin in for about $500,000. A couple of notable trades
involving Harry Frazee and the Yankees occurred before the Babe
Ruth sale. On December 18, 1918, outstanding outfielder
Duffy Lewis, pitcher
Dutch Leonard (who'd
posted a modern record 0.96 ERA in 1914.), and pitcher
Ernie Shore were traded to the Yankees for
pitcher
Ray Caldwell,
Slim Love,
Roxy
Walters,
Frank Gilhooley and
$15,000. As all three players were well-regarded in Boston —
Lewis had been a key player on the 1910s championship teams, Shore
had famously relieved Babe Ruth and retired 27 straight, and
Leonard had only four years before setting a modern record for
earned run average — this trade was regarded as a poor one in
Boston. Then, on July 13, 1919, submarine-style pitching star
Carl Mays was traded to the Yankees for
Bob McGraw, Allan Russell and $40,000. Mays would go on to have
several good years for the Yankees, but had been a discipline
problem for the Red Sox.
On
December 26, 1919, Frazee sold Babe Ruth, who had played the
previous six seasons for the Red Sox, to the rival New York Yankees
(Ruth had just broken the single-season home run record, hitting 29
in .) Legend has it that Frazee did so in order to finance the
Broadway
play No, No,
Nanette. That play did not actually open on
Broadway until , but as Leigh Montville discovered during research
for his book,
The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe
Ruth,
No, No, Nanette had originated as a non-musical
stage play called
My Lady Friends, which opened on
Broadway in December 1919.
My Lady Friends had, indeed,
been financed by the Ruth sale to the Yankees.
During that period, the Red Sox, Yankees and
Chicago White Sox had a détente; they were
called "Insurrectos" because their actions antagonized league
president Ban Johnson. Although Frazee owned the Boston Red Sox
franchise, he did not own Fenway Park (it was owned by the Fenway
Park Trust), making his ownership a precarious one; Johnson could
move another team into the ballpark. His club was in debt, but
Frazee felt the need to purchase its playing site (which he did in
). Further, providing the Yankees with a
box
office attraction would help that mediocre club, which had
sided with him against Johnson and "the Loyal Five" clubs. Finally,
Ruth was considered a serious disciplinary problem, a reputation he
amply confirmed while playing for the Yankees. Frazee moved Ruth to
stabilize Red Sox finances and cut distractions. It was a straight
sale, no players in return.
New York achieved great success after acquiring Ruth and several
other very good players. Boston, meanwhile, did poorly during the
20s and 30s, and the sale of Babe Ruth came to be viewed as the
beginning of the
Red
Sox – Yankees rivalry, considered the "Greatest Rivalry on
Earth" by American sports journalists.
BoSox logo from 1931–1932
After deciding to get out of baseball, Frazee began selling many of
his star players. In the winter of 1920,
Wally Schang,
Waite
Hoyt,
Harry Harper and Mike McNally
were traded to the Yankees for
Del Pratt,
Muddy Ruel,
John
Costello, Hank Thormahlen, Sammy Vick and cash. The
following winter, iron man
shortstop Everett
Scott, and pitchers
Bullet Joe
Bush and
Sad Sam Jones were traded
to the Yankees for
Roger
Peckinpaugh (who would be immediately shipped to the
Washington Senators),
Jack Quinn,
Rip
Collins, Bill Piercy and $50,000. On July 23, ,
Joe Dugan and
Elmer Smith
were traded to the Yankees for Elmer Miller, Chick Fewster,
Johnny Mitchell, and
Lefty O'Doul, who was at the time a
mediocre pitching prospect. Acquiring Dugan helped the Yankees edge
the
St. Louis Browns in
a tight pennant race, and the resulting uproar helped create a June
15 trading deadline that went into effect the next year. Perhaps an
even more outrageous deal was the trade of
Herb Pennock, occurring in early . Pennock was
traded by the Red Sox to the Yankees for Camp Skinner, Norm
McMillan,
George Murray and
$50,000.
Over an eight-year period from to , the Red Sox averaged over 100
losses per season. One of the few bright spots on these teams was
Earl Webb, who set the all-time mark for
most doubles in a season in with 67. The BoSox’ fortunes began to
change in when
Tom Yawkey bought the
team. Yawkey acquired pitcher
Wes
Ferrell and one of the greatest pitchers of all-time,
Lefty Grove, making his team competitive once
again in the late thirties. He also acquired
Joe Cronin, an outstanding shortstop and manager
and slugging first baseman
Jimmie Foxx
whose 50 home runs in 1938 would stand as a club record for 68
years. Foxx also drove in a club record 175 runs.
1939–1960

Ted Williams & Tom Yawkey
In , the Red Sox purchased the contract of
outfielder Ted
Williams from the minor league
San Diego Padres of the
Pacific Coast League, ushering in an
era of the team sometimes called the "Ted Sox." Williams
consistently hit for both high power and high average, and is
generally considered one of the greatest hitters of all time. The
right-field bullpens in Fenway were built in part for Williams'
left-handed swing, and are sometimes
called "Williamsburg." Before this addition, it was over to right
field. He served two stints in the
United States Marine Corps as a
pilot and saw
active duty in both
World War II and the
Korean War, missing at least five full seasons of
baseball. His book
The Science of Hitting is widely read
by students of baseball. He is currently the last player to hit
over .400 for a full season, batting .406 in .. Williams feuded
with sports writers his whole career, calling them "The Knights of
the Keyboard," and his relationship with the fans was often rocky
as he was seen spitting towards the stands on more than one
occasion.
With Williams, the Red Sox reached the
1946 World Series, but lost to the
St. Louis Cardinals
in seven games in part because of the use of the "Williams Shift,"
a defensive tactic in which the shortstop would move to the right
side of the infield to make it harder for the left-handed-hitting
Williams to hit to that side of the field. Some have claimed that
he was too proud to hit to the other side of the field, not wanting
to let the Cardinals take away his game. His performance may have
also been affected by a pitch he took in the elbow in an exhibition
game a few days earlier. Either way, in his only World Series,
Williams gathering just five singles in 25
at-bats for a .200 average.
