New York City - A Baseball
Town
© 2007 BestShowTicketsLasVegas.com
Above all other sports, New
York is a first and foremost a baseball town.
It’s true that basketball,
football
and hockey
have their fans, but the sports year begins in the middle
of February and ends in October - preferably the end of October.
And even during the other three and a half months, the hot
stove league consumes the city’s consciousness, even
eclipsing the Jets
and Giants
playoff runs.
This love of the game dates all the ways back to the 19th
century as baseball was played throughout New York in its
earliest forms. The birth of the National League in 1876 eventually
brought the city the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants
and when the American League set up shop in 1901, the New
York Yankees soon set up shop.
Rooting for a baseball team in New York wasn’t about
what team was better, it was a birthright. People were born
into a fan base and there was no switching side. As the Yankees
established themselves, their fans came from the Bronx and
also attracted the corporate visitor and tourists.
The
Dodgers and Giants
were different. Working class fans in the first half of the
20th century tended to back one of the two National League
teams. Giant fans were generally from Manhattan, while the
city’s largest borough had their beloved Dodgers. Much
like the class system of the early 19th century, which broke
down people by nationality and religion, New Yorkers were
identified with the teams they followed.
The best example of that came in 1951, where the Dodgers
and Giants
finished tied after the 154 game season. A three game playoff
was ordered by the National League, which culminated with
“The Shot Heard Around the World” by the Giants
Bobby Thompson. Fans fought with each other and until this
day old Brooklyn Dodger fans still feel the pain.
After the Giant
win, they proceeded to be swept by the Yankees, who had
a young Mickey Mantle in the outfield.
The Dodgers had their day in 1955, giving Brooklyn their
only championship, but the days of the Boys of Summer ended
two years later when the Bums and Giants upped and left for
the West Coast.
With only one team in town, the fans of the Dodgers and Giants
left behind did not back the Yankees, rather they followed
their teams from afar or stopped watching all together. Only
when the New
York Mets were formed in 1962, did these spurned New Yorkers
find a team.
The New York Mets Baseball Team
Much like their predecessors, the Amazins’
quickly established themselves as a people’s team. Although
they were inept, fans flocked to the old Polo Grounds - and
eventually Shea Stadium - to watch the Mets
and root against the Dodgers and Giants when they came into
town.
The Yankees, meanwhile, just kept winning. Champions in 1961
and 1962, they lost the Fall Classic the next two years. Then
the bottom fell out. They finished close to the bottom or
last for the rest of the decade, as the team aged and the
mighty farm system went barren.
That gave the Mets
a chance to take the city. And in 1969 they improbably won
the World Series against insurmountable odds. Led by young
pitchers Tom Seaver and Jerry Koosman, the
Miracle Mets won their first the Series 4-1 over the Baltimore
Orioles.
They stayed in contention for the next seven years, but never
got back to the top.
The Yankees
resurged after George Steinbrenner bought the team and
through free agency built the 1977 and 1978 champs. But the
Boss’s hand’s on approach eventually cost those
Bombers due to too many bad moves.
As the Yankees went down, the Mets
came back and in 1986 won the Series again, beating the Boston
Red Sox in seven games. Much like the team of a generation
before, these NY
Mets were competitive until 1991, but never won the big
game.
But like before, when the Mets
faded, the Yankees came to the forefront. This time winning
four crowns in five years [1996, 1998-2000]. Unlike past teams,
these Bombers
were built from within, while cheery-picking the other talent
through free agency and trades. Led by future Hall of Famers
Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera, the Bronx Bombers remain a
force in the American League.
The Mets
enjoyed a resurgence in 1999 under controversial manager
Bobby Valentine and catcher Mike Piazza. They even went to
the Series in 2000, only to lose to the cross town Yankees.
Then, after five years of mediocrity, the Mets came back in
2006 behind young stars David Wright and Jose Reyes and were
one strike away from the
World Series, losing to the eventual champion St.
Louis Cardinals in seven games.
What makes baseball in New York unique these days is the
rivalry between the Mets and Yankees. The teams didn’t
play each other in non-exhibition games until 1997 and the
Subway Series is the highlight of every season. Both Shea
and Yankee Stadiums get a mixed but behaved crowd when the
two teams play each other. As both the Met and Yankee fans
root for their teams, you can hear chants for both clubs back
and forth for all nine innings.
And that’s unlike any other sport in the city. Hockey
games tend to have more violent outbursts in the stands, while
games between the Knicks
and Nets
and Jets
vs. Giants
matches could be played anywhere, since the intensity just
isn’t there.
But that’s probably because New York, first and foremost,
is a baseball town.