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New York Yankees

The New York Yankees are an American professional baseball team based in the New York City borough of the Bronx. The Yankees compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) East Division. They are one of two major league clubs based in New York City alongside the National League (NL)'s New York Mets. The team was founded in 1903 when Frank Farrell and Bill Devery purchased the franchise rights to the defunct Baltimore Orioles (no relation to the current team of the same name) after it ceased operations and used them to establish the New York Highlanders.[6][a] The Highlanders were officially renamed the Yankees in 1913.[9]

New York Yankees
2024 New York Yankees season
Team logoCap insignia
Major league affiliations
Current uniform
Retired numbers
Colors
  • Midnight navy blue, white[1][2]
       
Name
  • New York Yankees (1913–present)
  • New York Highlanders (19031912)
Other nicknames
  • The Bronx Bombers
  • The Yanks
  • The Pinstripers
  • The Evil Empire[3]
Ballpark
Major league titles
World Series titles (27)
AL Pennants (40)
AL East Division titles (20)
Wild card berths (9)
Front office
Principal owner(s)Yankee Global Enterprises
(Hal Steinbrenner, chairman)[4][5]
PresidentRandy Levine
General managerBrian Cashman
ManagerAaron Boone
Websitemlb.com/yankees

The team is owned by Yankee Global Enterprises, a limited liability company that is controlled by the family of the late George Steinbrenner. Steinbrenner purchased the team from CBS in 1973. Currently, Brian Cashman is the team's general manager, Aaron Boone is the team's field manager, and Aaron Judge is the team captain. The team's home games were played at the original Yankee Stadium in the Bronx from 1923 to 1973 and from 1976 to 2008. In 1974 and 1975, the Yankees shared Shea Stadium with the Mets, in addition to the New York Jets and the New York Giants. In 2009, they moved into a new ballpark of the same name that was constructed adjacent to the previous facility, which was closed and demolished.[10] The team is perennially among the leaders in MLB attendance.[11]

Arguably the most successful professional sports franchise in the United States,[12][13] the Yankees have won 20 American League East Division titles, 40 American League pennants, and 27 World Series championships, all of which are MLB records.[14][15] The team has won more titles than any other franchise in the four major North American sports leagues, after briefly trailing the NHL's Montreal Canadiens between 1993 and 1999.[16] The Yankees have had 44 players and 11 managers inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame, including many of the most iconic figures in the sport's history, such as Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford, and Reggie Jackson; more recent inductees include Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter, who received the two highest vote percentages of all Hall of Fame members.[17][18] According to Forbes, the Yankees are the second-highest valued sports franchise in the world, after the NFL's Dallas Cowboys, with an estimated value in 2023 of approximately $7.1 billion.[19] The team has garnered enormous popularity and a dedicated fanbase, as well as widespread enmity from fans of other MLB teams.[20][21] The team's rivalry with the Boston Red Sox is one of the most well-known rivalries in North American sports.[22] The team's logo is internationally known as a fashion item and an icon of New York City and the United States.[23]

From 1903 through the 2023 season, the Yankees' overall win–loss record is 10,684–8,080–88 (a .569 winning percentage).[24]

History

1901–1902: Origins in Baltimore

In 1900, Ban Johnson, the president of a minor league known as the Western League (1894–1899),[25] changed the Western League name to the American League (AL) and asked the National League to classify it as a major league.[26] Johnson held that his league would operate on friendly terms with the National League, but the National League demanded concessions which Johnson did not agree with and declared major league status for the AL in 1901 anyway.[27][28][29]

Plans to add an AL team in New York City were blocked by the NL's New York Giants.[30] A team was instead placed in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1901 and named the Orioles.[31] The Orioles were managed by John McGraw, who was also a part owner. After many personal clashes with Johnson, during the 1902 season McGraw jumped to become the new manager of the Giants, taking many players with him.[32] The Orioles limped through the remainder of the season under league control, using a roster of players loaned from the rest of the AL clubs. The Orioles were disbanded at the end of the season.[33]

In early 1903, the two leagues decided to settle their disputes and try to coexist.[34] At a conference, Johnson requested that an AL team be put in New York, to play alongside the NL's Giants.[35] It was put to a vote, and 15 of the 16 major league owners agreed on it.[30] The franchise was awarded to Frank J. Farrell and William S. Devery.[36][37]