The Cardinals won the Series when
Enos
Slaughter scored the go-ahead run all the way from first base
on a
base hit to left field. The
throw from
Leon Culberson was cut off
by shortstop
Johnny Pesky, who relayed
the ball to the plate just a hair too late. Some say Pesky
hesitated or "held the ball" before he turned to throw the ball,
but this has been disputed.
Along with Williams and Pesky, the Red Sox featured several other
star players during the 1940s, including second baseman
Bobby Doerr and center fielder
Dom DiMaggio (the younger brother of
Joe DiMaggio).
The Red Sox narrowly lost the AL pennant in and . In
1948,
Boston finished in a tie with
Cleveland, and their
loss to Cleveland in a
one-game
playoff ended hopes of an all-Boston World Series. Curiously,
manager
Joseph McCarthy chose
journeyman
Denny Galehouse to start
the playoff game when the young lefty phenom
Mel Parnell was available to pitch. In
1949, the
Red Sox were one game ahead of
the
New York Yankees,
with the only two games left for both teams being against each
other, and they lost both of those games.

Logo used by the BoSox in the
1950s
1950s were viewed as a time of tribulation for the Red Sox. After
Williams returned from the Korean War in , many of the best players
from the late 1940s had retired or been traded. The stark contrast
in the team led critics to call the Red Sox' daily lineup "Ted
Williams and the Seven Dwarfs."
Jackie
Robinson was even worked out by the team at Fenway Park,
however it appeared that owner Tom Yawkey did not want an African
American player on his team at that time.
Willie Mays also tried out for Boston and was
highly praised by team scouts. Ted Williams hit .388 at the age of
38 in , but there was little else for Boston fans to root for.
Williams retired at the end of the
season, famously hitting a
home run in his final at-bat as memorialized in the
John Updike story "Hub fans bid Kid adieu." The
Red Sox finally became the last Major League team to field an
African American player when they
promoted
infielder Pumpsie Green from their AAA
farm team in .
1960s
The 1960s also started poorly for the Red Sox, though 1961 saw the
debut of
Carl "Yaz" Yastrzemski,
Williams' replacement in left field, who developed into one of the
better hitters of a pitching-rich decade.
Red Sox fans know as the
season of the "Impossible Dream."
The slogan refers to the hit song from the popular
musical play "
Man of La Mancha."
1967 saw one of the great
pennant races in
baseball
history with four teams in the AL pennant race until almost the
last game. The BoSox had finished the
season in ninth place, but
they found new life with Yastrzemski as the team went to the
1967 World Series. Yastrzemski won
the American League Triple Crown (the most recent player to
accomplish such a feat), hitting .326 with 44
home runs and 121 RBIs. He finished one vote short
of a unanimous MVP selection, as a Minnesota sportswriter placed
Twins center fielder
César Tovar
first on his ballot. But the Red Sox lost the series — again
to the St. Louis Cardinals, in seven games. Legendary pitcher
Bob Gibson stymied the Red Sox winning
three games.
An 18-year-old Bostonian rookie named
Tony Conigliaro slugged 24 home runs in .
"Tony C" became the youngest player in Major League Baseball to hit
his 100th home run, a record that stands today. However, he was
struck just above the left
cheek bone
by a fastball thrown by
Jack
Hamilton of the
California Angels in August .
Conigliaro sat out the entire next season with headaches and
blurred vision. Although he did have a productive season in , he
was never the same.
1970s

1960–1978 logo
Although the Red Sox were competitive for much of the late 1960s
and early 1970s, they never finished higher than second place in
their division. The closest they came to a divisional title was ,
when they lost by a half-game to the
Detroit Tigers. The start of the
season was delayed by a players' strike, and the Red Sox further
lost a game to a rainout that was never replayed, which caused the
Red Sox to lose the division by a half-game. On October 2, 1972,
they also lost the second to last game of the year to the Tigers,
3–1, when
Luis Aparicio fell rounding
third after Yastrzemski hit a triple in the third inning, Aparicio
tried to scamper back to third but this created an out as
Yastrzemski was already on third.
The Red Sox won the AL pennant in . The
1975 Red Sox were as colorful as
they were talented, with Yastrzemski and rookie outfielders
Jim Rice and
Fred
Lynn, veteran outfielder
Dwight
Evans,
catcher Carlton Fisk, and pitchers
Luis Tiant and eccentric junkballer
Bill "The Spaceman" Lee. Fred
Lynn won both the American League
Rookie of the
Year award and the
Most Valuable
Player award, a feat which had never previously been
accomplished, and was not duplicated until
Ichiro Suzuki did it in .. In the
1975 American League
Championship Series, the Red Sox swept the
Oakland A's.
In the
1975 World Series, they
faced the heavily favored
Cincinnati Reds, also known as
The Big Red Machine. Luis Tiant
won games 1 and 4 of the World Series but after five games, the Red
Sox trailed the series 3 games to 2. Game 6 at Fenway Park is
considered among the greatest games in postseason history. Down 6–3
in the bottom of the eighth inning, Red Sox
pinch hitter Bernie
Carbo hit a three run homer into the center field bleachers off
Reds fireman
Rawly Eastwick to tie
the game. In the top of the eleventh inning,
right fielder Dwight Evans made a spectacular
catch of a
Joe Morgan line drive and
doubled
Ken Griffey at first base to
preserve the tie. In the bottom of the twelfth inning, Carlton Fisk
hit a deep fly ball which sliced towards the left field foul pole
above the
Green Monster. As the ball
sailed into the night, Fisk waved his arms frantically towards fair
territory, seemingly pleading with the ball not to go foul. The
ball complied, and bedlam ensued at Fenway as Fisk rounded the
bases to win the game for the Red Sox 7–6.
The Red Sox lost game 7, 4–3 even though they had an early 3–0
lead. Starting pitcher Bill Lee threw a slow looping curve which he
called a "Leephus pitch" or "space ball" to Reds first baseman
Tony Perez who hit the ball over the
Green Monster and across the street. The Reds scored the winning
run in the 9th inning. Carlton Fisk said famously about the 1975
World Series, "We won that thing 3 games to 4."
