News

The 1967 season reignited fans’ love for the Red Sox. “New England was on fire that year,” Bell said. “Kids had transistor radios in the classrooms. It was, everywhere you went, it was Red ...
The Red Sox won the pennant by one game, winning 92 for the season. The Tigers and Twins finished right behind, at 91 wins, and the White Sox finished with 89 wins, so essentially it was a four ...
The 1967 Boston Red Sox captured the hearts of their fans and became known as the "Impossible Dream" team. After finishing ninth in the American League in 1966, the Red Sox made a remarkable ...
“That season changed the whole thing around forever,” said Gary Bell during an event at The Sports Museum that gathered nine of the 20 living players from the 1967 team.
1967: Cardinals 4, Red Sox 3. ... had pitched a complete game on the final day of the season to deliver the pennant, the Red Sox were unable to start him against Cardinals ace Bob Gibson in Game 1.
In 1967, Yastrzemski lifted the Red Sox to a magical season, winning the Triple Crown and MVP as he drove Boston through a riveting pennant race to the World Series.
Betts’s 10.9 Wins Above Replacement in ’18 tied Ted Williams’s 1946 season for the second-best among offensive players in Red Sox history, trailing only Carl Yastrzemski’s impossibly ...
Carl Yastrzemski: An iconic figure in Red Sox history, "Yaz" was a seven-time Gold Glove winner and achieved a .300+ batting average in ten seasons, including his Triple Crown-winning year in 1967 ...
The lefty played his entire 23-year MLB career with the Red Sox and was a fan favorite in New England. Between 1967 and 1970, he racked up 40+ home runs on three different occasions.
Another holdover from that team, the star-crossed Tony Conigliaro, opened the season with the Red Sox, but lasted only 21 games. He had missed the 1967 stretch drive after being struck just below ...