1903–1912: Establishment in New York and the Highlanders years

 
Hilltop Park, home of the Highlanders

The team's new ballpark, Hilltop Park (formally known as "American League Park"),[38] was constructed in one of Upper Manhattan's highest points—between 165th and 168th Streets in the Washington Heights neighborhood.[39] The team was named the New York Highlanders.[40] Fans believed the name was chosen because of the team's elevated location in Upper Manhattan, or as a nod to team president Joseph Gordon's Scottish-Irish heritage (the Gordon Highlanders were a well known Scottish military unit).[41][42]: 18  The land was owned by the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind and was leased to the Highlanders for 10 years.[43]

Initially, the team was commonly referred to as the New York Americans.[44] The team was also referred to as the "Invaders" in the Evening Journal and The Evening World.[45][46] New York Press Sports Editor Jim Price coined the unofficial nickname Yankees (or "Yanks") for the club as early as 1904, because it was easier to fit in headlines.[47] The Highlanders finished second in the AL in 1904, 1906, and 1910.[48] In 1904, they lost the deciding game on a wild pitch to the Boston Americans, who later became the Boston Red Sox.[49][50] That year, Highlander pitcher Jack Chesbro set the single-season wins record at 41.[51] At this time there was no formal World Series agreement wherein the AL and NL winners would play each other.[51]

1913–1922: New owners, a new home, and a new name: Years at the Polo Grounds

 
The Polo Grounds, home of the Yankees from 1913 to 1922, was demolished in 1964, after the Mets had moved to Shea Stadium in Flushing.

The Polo Grounds,[b] located on the shore of the Harlem River in Washington Heights, was home to the New York Giants of the National League.[53] The Giants were inter-city rivals with the Highlanders, dating back to when Giants manager John McGraw feuded with Ban Johnson after McGraw jumped from the Orioles to the Giants.[54][55] Polo Grounds III burned down in 1911 and the Highlanders shared Hilltop Park with the Giants during a two-month renovation period.[56][57] Later, from 1913 to 1922, the Highlanders shared the Polo Grounds with the Giants after their lease with Hilltop Park expired.[58] While playing at the Polo Grounds, the name "Highlanders" fell into disuse among the press.[47] In 1913 the team became officially known as the New York Yankees.[59]

In the mid‑1910s, the Yankees finished towards the bottom of the standings.[42]: 66–69  The relationship between Farrell and Devery became strained due to money issues and the team performance.[60] At the start of 1915, the pair sold the team to Colonel Jacob Ruppert, a brewer, and Captain Tillinghast L'Hommedieu Huston, a contractor-engineer.[6][61] Ruppert and Huston paid $350,000 (equivalent to $9,375,000 in 2021) with both men contributing half of the total price.[62] After the purchase, Ruppert assumed the role of team president with Huston becoming team secretary and treasurer.[63]

1923–1935: Sluggers and the Stadium: Ruth, Gehrig, and Murderer's Row

 
With his hitting prowess, Babe Ruth (1895–1948) ushered in an offensive-oriented era of baseball and helped lead the Yankees to four World Series titles.

In the years around 1920, the Yankees, the Red Sox, and the Chicago White Sox had a détente.[64] The trades between the three ball clubs antagonized Ban Johnson and garnered the teams the nickname "The Insurrectos".[65][66] This détente paid off well for the Yankees as they increased their payroll. Most new players who later contributed to the team's success came from the Red Sox, whose owner, Harry Frazee, was trading them for large sums of money to finance his theatrical productions.[67][68] Pitcher-turned-outfielder Babe Ruth was the most talented of all the acquisitions from Boston, and the outcome of that trade would haunt the Red Sox for the next 86 years, a span in which the team did not win a single World Series championship.[69] This phenomenon eventually became known as the Curse of the Bambino, which was coined by writer Dan Shaughnessy in the 1990 book of the same name.[70]