1978 pennant race
In , the Red Sox and the Yankees were involved in a tight pennant
race. The Yankees were 14½
games behind
the Red Sox in July, and on September 10, after completing a 4-game
sweep of the Red Sox (known as "The Boston Massacre"), the Yankees
tied for the divisional lead.
For the final three weeks of the season, the teams fought closely
and the lead changed hands several times. By the final day of the
season, the Yankees' magic number to win the division was
one — with a win over Cleveland or a Boston loss to the
Toronto Blue Jays
clinching the division. However,
New York lost 9–2 and Boston
won 5–0, forcing a one-game playoff to be held at Fenway Park on
Monday, October 2.
The most remembered moment from the game was
Bucky Dent's 7th inning three-run home run in off
Mike Torrez just over the Green Monster, giving the Yankees their
first lead.
Reggie Jackson provided a
solo home run in the 8th that proved to be the difference in the
Yankees' 5–4 win, which ended with Yastrzemski popping out to
Graig Nettles in foul territory with
Rick Burleson representing the tying
run at third.
1986 season

1979–2008 logo
Carl Yastrzemski retired after the season, during which the
Red Sox finished sixth in
the seven-team AL East, posting their worst record since . However,
in , it appeared that the team's fortunes were about to change. The
offense had remained strong with Jim Rice, Dwight Evans,
Don Baylor and
Wade
Boggs.
Roger Clemens led the
pitching staff, going 24-4 with a 2.48
ERA, and had a 20-strikeout game to win
both the
American League Cy Young and Most Valuable Player awards.
Clemens became the first starting pitcher to win both awards since
Vida Blue in , and no starting pitcher has
won the MVP award in either league since.
The
Red Sox won the AL
East for the first time in 11 seasons, and faced the
California Angels in the
AL Championship
Series. The teams split the first two games in Boston, but the
Angels won the next two home games, taking a 3–1 lead in the
series. With the Angels poised to win the series, the Red Sox
trailed 5–2 heading into the ninth inning of Game 5. A two-run
homer by Baylor cut the lead to one. With two outs and a runner on,
and one strike away from elimination,
Dave Henderson homered off
Donnie Moore to put Boston up 6–5. Although the
Angels tied the game in the bottom of the ninth, the Red Sox won in
the 11th on a Henderson sacrifice fly off Moore. The Red Sox then
found themselves with six- and seven-run wins at Fenway Park in
Games 6 and 7 to win the American League title.
The Red Sox faced a heavily favored
New York Mets team that had won
108 games in the regular season in the
1986 World Series.
Boston won the first
two games in Shea
Stadium
but lost the next two at Fenway, knotting the
series at 2 games apiece. After Bruce
Hurst recorded his second victory of the series in Game 5, the
Red Sox returned to Shea
Stadium
looking to garner their first championship in 68
years. However, Game 6 would go down as one of the most
devastating losses in club history. After pitching seven strong
innings, Clemens was lifted from the game with a 3–2 lead. Years
later, Manager
John
McNamara said Clemens was suffering from a blister and asked to
be taken out of the game, a claim Clemens denied. The Mets then
scored a run off
reliever and former
Met
Calvin Schiraldi to tie the
score 3–3. The game went to extra innings, where the Red Sox took a
5–3 lead in the top of the 10th on a solo home run by Henderson, a
double by Boggs and an RBI single by second baseman
Marty Barrett.
After recording two outs in the bottom of the 10th, a graphic
appeared on the
NBC
telecast hailing Barrett as the Player of the Game, and Bruce
Hurst had been named World Series MVP. A message even appeared
briefly on the Shea Stadium scoreboard congratulating the Red Sox
as world champions. After so many years of abject frustration, Red
Sox fans around the world could taste victory. With two strikes,
Mets catcher
Gary Carter hit a single.
It was followed by singles by
Kevin Mitchell and
Ray Knight. With
Mookie
Wilson batting, a wild pitch by
Bob
Stanley tied the game at 5. Wilson then hit a slow ground ball
to first; the ball rolled through
Bill
Buckner's legs, allowing Knight to score the winning run from
second.
While Buckner was singled out as responsible for the loss, many
observers — as well as both Wilson and Buckner — have
noted that even if Buckner had fielded the ball cleanly, the speedy
Wilson probably would still have been safe, leaving the
game-winning run at third with two out.
Many observers questioned why Buckner was in the game at that point
considering he had bad knees and that
Dave Stapleton had come in as a late-inning
defensive replacement in prior series games. It appeared as though
McNamara was trying to reward Buckner for his long and illustrious
career by leaving him in the game. After falling behind 3–0, the
Mets then won Game 7, concluding the devastating collapse and
feeding the myth that the Red Sox were "cursed."
1988–1991
The
Red Sox returned to
the postseason in
1988. With the club in
fourth place midway through the 1988 season at the All-Star break,
manager John McNamara was fired and replaced by
Joe Morgan on July 15. Immediately the
club won 12 games in a row, and 19 of 20 overall, to surge to the
AL East title in what would be referred to as
Morgan
Magic. But the magic was short-lived, as the team was swept by
the
Oakland Athletics
in the
ALCS. Ironically,
the MVP of that Series was former Red Sox pitcher and Baseball Hall
of Fame player
Dennis Eckersley,
who saved all four wins for Oakland. Two years later, in
1990, the
Red Sox would again win the
division and face the
Athletics in the
ALCS. However, the
outcome was the same, with the A's sweeping the ALCS in four
straight.
In 1990, Yankees fans started to chant "1918!" each time the Red
Sox visited Yankee Stadium, to remind them of their last World
Series win.
1992–2001
Tom Yawkey died in , and his wife
Jean
R. Yawkey took control of the
team until her death in . Their initials are shown in two stripes
on the
Left field wall in
Morse code. Upon Jean's death, control of the
team passed to the Yawkey Trust, led by
John Harrington. The trust
sold the team in 2002, concluding 70 years of Yawkey
ownership.
