The Great Bambino, The Babe, Sultan of Swat, The Big Fellow—you’ve probably heard of him. Babe Ruth, one of the greatest baseball players to ever live, was born George Herman Ruth Jr. in Pigtown, Maryland and was the son of Katherine Schamberger and George Ruth Herman Sr. Babe was known to be a rowdy child. It is rumored that the Babe threw tomatoes at police officers while they were hard at work. Due to his constant trouble making, Babe’s parents sent him off to St. Mary’s Industrial School in Baltimore, Maryland, where The Babe fell in love with baseball. Brother Mathias taught Babe how to throw, catch, and hit while he was at St. Mary’s; Mathias was a brother in the Catholic Church who taught children at St. Mary’s. Not after long, the Babe became an incredible ball player with the help of Brother Mathias, and later went on to play for the Boston Red Sox. What? You thought he played for the Yankees, right? He did, but his career began with the Boston Red Sox.1 Babe Ruth began his first season on the Red Sox in July of 1914. The Babe became a star, hitting twenty-nine home runs in the 1919 season with the Red Sox.2
Now this is where something terrible happens… Red Sox owner, Harry Frazee, sells the best player on the team to their rivals, the Yankees. In addition to being the Red Sox owner, Frazee was also a Broadway producer, and he used the money he made from selling Babe Ruth to produce one of his plays. Babe Ruth was worth a lot of money; in fact, the Red Sox sold him for $125,000! But the money did not even go back into the organization. Frazee continued this broken baseball business while selling Boston’s finest talent up until 1921, when he sold the Red Sox to Ed Barrow.2 This created the longest, most brutal curse in baseball history. Getting rid of your best players, selling them to your rival team, and receiving tons of money for a Broadway play… now that is just asking for a curse. As soon as Babe Ruth left the Red Sox things began to turn sour for the Red Sox organization. Babe Ruth was playing the best baseball of his life for the Yankees, and the Red Sox were certainly not winning games without him.4 Red Sox fans became disgusted with the organization, and the team lost many of its supporters over time.
Losing became a bad habit that the Red Sox could not seem to shake. In 1986, the Curse of the Great Bambino dramatically broke the hearts of all Red Sox fans. That year the Red Sox finally made it to the World Series, after almost seventy years. Playing against the New York Mets, the Red Sox overcame all statistical predictions and went on the play a remarkable series. In Game 6, the game went into extra innings. In the top of the tenth inning, Boston scored two runs, bringing them into the lead. With two outs against them, the Red Sox were one out away from being the World Series Champions. Suddenly, the Mets got two singles, bringing the tying runner to third. The Red Sox manager pulled pitcher Roger Clemens, and brought in their best closer, Bob Stanley, to finish the game.2 The count was 2-2 when Stanley threw a wild pitch, allowing the tying run to score and advance the other runners on base. The next pitch Stanley threw ended up being a weak ground ball hit to the first baseman, Bill Buckner.6 It was a routine play that Buckner, who was very consistent, missed… the ball went right through his legs, causing the winning run to score. If you’ve ever heard the phrase “pull a Buckner,” now you know what that means! The Red Sox lost Game 6, and they had been only two strikes away from winning the World Series; a greater force seemed to be holding the Red Sox back from winning the 1986 World Series. The Red Sox then lost Game 7 against the Mets, which was blamed on the curse.7 Game 7 was determined a loss in every fan’s eyes after the fifth inning, when the Mets secured their lead with a two-run homerun. Red Sox fans began to think that the curse was more real than ever. They were one pitch away from winning a world series, and one pitch away from ending sixty-eight years of frustration.8 The losing continued, and subsequent seasons only got worse.