Ruth's multitude of home runs proved so popular that the Yankees began drawing more people than their National League counterpart, the Giants.[66] In 1921 — the year after acquiring Ruth — the Yankees played in their first World Series.[71][72] They competed against the Giants,[73] and all eight games of the series were played in the Polo Grounds.[74] After the 1922 season, the Yankees were told to move out of the Polo Grounds.[75] Giants manager John McGraw became upset with the increase of Yankees attendance along with the number of home runs.[76] He was said to have commented that the Yankees should "move to some out-of-the-way place, like Queens",[77] but they instead broke ground for a new ballpark in the Bronx, right across the Harlem River from the Polo Grounds.[78] In 1922, the Yankees returned to the World Series again and were dealt a second defeat at the hands of the Giants.[79] Manager Miller Huggins and general manager Ed Barrow were important newcomers in this period.[80] The hiring of Huggins by Ruppert in 1918 caused a rift between the owners that eventually led to Ruppert buying Huston out in 1923.[81]

 
Lou Gehrig (1903–1941) was the first Yankees player to have his number retired, in 1939, which was the same year that he retired from baseball due to a crippling disease.

In 1923, the Yankees moved to their new home, Yankee Stadium,[82] which took 11 months to build and cost $2.5 million (equivalent to $40,000,000 in 2021).[83] The team announced that 99,200 fans showed up on Opening Day and 25,000 were turned away.[84] In the first game at Yankee Stadium, Ruth hit a home run.[85] The stadium was nicknamed "The House That Ruth Built", due mainly to the fact that Ruth had doubled Yankees' attendance, which helped the team pay for the new stadium.[86] At the end of the season, the Yankees faced the Giants in the World Series for the third straight year and won their first championship.[87]

In the 1927 season, the Yankees featured a lineup that became known as "Murderers' Row",[88] and some consider this team to be the best in the history of baseball (though similar claims have been made for other Yankee squads, notably those of 1939, 1961 and 1998).[89] The name originated from The Tombs, a jail complex in Lower Manhattan that had specific cell block for murderers.[90] That season, the Yankees became the first team in baseball to occupy first place every day of the season, winning 110 games.[91] The team also swept the Pittsburgh Pirates in the World Series.[92] Ruth's home run total of 60 in 1927 set a single-season home run record that stood until it was broken by Roger Maris in 1961, although Maris had eight additional games in which to break the record.[91] Meanwhile, first baseman Lou Gehrig had his first big season, batting .373 with 47 home runs and 175 runs batted in (RBI),[93] beating Ruth's single-season RBI mark which he had set in 1921.[94] The Yankees won the World Series again in 1928.[95]

In 1931, Joe McCarthy, who was previously manager of the Chicago Cubs, was hired as manager and brought the Yankees back to the top of the AL.[96] They swept the Chicago Cubs in the 1932 World Series, and brought the team's streak of consecutive World Series game wins to 12.[97] This series was made famous by Babe Ruth's "Called Shot" in game three of the series at Wrigley Field, in which Ruth pointed to center field before hitting a home run.[98] In 1935, Ruth left the Yankees to join the NL's Boston Braves,[99] and he made his last major league baseball appearance on May 30 of that year.[100]

1936–1951: Joltin' Joe DiMaggio

 
In 1941, Joe DiMaggio (1914–1999) set an MLB record with a 56-game hitting streak that stands to this day and will probably never be broken.

After Ruth left the Yankees following the 1934 season, Gehrig finally had a chance to take center stage, but it was only one year before a new star appeared, Joe DiMaggio.[101] The team won an unprecedented four straight World Series titles from 1936 to 1939.[102] For most of 1939, however, they had to do it without Gehrig, who took himself out of the lineup on May 2 and retired due to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which was later known as "Lou Gehrig's Disease" in his memory.[103][104] The Yankees declared July 4, 1939 to be "Lou Gehrig Day", on which they retired his number 4, the first retired number in baseball.[105] Gehrig made a famous speech in which he declared himself to be "the luckiest man on the face of the earth."[106] He died two years later on June 2, 1941.[107] The acclaimed movie The Pride of the Yankees about Gehrig was released in 1942.