In , General Manager
Lou Gorman was
replaced by
Dan Duquette, a
Massachusetts native who had worked for the
Montreal Expos. Duquette revived the team's
farm system, which during his
tenure produced players such as
Nomar
Garciaparra,
Carl Pavano and
David Eckstein. Duquette also spent
money on free agents, notably an eight-year, $160 million deal for
Manny Ramírez after the
season.
The
Red Sox won the
newly-realigned
American League
East in , finishing seven games ahead of the
Yankees. However, they were
swept in three games in the
ALDS by the
Cleveland Indians. Their
postseason losing streak reached 13 straight games, dating back to
the 1986 World Series.
Roger Clemens tied his major league record by fanning 20
Detroit Tigers on September 18,
in what would prove to be one of his final appearances in a Red Sox
uniform. After Clemens had turned 30 and then had four seasons,
1993–96, which were by his standards mediocre at best, Duquette
said the pitcher was entering "the twilight of his career." Clemens
went on to pitch well for another ten years and win four more Cy
Young awards.
Out of contention in , the team traded closer Slocum to Seattle for
catching prospect
Jason Varitek and
right-handed pitcher
Derek Lowe. Prior to
the start of the
season, the Red Sox dealt
pitchers
Tony Armas, Jr. and Carl
Pavano to the Montreal Expos for pitcher
Pedro Martínez. Martínez became the
anchor of the team's pitching staff and turned in several
outstanding seasons. In 1998, the
team won the American League
Wild Card,
but again lost the
American League Division
Series to the
Indians.
In , Duquette called Fenway Park "economically obsolete" and, along
with Red Sox ownership, led a push for a new stadium. Despite
support from the
Massachusetts Legislature and
other politicians, issues with buying out neighboring property and
steadfast opposition within Boston's city council eventually doomed
the project.
On the field, the
1999 Red
Sox were finally able to overturn their fortunes against the
Indians.
Cleveland
took a 2–0 series lead, but Boston won the next three games behind
strong pitching by Derek Lowe, Pedro Martínez and his brother
Ramón
Martínez. Game 4's 23–7 win by the Red Sox was the
highest-scoring playoff game in major league history. Game 5 began
with the Indians taking a 5–2 lead after two innings, but Pedro
Martínez, nursing a shoulder injury, came on in the fourth inning
and pitched six innings without allowing a hit while the team's
offense rallied for a 12–8 win behind two home runs and seven RBIs
from outfielder
Troy O'Leary. After the
ALDS victory, the Red Sox lost the
American League
Championship Series to the Yankees, four games to one. The one
bright spot was a lopsided win for the Red Sox in the much-hyped
Martinez-Clemens game.
2002–present: Henry comes to Boston
2002
In , the Red Sox were sold by Yawkey trustee and president
Harrington to
New England
Sports Ventures, a consortium headed by principal owner
John Henry.
Tom Werner served as executive chairman,
Larry Lucchino served as president and CEO,
and serving as vice chairman was
Les
Otten. Dan Duquette was fired as GM of the club on February 28,
with former Angels GM
Mike Port taking the
helm for the
2002
season. A week later, manager Joe Kerrigan was fired and was
replaced by
Grady Little.
While nearly all offseason moves were made under Dan Duquette, such
as signing outfielder
Johnny Damon away
from the Oakland A's, the new ownership made additions after their
purchase of the team, including trading for outfielder
Cliff Floyd and relief pitcher
Alan Embree. Nomar Garciaparra, Manny Ramírez,
and Floyd all hit well, while Pedro Martínez put up his usual
outstanding numbers. Derek Lowe, newly converted into a starter,
won 20 games—becoming the first player to save 20 games and win 20
games in back-to-back seasons. The Red Sox won 93 games but they
finished 10½ games behind the
Yankees for the division and 6
behind the
Angels for the
AL wild card.
2003
In the
off-season, Port was replaced by Yale
graduate
Theo Epstein. Epstein, raised in
, and just 28 at the time of his hiring, became the youngest
general manager in MLB history.
The "Idiots" of arose out of the "Cowboy Up" team of , a nickname
derived from first baseman
Kevin
Millar's challenge to his teammates to show more determination.
In addition to Millar, the team's offense was so deep that 2003
batting champion
Bill Mueller batted
7th in the lineup behind sluggers Manny Ramírez and the newly
acquired
David Ortiz.
GM Theo Epstein, noticing that Mueller was hitting very well in a
limited role, traded Shea Hillenbrand to the
Arizona Diamondbacks for
Byung-Hyun Kim. Receiving much more playing
time following the trade, Ortiz contributed significantly in the
second half of the season. The trade ended up greatly benefiting
the team, as the Red Sox broke many batting records and won the AL
Wild Card.
In the
2003
American League Division Series, the Red Sox rallied from a 0–2
series deficit against the
Oakland Athletics to win the
best-of-five series. Derek Lowe returned to his former relief
pitching role to save Game 5, a 4–3 victory. The team then faced
the
Yankees in the
2003 American
League Championship Series. In Game 7, Boston led 5–2 in the
eighth inning, but Pedro Martínez allowed three runs to tie the
game. The Red Sox could not score off
Mariano Rivera over the last three innings
and eventually lost the game 6–5 when Yankee third baseman
Aaron Boone hit a solo home run off Tim
Wakefield.
Some placed the blame for the loss on manager Grady Little for
failing to remove starting pitcher Martínez in the 8th inning after
some observers believe he began to show signs of tiring. Others
credited Little with the team's successful season and dramatic
come-from-behind victory in the ALDS. Nevertheless, Boston's
management decided a change was in order and did not renew Little's
contract. He was replaced by former
Philadelphia Phillies manager
Terry Francona.
2004: World Series Championship
During the 2003–04 offseason, the Red Sox acquired another ace
pitcher,
Curt Schilling, and a
closer,
Keith Foulke. Expectations once
again ran high that would be the year that the Red Sox ended their
championship drought. The regular season started well in April, but
through mid-season the team struggled due to injuries,
inconsistency, and defensive woes.