Eighteen years later, in the 2004 season, the Red Sox started to show promise again. They started winning.2 The 2004 team eventually made it to the American League Championship Series against the Yankees. This time the Red Sox had one of the best teams in its history. Everyone on this team played their part in this series. The first three games of the series were discouraging for Red Sox fans, for the Red Sox lost to the Yankees all three times, allowing them only one more game to win to go onto the World Series. Many of the Red Sox players started motivating others by saying “don’t let us win at 8 tonight, if they let us win tonight we have Pedro Martinez coming in hot tomorrow,” “if there is a group of idiots that can do it, it’s us.”2 The Red Sox did not make this series easy on themselves, and they refused to get swept by their rivals. Game 4, bottom of the 9th inning, down by a run, Kevin Millar gets walked, allowing the Red Sox one last chance to beat the Yankees. The Red Sox put a pinch runner in for Millar, Dave Roberts, one of the speediest guys on the team, in order for him to steal second. Roberts almost got picked off twice, but finally stole second. He was safe!2 Red Sox fans began believing in their team. The next batter hits a line drive up the middle, scoring Roberts and tying up the game 4-4. Now to extra innings. Big Papi, David Ortiz, comes up in the bottom of the 12th inning and hits a walk-off homer!2 The Red Sox beat all odds, and finally win Game 4. But the Series is never over until it is truly over. The Red Sox were determined to win the next three games in order to prove the world wrong. In Game 5, the Yankees start out strong, leading the game by 2 runs, but then, in the bottom of the 8th inning, Big Papi steps up to the plate, once again hits a bomb over the tremendous green monster, resulting in the Red Sox being only down by one run.13 The Red Sox later tie up the game in the bottom of the 8th inning. The curse started to show its power in the top of the 9th inning, when the Yankees began hitting, the Red Sox were making errors, and the baseball gods were not in their favor. Luckily, the Red Sox made it out of the top of the 9th inning scoreless. Heading in to the bottom of the 9th Big Papi again steps up to plate hitting a line drive walk off to center field.2 David Ortiz has now come in clutch this series in dire need, twice! The baseball gods seem to finally be working in favor of the Red Sox, leading them to Game 6—Game 6 was one of the most passionate baseball games ever played.
The Red Sox continued their series slogan “why not us” in order to motivate their fans and players.2 Curt Schilling, who had just received an ankle surgery, was on the mound tonight, giving all Red Sox fans the inspiration to persevere through these last two games. Schilling fed off of the hatred of the Yankee fans, and started out very strong. Schilling did his job as a pitcher, and the offense was hitting for their injured pitcher, leading 4-0. Later throughout Game 6, Schilling’s sock became soaked in blood, and his ankle was starting to fester.2 Schilling began to limp back to the dugout, and he finished the 7th inning strong and was then pulled. Schilling made history that night, pitching with an injured bloody ankle. He left Yankee stadium shocked, and Red Sox fans inspired. The baseball gods were back and helping the Red Sox with controversial calls. The Red Sox go on winning Game 6 due to the heroic performance of Curt Schilling. His passion for the game was shown that night in Yankee Stadium.2
Finally, going into Game 7, the final game of the series, it was anybody’s ball game. Big Papi yet again brings the Red Sox into a lead 2-0 due to a major long ball home-run. In the 2nd inning, Johnny Damon hits a grand slam over the centerfield wall, allowing the Red Sox to have a 6-run security cushion early in the game.2 In the bottom of the 6th inning, the Red Sox put in pitcher Pedro Martinez, and Yankee fans began to shout, “who’s your daddy?” in order to taunt Martinez. Martinez pushed through the negativity, and finished the game 8-1 as American League Champions!2 This was the first time in sports history for a baseball team to come back to win a three-game deficit. Now off to the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, winning in an easy four games, finally ending the curse of the Great Bambino, after eighty-six years.