The 1941 season was often described as the last year of the "Golden Era" before the United States entered World War II and other realities intervened.[108] Numerous achievements were made in the early 1940s including Ted Williams of the Red Sox hitting for the elusive .400 batting average and Joe DiMaggio getting hits in consecutive ballgames.[109] By the end of his hitting streak, DiMaggio hit in 56 consecutive games, the current major league record and one often deemed unbreakable.[110]

Two months after the Yankees beat the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1941 World Series, the first of seven October meetings between the two crosstown rivals before the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles.[111] As a result of the mandatory draft following the attack on Pearl Harbor, more than 90 percent of the players, including DiMaggio, were forced to suspend their playing careers and enter the military.[112] Despite losing many of their players, the Yankees still managed to pull out a win against the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1943 World Series.[113] Following Jacob Ruppert's death in 1939, his heirs assumed control on the team.[114] In 1945 construction and real estate magnate Del Webb along with partners Dan Topping and Larry MacPhail purchased the team from the Ruppert estate for $2.8 million (equivalent to roughly $47.8 million in 2023);[115][116] MacPhail, who was the team president, treasurer, and general manager, was bought out following the 1947 World Series.[117]

After a few slumping seasons, McCarthy left the organization in 1946.[118] A few interim managers later, Bucky Harris took the job, righting the ship and taking the Yankees to a hard-fought series victory against the Dodgers.[119][120] Despite finishing only three games behind the Cleveland Indians in the 1948 pennant race, Harris was relieved of his duties and replaced by Casey Stengel, who had a reputation of being a clown and managing bad teams.[121][122] His tenure as Yankees' field manager, however, was marked with success.[123] The "underdog" Yankees came from behind to catch and surprise a powerful Red Sox team on the last two days of the 1949 season, a face-off that fueled the beginning of the modern Yankees–Red Sox rivalry.[124] By this time, however, DiMaggio's career was winding down, and the "Yankee Clipper" retired after the 1951 season after numerous injuries.[125] That year marked the arrival of Mickey Mantle, who was one of several rookies to fill the gap.[126]

1951–1959: Stengel's Squad

 
Opening Day of the 1951 baseball season at Griffith Stadium. President Harry Truman throws out the first ball as Bucky Harris and Casey Stengel look on.

Bettering the clubs managed by Joe McCarthy, the Yankees won the World Series five consecutive times from 1949 to 1953 under Stengel, which remains an MLB record.[127] Led by players like center fielder Mickey Mantle, pitcher Whitey Ford, and catcher Yogi Berra, Stengel's teams won ten pennants and seven World Series titles in his 12 seasons as the Yankees manager.[123] The 1950 title was the only one of those five championships not to be won against either the New York Giants or Brooklyn Dodgers; it was won in four straight games against the Whiz Kids of the Philadelphia Phillies.[128][129]

In 1954, the Yankees won 103 games, but the Cleveland Indians took the pennant with a then-AL record 111 wins; 1954 was famously referred to as "The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant".[130] The term was coined by writer Douglass Wallop, who wrote a novel of the same name.[131] The novel was then adapted into a musical called Damn Yankees.[132] In 1955, the Dodgers finally beat the Yankees in the World Series, after five previous Series losses to them. The Yankees came back strong the next year.[133] In Game 5 of the 1956 World Series against the Dodgers, pitcher Don Larsen threw the only perfect game in World Series history,[134] which remains the only perfect game in postseason play and the only postseason no-hitter until 2010.[135]

The Yankees lost the 1957 World Series to the Milwaukee Braves when Lew Burdette won three games for the Braves and was awarded World Series MVP.[136][137] Following the Series, the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers both left for San Francisco and Los Angeles, respectively.[138] This left the Yankees as New York's only baseball team. In the 1958 World Series, the Yankees got their revenge against the Braves and became the second team to win the Series after being down 3–1.[139] For the decade, the Yankees won six World Series championships (1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1956, 1958) and eight American League pennants (those six plus 1955 and 1957).[140] Led by Mantle, Ford, Berra, Elston Howard (the Yankees' first African-American player),[141] and the newly acquired Roger Maris, the Yankees entered the 1960s seeking to replicate their success of the 1950s.[142]

1960–1964: Mantle and Maris

 
Mickey Mantle (1931–1995) was one of the franchise's most celebrated hitters, highlighted by his 1956 Triple Crown and World Series championship.