Management shook up the team at the MLB trading deadline on July 31
with a blockbuster four team trade. They traded the team's popular
yet often injured shortstop Nomar Garciaparra with outfielder
Matt Murton to the
Chicago Cubs. The Cubs sent
Brendan Harris,
Alex
Gonzalez and
Francis Beltran to
the Montreal Expos, and minor leaguer Justin Jones to the
Minnesota Twins. The Red Sox received first
baseman
Doug Mientkiewicz from the
Twins, and shortstop
Orlando Cabrera
from the Expos.
In a separate transaction, the Red Sox traded minor leaguer Henri
Stanley to the
Los Angeles
Dodgers for center fielder
Dave Roberts. Following the
trades, the club immediately turned things around, winning 22 out
of 25 games and qualifying for the playoffs as the AL Wild Card.
Players and fans affectionately referred to the players as "The
Idiots," a term coined by Johnny Damon and Kevin Millar during the
playoff push to describe the team's eclectic roster and
devil-may-care attitude toward their supposed "curse."
Boston began the postseason by sweeping the
AL West champion
Anaheim Angels in the
ALDS. However, Curt
Schilling suffered a torn ankle tendon in Game 1 when he was hit by
a line drive. In the third game of the series,
Vladimir Guerrero hit a grand slam off
Mike Timlin in the 7th inning to tie the
game. However, David Ortiz hit a walk-off two-run homer in the 10th
inning to win the game. The Red Sox advanced to a rematch in the
ALCS
against the
Yankees.
The series started very poorly for the Red Sox. Schilling, pitching
injured, was routed for six runs in three innings and Boston ended
up losing Game 1. In the second game, with his Yankees leading 1–0
for most of the game,
John Olerud hit a
two-run home run to put New York up for good. Following this, the
Red Sox were down three games to none after a crushing 19–8 loss in
Game 3 at home.
Up to this point, no team in the history of baseball had come back
to win from a 3–0 series deficit. In Game 4, the Red Sox found
themselves facing elimination, trailing 4–3 in the ninth with
Mariano Rivera in to close for the Yankees. After Rivera issued a
walk to Kevin Millar, Dave Roberts came on to pinch run and
promptly stole second base. He then scored on an RBI single by Bill
Mueller, sending the game into extra innings. The Red Sox went on
to win the game on a two-run home run by David Ortiz in the 12th
inning. Game 5 would last 14 innings, setting the record for the
longest ALCS game ever played. Both sides squandered many
opportunities, until Ortiz again sealed the win with a walk-off RBI
single in the bottom of the 14th.

The Commissioner's Trophy (2004 World
Series)
With the
series returning to Yankee Stadium
for Game 6, the comeback continued with Schilling
pitching on a bad ankle. Three sutures being used to
stabilize the tendon in Schilling's right ankle bled throughout the
game, making his sock appear bloody red. Schilling only allowed one
run over 7 innings to lead the Red Sox to victory. In Game 7, the
Red Sox completed their historic comeback owing to the strength of
Derek Lowe's pitching and Johnny Damon's two home runs (including a
grand slam in the second inning). The Yankees were defeated 10–3.
Ortiz, who had the game winning RBIs in Games 4 and 5, was named
ALCS Most Valuable Player. The Red Sox joined the
1942 Toronto Maple
Leafs and
1975 New York
Islanders as the only
professional sports teams in history to
win a best-of-seven games series after being down three games to
none.
The Red Sox swept the
St. Louis Cardinals in the
2004 World Series. The Red Sox
began the series with an 11–9 win, marked by
Mark Bellhorn's game-winning home run off
Pesky's Pole. Game 2 in Boston was won thanks to another great
performance by the bloody-socked Curt Schilling. Pedro Martínez (in
his first World Series performance) shut out the Cardinals for
seven innings and led Boston to a 4–1 victory in game 3, and Derek
Lowe and the Red Sox did not allow a single run in game 4. The game
ended as
Edgar Rentería hit the
ball back to closer Keith Foulke. After Foulke lobbed the ball to
Mientkiewicz at first, the Red Sox had won their first World
Championship in 86 years.
Boston held the Cardinals' offense to only three runs in the final
three games and never trailed in the series. Manny Ramírez was
named
World Series MVP.
To add a
final, surreal touch to Boston's championship season, on the night
of Game 4 a total lunar eclipse
colored the moon red over Busch Stadium
. The city of Boston held a "rolling rally"
for the team on October 30, 2004.
Red Sox
Nation packed the streets of Boston that Saturday to celebrate
as the team rode on the city's famous
Duck
Boats. The Red Sox earned many accolades from the sports media
and throughout the nation for their incredible season. In December,
Sports Illustrated named
the Boston Red Sox the 2004
Sportsmen of the Year.
2005
After winning its first World Series in 86 years, the club
re-signed Jason Varitek and named him team captain. The AL East
would be decided on the last weekend of the season, with the
Yankees coming to
Fenway Park with a one-game lead in the standings. The Red Sox won
two of the three games to finish the season with the same record as
the Yankees, 95–67. However, a playoff was not needed. The Yankees
had won the season series, 10–9, thus they won the division, and
the Red Sox settled for the Wild Card. Boston was swept in three
games by the eventual
2005 World
Series champion
White
Sox in the
first round of the
playoffs.
2005–2006 off-season

225x
On October 31, 2005, general manager Theo Epstein resigned on the
last day of his contract. On
Thanksgiving evening, the Red
Sox announced the acquisition of pitcher
Josh Beckett and third baseman
Mike Lowell from the
Florida Marlins, while sending several
prospects including
Hanley
Ramírez to the Marlins. Fan-favorite Johnny Damon broke the
hearts of Red Sox Nation by signing a four-year, $52 million deal
with the Yankees. The team filled the vacancy in center field left
by Damon's departure by trading for Cleveland Indians center
fielder
Coco Crisp. However, Crisp
fractured his left index finger in April and would end up missing
over 50 games in . In January 2006, Epstein came to terms with the
Red Sox and was once again named General Manager.
2006 season
The revamped Red Sox infield, with third baseman Mike Lowell
joining new shortstop Alex Gonzalez, second baseman
Mark Loretta, and first baseman
Kevin Youkilis was one of the best-fielding
infields in baseball. The Red Sox committed the fewest errors in
the American League in
2006, and on June 30,
Boston set a major league record of 17 straight errorless games.