- Cynthia Rose, The Babe Ruth Story (Detroit: Gale, 2004), 692-694. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- Edward M. Scahill, “Did Babe Ruth Have a Comparative Advantage as a Pitcher?,” The Journal of Economic Education, no. 4 (Autumn 1990): 404. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- Cynthia Rose, They Were Just One Pitch Away (Detroit: Gale, 2004), 642. ↵
- Cynthia Rose, They Were Just One Pitch Away (Detroit: Gale, 2004), 644. ↵
- Cynthia Rose, They Were Just One Pitch Away (Detroit: Gale, 2004), 645. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- The green monster is a unique green wall in left field that is significantly taller than all of the other parts of the fence, and very few players are able to hit over this incredibly tall wall. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Boston Red Sox,” by Steve Meyer. ↵
58 comments
Elias Garza
I found the start of this article to be cute and quite humorous. Little details such as Babe Ruth throwing tomatos to police officers makes me laugh to myself. However, I grew up playing baseball and I have great love for this sport as well. Baseball is a beautiful sport and can be intense, just as this article explained. Personally, I think the Red Sox’s made the wrong decision when they made to decision to no longer keep Ruth on their team; however, I am proud of the success Babe Ruth brought to the Yankees.
Luis Morales
This article is great. I am not a huge baseball fan, except for the Astros, but this article is funny, motivating, and just well written. I love how the author incorporated humor in the beginning of the article by stating, “Boston Red Sox. What? You thought he played for the Yankees, right?” This article is a perfect example of how the determination and passion people can have when they set their minds on a goal can take them far in life.
Rafael Lopez-Rodriguez
Boston Red Sox vs. New York Yankees one of the best rivalries in all of sports. When these two teams play it is always must see tv. The famous “Curse of the Bambino” seemed to haunt Red Sox fans forever especially when both of these teams played in the ALCS in 2004 where the Red Sox came back from an 0-3 deficit to win the series. I am a big Red Sox fans and dislike the Yankees with a passion. It was very interesting to read a little more in depth about how Babe Ruth came to be and how this rivalry heats up every single year since Ruth’s playing days.
Andrea Chavez
This article is about how the Red Sox’s “curse” stared. I wonder if the fact that the Yankees took their best player Babe Ruth made their rivalry more intense. I never knew his story about his younger life. Its amazing to see someone turn their anger or problems into something great. I had heard a lot about Babe Ruth, and I never really looked into it so reading this article really crossed it out of my to do lists.
Angela Rodriguez
I’ve never been the biggest fan of baseball compared to other sports but I can still sit down and watch a game. After reading your article, you made me feel as if I was actually watching these baseball games. I remember hearing about how Babe Ruth stated his career with the Red Sox then drafted to the Yankees. However, I had not heard about the Broadway play that was produced right after.
Luke Willis
This was a very interesting article to read. I do not like baseball but this was very interesting. I think that the owner of the Red Sox was a complete idiot for selling babe ruth just to make money so that he could produce a Broadway show. He should have never owned the team in the first place and i am glad that they were finally able to break the curse.
Ryann Cervantes
As a member of a baseball enthusiastic family I actually never heard of the curse before. Although I did know of a rivalry between the Sox and the Yankees I didn’t know about the curse. I usually cheered for the Red Sox with my brothers cheering for the Yankees and thankfully that was after the curse was broken. Nice article, while I don’t watch baseball anymore it’s nice to learn a little more about the team I used to cheer for.
Valeria Hernandez
Growing up my father used to watch plenty of Baseball, he would constantly repeat the name, Babe Ruth. I had never been a fan of sports so I never fully understood the importance if this baseball legend until I read this article. The article explains/ described an event that was completely unfamiliar to me the “Curse.” A wonderful well-executed article.
Brianda Gomez
This was a very well written article! I really enjoyed reading and learning about the amazing athlete Babe Ruth and the 86 devastating years that the red sox went through . Before reading this article, I had never known about the “curse” or being a yankees fan, I had never known that he first played with our ultimate rival! It is crazy to think how someone would sell their best players on the team to their own enemy.
Alejandra Chavez
I found it quite interesting how this article was written. I appreciate how it was very detailed and answered a good amount of questions a reader would typically have after reading a piece like this, on it’s own. As a Yankees fan, I had heard about the curse but I had never really gotten into the details. I found this article to be really informative. I had no idea the curse lasted for as long as it did. Great article.