Yankees Mag: Ring Bearer
Paul O'Neill was already a winner when he was traded to New York in the fall of 1992, having celebrated a world title with the 1990 Cincinnati Reds. But that was just a preview of what was to come for George Steinbrenner¡¯s beloved Warrior. One of the emotional rocks of
Yankees Mag: Most Valuable Mensch
Jimmie Reese¡¯s fungo bat ought to have had a U.S. patent. Among the many ways he is remembered from a full and rich baseball life, Reese was known as one of the game¡¯s great virtuosos with a fungo bat. Handcrafted in his Southern California home woodshop, his bats, with the
Yankees Mag: Never Easy
Gerrit Cole stood at his locker looking off into the distance. Instead of any kind of answer, all that cracked through his lip was a not altogether friendly, almost sneer-like smirk. Despite the pitcher¡¯s stern demeanor on the mound, the real Gerrit Cole usually has a perfectly affable disposition. This
Yankees Mag: The Blueprint
A grind. A marathon. A slog. There are many ways to describe the rigors of baseball¡¯s physically punishing and mentally exhausting 162-game schedule. The games themselves might not be as brutal as football, and the players display a different type of athleticism from what is required on a basketball court
Yankees Mag: A Glove Supreme (With a Bat to Match)
It was a few hours before the night¡¯s first pitch would be thrown at Yankee Stadium, and Jazz Chisholm Jr. seemed surprised to receive a package at his locker in the home clubhouse. The newest Yankees infielder looked quizzically at the large brown box, waiting a few seconds before tearing
Yankees Mag: Who was Pedro Gonz¨¢lez?
After hitting .326 in 19 Grapefruit League games, Pedro Gonz¨¢lez stood near home plate at Fort Lauderdale Stadium and humbly accepted the praise of his manager, Ralph Houk. Jerry Coleman, beginning his first full season as a Yankees broadcaster, helped present the 1963 James P. Dawson Award -- bestowed annually
Yankees Mag: Playing to Win
For most people, the love of baseball is instilled over years, passed down from generation to generation. But for some, that love of the game seems almost innate, something they must have naturally inherited. Hudson Valley Renegades shortstop George Lombard Jr. is among the latter, born into the world of
Yankees Mag: Big-Time Fun
The Yankees hadn¡¯t even emerged from the gray sky above Williamsport Regional Airport, but the excitement on the runway was palpable. Among the people gathered at the small airport in rural Pennsylvania were two Little League teams, one from Venezuela and the other from Henderson, Nevada. The players would be
Yankees Mag: Three and Oh!
When you look back at the Yankees¡¯ dynasty from the end of the last century, it¡¯s easy to consider it as a single entity. But few people know better than Joe Girardi -- who played on three of those championship teams before managing the 2009 Yankees to the top of
Yankees Mag: 7 O¡¯Clock Lightning
Throughout the decades, there have been plenty of times when spending July Fourth at Yankee Stadium was well worth the price of admission. From Lou Gehrig¡¯s famous speech in 1939 to Dave Righetti¡¯s no-hitter in 1983, countless incredible memories have been made in the Bronx on America¡¯s birthday. July 4,
Yankees Mag: Thrice as Nice
Ben Rice had already hit two home runs against the Boston Red Sox on July 6, and the question that came to mind as the first baseman stepped into the batter¡¯s box in the seventh inning was obvious. Has a rookie ever hit three home runs in one game for
Yankees Mag: Stars and Pinstripes
As he sat at a table in the Globe Life Field outfield the day before the 2024 All-Star Game in Arlington, Texas, Aaron Judge serenaded a swelled media throng with a recitation of the baseball studs in town for the weekend. Over the course of nearly an hour, he spent
Yankees Mag: It Don¡¯t Mean A Thing If You Ain¡¯t Got That Swing
When James Rowson began working with his players upon the official start of Spring Training this past February, the Yankees¡¯ new hitting coach was overwhelmed by the bounty of talent in his charge. In Aaron Judge, he had the American League single-season home run record holder. Juan Soto? Only perhaps
Yankees Mag: Classic Celebration
On Saturday afternoon of a picture-perfect Memorial Day Weekend, several thousand baseball fans flocked to the village of Cooperstown, N.Y., to revel in the game¡¯s storied past. They filed into the stands at 103-year-old Doubleday Field, anticipating the 1:05 p.m. ET start of the Hall of Fame East-West Classic --
Yankees Mag: Oh, It¡¯s Such a Perfect Day
It¡¯s a nice problem to consider what it would be like if your perfect game hadn¡¯t happened. Certainly better than the alternative. For David Cone, who achieved baseball immortality 25 years ago on a hot July day in the summer of 1999, it¡¯s a fun exercise, harmless and victimless. ¡°You
Yankees Mag: The Roaring Yankees
The grandest, most successful and colorful of all the years I played baseball was 1927. We went into first place after the first game, and we were never out of it the whole season, winning 110 games. In 1969, at the celebration of baseball¡¯s 100th season, the Baseball Writers¡¯ Association
Yankees Mag: Renewed View
Even though he retired from baseball, Alex Mauricio wasn¡¯t ready to be done with it. Part of that was because he was just 23 years old, and his career had barely started. Part of it was because he knew his arm would mend eventually, and he could continue doing what
Yankees Mag: Only the Beginning
Luis Gil has elevated his game to a level that few -- if any -- people around baseball could have seen coming. After undergoing Tommy John surgery in May 2022, Gil missed the remainder of that season and made just two Minor League appearances in 2023. But after coming into
Yankees Mag: Proven Winner
Mike Stanton had come so far. He had already experienced almost everything the game of baseball could offer. He had made an improbable climb from a rural Texas community college to the Majors. He had experienced World Series heartbreak, and he had also enjoyed the highest of October highs. But
Yankees Mag: Battle-Tested and Ready for More
In a rare occurrence, the Boston Red Sox dealt one of the most productive hitters in their lineup to the Yankees last December. In exchange for right-handed reliever Greg Weissert and Minor League pitchers Richard Fitts and Nicholas Judice, the Yankees landed 27-year-old outfielder Alex Verdugo. In three seasons with
Yankees Mag: Steady Hand
Brian Cashman knew it might sound crazy. His team had just come within one win of reaching the World Series, losing Games 6 and 7 of the 2017 American League Championship Series in Houston, and now not only was the Yankees¡¯ GM parting ways with the skipper of his 91-71
Yankees Mag: Modern Fit
Nobody does history like the Yankees. Which is convenient, because nobody has a history like the Yankees do. Yankee Stadium is filled with evidence of that legacy, from the displays throughout the Great Hall and the concourses to the plaques, numbers and stone tablets that fill Monument Park. Or, if
Yankees Mag: The Beet Goes On
Clayton Beeter had just finished a start that didn¡¯t meet his standards, the kind that no pitcher walks away feeling great about. He threw too many pitches. He didn¡¯t get enough outs. A couple of balls cleared the fence. He made an early exit and was eventually saddled with a
Yankees Mag: The Good in Mankind
It¡¯s only 7 a.m., and the Florida sun has already turned Parkland into an outdoor sauna. But for Anthony Rizzo and so many of his family members and friends, there¡¯s nothing that would keep them away from Pine Trails Park on this early December day. Located a stone¡¯s throw from
Yankees Mag: Bulldog Born, Bulldog Bred
Anticipation had been building all weekend long. Fresno State alumni, former players and supporters of the Bulldogs baseball team had traveled from near and far to see the 12th and 13th numbers in the program¡¯s storied history retired. The sheet covering up the No. 44 of legendary head coach Mike