One of the brightest spots of the 2006 season was the emergence of
new closer
Jonathan Papelbon.
Papelbon ended up setting a Red Sox rookie record with 35 saves and
earning an
All-Star
appearance. Also, David Ortiz provided a late-season highlight when
he broke Jimmie Foxx's single season Red Sox home run record by
hitting 54 homers. Down the stretch, the Red Sox wilted under the
pressure of mounting injuries and poor performances. Boston would
compile a 9–21 record in the month of August. Injuries to Jason
Varitek, Trot Nixon, and Manny Ramírez severely hurt the offense.
Also, injuries to Tim Wakefield, rookie
Jon
Lester (diagnosed with
lymphoma), and
Matt Clement left the rotation with major holes to fill. The Red
Sox finished 2006 with an 86–76 record and third place in the AL
East.
2007: World Series Championship
2007 season final standing
Theo Epstein's first step toward restocking the team for was to
pursue one of the most anticipated acquisitions in baseball
history. On November 14, MLB announced that Boston had won the bid
for the rights to negotiate a contract with
Japanese superstar pitcher
Daisuke Matsuzaka. Boston placed a bid of
$51.1 million and had 30 days to complete a deal. On December 13,
Matsuzaka signed a 6-year, $52 million contract.
Fan favorite
Trot Nixon filed for free
agency and agreed on a deal with the Indians. With an opening in
right field, the Red Sox signed
J.D.
Drew on January 25, 2007 to a 5-year, $70
million contract. Free agent Shortstop
Álex González was
replaced by another free agent,
Julio
Lugo. Second baseman Mark Loretta also left via free agency for
the
Houston Astros, opening a spot
for rookie
Dustin Pedroia.
The Red Sox moved into first place in the AL East by mid-April and
never relinquished their division lead. While Ortiz and Ramirez
provided their usual offense, it was the hitting of Lowell,
Youkilis, and Pedroia that anchored the club through the first few
months. While Drew, Lugo, and Coco Crisp struggled to provide
offense, Lowell and Youkilis more than made up for it with averages
well above .300 and impressive home run and RBI totals. Pedroia
started badly, hitting below .200 in April. Manager Terry Francona
stuck with him and his patience paid off as Pedroia finished the
first half over .300.
On the mound, Josh Beckett emerged as the ace of the staff and was
12–2 at the all-star break. His success was needed as Schilling,
Matsuzaka, Wakefield and Tavarez all struggled at times. Meanwhile,
the Boston bullpen, anchored by Papelbon and
Hideki Okajima, was there to pick up the
starters often. Papelbon served as the stopper, and the rise of
Okajima as a legitimate setup man and occasional closer gave the
Red Sox more options late in the game. Okajima posted an ERA of
0.88 through the first half and was selected for the All-Star
Game.
By the
All-Star
break, Boston had the best record in baseball and held their
largest lead in the American League East, 10 games over the
Blue Jays and
Yankees. In the second half,
more stars emerged for the Red Sox as they continued to lead the AL
East. Beckett continued to shine, reaching 20 wins for the first
time in his career. At one point, veteran Tim Wakefield found
himself atop the AL in wins and finished with a 17–12 record. Minor
league call-up
Clay Buchholz provided
a spark on September 1 by pitching a no-hitter in his second career
start. Another call-up, outfielder
Jacoby Ellsbury, was thrust into the
starting lineup while Manny Ramírez rested through most of
September. Ellsbury played brilliantly during the month, hitting
.361 with 3 HR, 17 RBI, and 8 stolen bases. Mike Lowell continued
to carry the club, hitting cleanup in September and leading the
team with 120 RBI for the season. Eventual 2007 Rookie of the Year
Dustin Pedroia finished his outstanding first full season with 165
hits and a .317 average. The Red Sox became the first team to
clinch a playoff spot for the 2007 season and the Red Sox captured
their first AL East title since 1995.
The Red Sox swept the
Angels in the
ALDS. Facing
the Indians in the
ALCS, Josh Beckett
won Game 1 but the Red Sox stumbled, losing the next three games.
Facing a 3–1 deficit and a must-win situation, Beckett pitched
eight innings while surrendering only one run and striking out 11
in a masterful Game 5 win. The Red Sox captured their twelfth
American League pennant by outscoring the Indians 30–5 over the
final three games, winning the final two games at Fenway
Park.
The Red Sox faced the
Colorado Rockies in the
2007 World Series. Beckett set the
tone in game 1, pitching seven strong innings as the offense
provided more than enough in a 13–1 victory. In Game 2, Schilling,
Okajima, and Papelbon held the Rockies to one run again in a 2–1
game.
Moving to Colorado
, the Red Sox offense made the difference again in a
10–5 win. Finally, in Game 4, Jon Lester took Wakefield's
spot in the rotation and gave the Red Sox an impressive start,
pitching 5⅔ shutout innings. The Rockies threatened, but thanks to
World Series MVP Mike Lowell and aided by a home run by
Bobby Kielty, Papelbon registered another save
as the Red Sox swept the Rockies in four games, capturing their
second title in four years.
2008
Following their World Series victory, the Red Sox were forced to
address a few personnel questions in the hopes of repeating as
champion. The team re-signed free agents
Mike Lowell,
Curt
Schilling,
Tim Wakefield and
Mike Timlin. The Red Sox also added
veteran first baseman
Sean
Casey to back up
Kevin
Youkilis.
Injuries to Schilling, Timlin, and Josh Beckett landed each pitcher
on the disabled list before the season began, putting added
pressure on young starters Jon Lester and Clay Buchholz.
The Red
Sox began their season by participating in the third opening day
game in MLB history to be played in Japan
, where they
defeated the Oakland
A's in the Tokyo
Dome
. Boston played well to start the season,
settling into a top position in the AL East. However, the surprise
Tampa Bay Rays took over
the top of the division with a sweep over the Red Sox in early
July. From May 17–22, the Sox had a winning streak of seven games,
their longest of the season. On May 19, Lester threw the 18th
no-hitter in team history, beating the
Kansas City Royals 7–0.
