The Clock Turns Back to 1983 as a Yastrzemski Homers at Fenway - 2 minutes read
The Clock Turns Back to 1983 as a Yastrzemski Homers at Fenway
BOSTON — Forty-four years ago, Carl Yastrzemski ended one of the most electrifying World Series in baseball history with a flyout to center field at Fenway Park. A little higher and farther, and Yastrzemski would have tied Game 7 with the Cincinnati Reds. He never returned to the World Series.
The year the Red Sox finally won it, 2004, was painful for Yastrzemski: His only son, Mike, a former minor leaguer, died that September of a heart attack after hip surgery. Only 43 years old, he had left behind a son, also named Mike.
On Tuesday, Mike Yastrzemski did something his father never could, and that his grandfather desperately wanted to do on that October night in 1975. He played a major league game at Fenway and hit a home run into the center-field bleachers.
“I just had to take a second and understand what was going on and appreciate that moment and not take it for granted,” said Yastrzemski, who later added a double. “So I made sure to kind of keep my head up and look around and just soak it all in.”
Source: The New York Times
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Keywords:
Home run • Boston • Carl Yastrzemski • World Series • Baseball • In flight • Center fielder • Fenway Park • Grady Little • Carl Yastrzemski • Game seven • Cincinnati Reds • World Series • Boston Red Sox • Carl Yastrzemski • Minor League Baseball • Myocardial infarction • Mike Yastrzemski • Major League Baseball • Fenway Park • Hit (baseball) • Home run • Center fielder • Bleacher • Second baseman • Double (baseball) •
BOSTON — Forty-four years ago, Carl Yastrzemski ended one of the most electrifying World Series in baseball history with a flyout to center field at Fenway Park. A little higher and farther, and Yastrzemski would have tied Game 7 with the Cincinnati Reds. He never returned to the World Series.
The year the Red Sox finally won it, 2004, was painful for Yastrzemski: His only son, Mike, a former minor leaguer, died that September of a heart attack after hip surgery. Only 43 years old, he had left behind a son, also named Mike.
On Tuesday, Mike Yastrzemski did something his father never could, and that his grandfather desperately wanted to do on that October night in 1975. He played a major league game at Fenway and hit a home run into the center-field bleachers.
“I just had to take a second and understand what was going on and appreciate that moment and not take it for granted,” said Yastrzemski, who later added a double. “So I made sure to kind of keep my head up and look around and just soak it all in.”
Source: The New York Times
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Home run • Boston • Carl Yastrzemski • World Series • Baseball • In flight • Center fielder • Fenway Park • Grady Little • Carl Yastrzemski • Game seven • Cincinnati Reds • World Series • Boston Red Sox • Carl Yastrzemski • Minor League Baseball • Myocardial infarction • Mike Yastrzemski • Major League Baseball • Fenway Park • Hit (baseball) • Home run • Center fielder • Bleacher • Second baseman • Double (baseball) •