During the season, Lester emerged as an anchor in the Red Sox
rotation, leading the team in starts and innings pitched while
compiling a 16–6 record and a 3.21 ERA. Buchholz meanwhile
struggled mightily in 2008 to a 2–9 record, ending up back in the
minors. Injuries would take a toll on the Red Sox offense during
the season. David Ortiz missed 45 games with an injured wrist, Mike
Lowell missed weeks with a torn hip labrum, and after a blistering
performance in June, J.D. Drew aggravated a back injury that
shelved him for much of the second half of the season. Down the
stretch, outfielder Manny Ramirez — playing in the final year
of his eight year contract — became a distraction to the team.
His disruptive behavior included public incidents with fellow
players in the dugout (shoving Kevin Youkilis), team employees
(pushing the team's 64 year old traveling secretary to the ground),
criticizing ownership, and not playing due to laziness and
nonexistent injuries. The front office decided to move the
disgrunted outfielder at the July 31 trade deadline, shipping him
to the Dodgers in a three-way deal with the Pirates that landed
them
Jason Bay to replace him in left
field.
With Ramirez gone, and Bay providing a new spark in the lineup, the
Red Sox found new life. Kevin Youkilis had career highs in home
runs (29) and RBIs (115). Closer Jonathan Papelbon set a career
high in saves with 41. Daisuke Matsuzaka improved on his 2007
performance and led the team in wins, finishing with an 18–3
record. However, it was Dustin Pedroia who emerged as not only a
team leader, but an American League MVP candidate. Pedroia hit over
.340 in the second half, finishing the year at or near the top in
the AL in batting average, hits, runs, and doubles. Despite
Boston's 34–19 record following the trading deadline, the Rays held
onto the AL East lead and captured their first division title in
franchise history.
Boston still made the playoffs as the AL Wild Card. Behind the
strong pitching of Jon Lester (two games started and no earned runs
allowed), the Red Sox defeated the
Angels in the
ALDS three
games to one. The Red Sox then took on their AL East rivals the
Tampa Bay Rays in the
ALCS. Down
three games to one in the 5th game of the ALCS, Boston mounted the
greatest single game comeback in ALCS history. Trailing 7–0 in the
7th inning with elimination pending, the Red Sox came back to win
the game 8-7. They tied the series at 3 games apiece before losing
Game 7, 3–1, thus becoming the eighth team in a row since 2000 not
to repeat as world champions. The Red Sox led the American League
last season in shutouts with 16, but only two were complete games
by the starter.
Current roster
Uniform
Spring training

Red Sox logo on the fence outside City
of Palms Park
City of Palms Park
Former
left fielder Mike Greenwell is from and was instrumental
in bringing his team to the city for
spring training.
City of
Palms Park
was built in for that purpose and holds 8,000
people. It is also the home of the Red Sox Rookie team, the
Gulf Coast League Red Sox,
from April through June.
Perhaps the most memorable game played at City of Palms was on
March 7, . This was the first game played between the Red Sox and
New York Yankees since
Aaron Boone hit the
home
run that eliminated the Red Sox from the playoffs the previous
October. Boone's replacement at
third
base,
Alex Rodriguez was the high
profile key acquisition of the off season for the Yankees, and he
was savagely booed by the 7,304 in attendance.
New spring facility
The Red Sox's lease with Fort Myers runs through 2019, however,
team ownership had been toying with exercising the early out in
their contract that allows them to leave following the spring
season.
Chief operating officer Mike Dee met with
Sarasota
officials on April 25, 2008 to discuss the
possibility of the Red Sox moving to Sarasota's Ed Smith
Stadium
once its current spring inhabitants, the Cincinnati Reds, move to their new spring
home in .
John
Yarborough, director of Lee County
Parks and Rec, met with Jeff Mudgett, a Fort Myers
architect who is volunteering his time to
brain storm ideas on what can be done to keep the Red Sox in Fort
Myers. “I’d like to have a project by 2012,’’ Yarborough
said after the meeting.
On October 28, 2008, the Lee County commission voted 3-1 to approve
an agreement with the Boston Red Sox to build a new spring-training
facility for the team in south Lee County. Commissioner Brian
Bigelow was the lone dissenting vote. Commissioner Bob Janes was
not present for the vote, but stated that he supported it.
Dee was present in the chambers for the vote, and took the
agreement back to Boston to meet with John Henry and other team
officials. On November 1, 2008, the Red Sox signed an agreement
with Lee County that will keep their spring training home in the
Fort Myers area for 30 more years.
Wednesday, April 30, 2009, the Lee County commissioners selected
the Watermen-Pinnacle site on Daniels Parkway (a little more than a
mile east of Interstate 75) as the site for the new facility.
The
backup choice, if negotiations between county staff and the
developer falter, is the University Highland site just north of
Germain
Arena
in Estero.
Jeff
Mudgett, a Fort Myers architect who is
volunteering his time toward the project, envisions a facility with
a mini-Fenway
Park
that would open for Spring 2012.
Radio and television
Currently, the flagship radio
station of the Red Sox is WEEI
, 850
AM. Joe Castiglione, in his
25th year as the voice of the Red Sox, serves as the lead
play-by-play announcer, along with the rotating
team of
Dave O'Brien,
Dale Arnold and
Jon
Rish. Some of Castiglione's predecessors include
Curt Gowdy,
Ken
Coleman, and
Ned Martin. He has also
worked with play-by-play veterans Bob Starr and
Jerry Trupiano.
Many stations
throughout New
England
and beyond pick up the broadcasts.
All Red Sox telecasts not shown nationally on
Fox or
ESPN are seen on
New England Sports Network (NESN)
with
Don Orsillo calling play-by-play
and
Jerry Remy, former Red Sox
second baseman, as
color analyst. During Remy's recovery from
cancer, former Red Sox players
Dennis
Eckersley and
Dave
Roberts have alternated doing color commentary.
NESN became exclusive
in 2006; before then, games were shown on such local stations as
WBZ
, WSBK
, WLVI
, WABU
, and
WFXT
at various points in team history.
Retired numbers
The most recent number retirement was on July 28, 2009, as the Red
Sox retired the number 14 of Jim Rice.
The Red Sox have two official requirements for a player to have his
number retired:
- Election to the National
Baseball Hall of Fame

- At least 10 years played with the Red Sox
The Red Sox previously had a requirement that the player "must have
finished their career with Red Sox," but this was reconsidered
after the election of Carlton Fisk to the Hall of Fame. Fisk
actually retired with the White Sox, but then-GM Dan Duquette hired
him for one day as a special assistant, which allowed Fisk to
technically end his career with the Red Sox. After that, with the
anticipation that there might be other former Red Sox players who
would be denied the chance to have their number by the club (a
prime example would be Roger Clemens), the team dropped the rule.
Some would argue that the rule still exists
de jure, as
Wade Boggs' number has not been retired by Boston even though he
meets the official requirements (Boggs finished his career with the
Tampa Bay Rays after spending five
years with the
rival New York Yankees). It should be noted that
Boston did honor Boggs by voting him into the
Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2004,
the year before he was enshrined into Cooperstown.
The only exception that has been made to date is for former Boston
shortstop
Johnny Pesky, whose number 6
was retired on September 28, 2008. Pesky neither spent ten years as
a player nor was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame; however, Red
Sox ownership cited "... his versatility of his
contributions — on the field, off the field, [and] in the
dugout...," including as a manager, scout, and special instructor
and decided that the honor had been well-earned.
The number 42 was officially retired by
Major League Baseball in , but
Mo Vaughn was one of a handful of players
to continue wearing #42 through a
grandfather clause. He last wore it for
the team in . In commemoration of Jackie Robinson Day, MLB invited
players to wear the number 42 for games played on April 15,
Coco Crisp (CF),
David Ortiz (DH), and
DeMarlo Hale (Coach) did that in 2007 and again
in 2008. In 2009, MLB had all uniformed players for all teams wear
#42 for Jackie Robinson Day.
Until the late 1990s, the numbers originally hung on the
right-field facade in the order in which they were retired:
9-4-1-8. It was pointed out that the numbers, when read as a date
(9/4/18), marked the eve of the first game of the
1918 World Series, the last championship
series that the Red Sox won before 2004. After the facade was
repainted, the numbers were rearranged in numerical order.
The Red Sox have not issued several numbers since the departure of
prominent players who wore them, specifically:
- 21 -- Roger Clemens RHP
(1984–1996); last played in 2007 for New York Yankees
- 26 -- Wade Boggs 3B
(1982–1992); Boggs has met the requirements based on his
11 years as a player and 2005 election into the Hall of Fame. No
announcement has been made, but #26 has not been issued since
Boggs' 2005 election to the Hall of Fame (Several players wore #26
between 1992–2004)
- 45 -- Pedro Martínez
RHP (1998–2004); currently on 40-man roster for Philadelphia Phillies
There is also considerable debate in Boston media circles and among
fans about the potential retiring of
Tony Conigliaro's number
25. Nonetheless, since Conigliaro's last full
season in Boston, 1970, the number has been assigned to several
players (including
Orlando Cepeda,
Mark Clear,
Don
Baylor,
Larry Parrish,
Jack Clark,
Troy O'Leary, and
Jeremy Giambi). Number 25 is currently worn by
the team's third baseman,
Mike Lowell,
who coincidentally won the
Tony
Conigliaro Award in 1999.
Baseball Hall of Famers
Ford C. Frick Award recipients
Minor league affiliations
Other notable seasons and team records
- Pedro Martínez compiled a 1.74 ERA in a hitter's park in a
big-hitting era in 2000.
- Nomar Garciaparra hit .372 in 2000, the club record for a
right-handed hitter.
- David Ortiz in 2005 had 47 home runs and 148 RBIs. He also had
many game winning and timely hits and came in second in the MVP
voting to the New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez.
- David Ortiz had a franchise record-breaking 2006 season with 54
home runs in the regular season
- On April 22, 2007, Manny Ramírez, J.D. Drew, Mike Lowell, and
Jason Varitek hit four consecutive home runs in the 3rd inning off
10 pitches from Chase Wright of the New
York Yankees in his second Major League start and his fourth above
Single-A ball. This was the fifth time in Major League history, and
first time in Red Sox history this feat has occurred. Additionally
notable, J.D. Drew, then with the Dodgers, previously contributed to a
four consecutive home run series as had Red Sox manager Terry
Francona's father, Tito Francona.
- The overall regular season winning percentage since club
inception in 1901 is .516, a record of 8595-8065 for games played
through 9 July 2008. They started 2007 with winning percentage of
0.512 (8444-7960).
- On September 1, 2007, Clay Buchholz no-hit the Baltimore Orioles in his
second Major League start. He is the first Red Sox rookie and 17th
Red Sox pitcher to throw a no-hitter.
- On September 22, 2007, with a victory over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, the
Red Sox clinched a spot in the postseason for the fourth time in
five years, the first time in club history this has happened. Also,
with this postseason berth, manager Terry Francona becomes the
first manager in team history to lead the club to three playoff
appearances.
- On September 8, 2008, the Red Sox set a Major League record
with their 456th consecutive home-park sellout. The previous record
had been held by the Cleveland Indians, who sold out 455 games
between June 12, 1995 and April 2, 2001. The streak began on May
15, 2003 against the Texas
Rangers. The Red Sox are only the fourth team to sell out every
home game of an entire season (the 1996 Colorado Rockies and the
2000 San Francisco
Giants being the other two). (The team definition of a sell
out: "The criteria used for a sellout at Fenway Park have been the
same since the early 1990s," Kennedy said in an e-mail. "Our policy
is simple and straightforward, and is used by many MLB clubs [and
other sports teams around the country]. A sellout occurs when the
number of tickets distributed to spectators is equal to or greater
than the seating capacity at Fenway Park. [The 2008 seating
capacity is 36,984 for day games and 37,400 for night games.]" That
is: a sellout only covers ticket sales, not spectators in physical
seats.)
See also
Notes
References
External links