Arnold Johnson, owner of the Kansas City Athletics, was a longtime business associate of Yankees co-owners Del Webb and Dan Topping.[115] Because of this "special relationship" with the Yankees, he traded young players to them in exchange for cash and aging veterans.[143] Invariably, these trades ended up being heavily tilted in the Yankees' favor, leading to accusations that the Athletics were little more than a Yankees farm team at the major league level.[144][145] Kansas City had been home to the Yankees' top farm team, the Kansas City Blues, for almost 20 years before the Athletics moved there from Philadelphia in 1954.[146]

In 1960, Charles O. Finley purchased the Athletics and put an end to the trades with the Yankees.[147] At that point, however, the Yankees had already strengthened their supply of future prospects, which included a young outfielder named Roger Maris.[148] In 1960, Maris led the league in slugging percentage, RBI, and extra-base hits.[149] He finished second in home runs (one behind Mickey Mantle) and total bases, and won a Gold Glove, which garnered enough votes for the American League MVP award.[150]

The year 1961 was one of the most memorable in Yankees history.[151][152]: n12  Mantle and Maris hit home runs at a fast pace and became known as the "M&M Boys".[153] Ultimately, a severe hip infection forced Mantle to leave the lineup at the end of the regular season.[154] Maris continued though, and on October 1, the last day of the regular season, he hit home run number 61, surpassing Babe Ruth's single-season home run record of 60.[155] However, MLB Commissioner Ford Frick decreed that since Maris had played in a 162-game season, and Ruth (in 1927) had played in a 154-game season.[156] They were considered two separate records for 30 years, until MLB reversed course and stated Maris held the record alone.[157] His record would be broken by Mark McGwire, who hit 70 home runs in 1998.[158] Maris held the American League record until 2022 when Aaron Judge hit 62.[159]

The Yankees won the pennant with a 109–53 record and went on to defeat the Cincinnati Reds in the 1961 World Series.[160] The team finished the year with 240 home runs, which was an MLB record until surpassed by the 1996 Baltimore Orioles team with 257 home runs.[161] In 1962, the sports scene in New York changed when the National League added an expansion team, the New York Mets.[162] The Mets played at the Giants' former home, the Polo Grounds, for two seasons while Shea Stadium was under construction in nearby Flushing, Queens.[163] This restored New York as a city with more than one team, as it had been from the late 1800s until 1957.[164] The Yankees won the 1962 World Series, their tenth in the past sixteen years, defeating the San Francisco Giants 4–3.[165] It was the Yankees' last championship until 1977.[166]

The Yankees easily reached the 1963 World Series when they won the pennant by 10.5 games, but they scored only four runs in the series and were swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers and their ace pitcher, Sandy Koufax.[167] The series was the first between the Yankees and the new Los Angeles Dodgers, after their move in 1958.[168] After the season, Yogi Berra, who had just retired from playing, took over managerial duties.[169] The aging Yankees returned the next year for a fifth straight World Series, but were beaten 4–3 by the St. Louis Cardinals. It would be the Yankees' last World Series appearance until 1976.[170][171]

1965–1972: New ownership and a steep decline

After the 1964 season, broadcasting company CBS purchased 80% of the Yankees from Topping and Webb for $11.2 million (equivalent to $110 million in 2023).[172] With the new ownership, the team began to decline.[173] The 1965 edition of the team posted a record of 77–85 — the Yankees' first losing record in 40 years.[174] In 1966, the Yankees finished in last place in the AL for the first time since 1912.[175] It also marked their first consecutive losing seasons since 1917 and 1918.[176] The 1967 season was not much better; they finished only ahead of the Kansas City Athletics in the American League.[177] While their fortunes improved somewhat in the late 1960s and early 1970s, they finished higher than fourth only once during CBS' ownership, in 1970.[178]

The Yankees were not able to replace their aging superstars with promising young talent, as they had consistently done in the previous five decades.[179] As early as the 1961–62 off-season, longtime fans noticed that the pipeline of talent from the minor league affiliates had started to dry up.[180] This was worsened by the introduction of the amateur draft that year, which meant that the Yankees could no longer sign any player they wanted.[181] The Yankees were one of four teams who voted against the establishment of the draft, with the Dodgers, Mets, and Cardinals also objecting.[182] While the Yankees usually drafted fairly early during this period due to their lackluster records, Thurman Munson was the only pick who lived up to his billing.[183]

1973–1981: Steinbrenner, Martin, Jackson, and Munson: the Bronx Zoo

 
Reggie Jackson

On January 3, 1973, CBS announced they were selling the club to a group of investors, led by Cleveland-based shipbuilder George Steinbrenner (1930–2010), for $10 million (equivalent to $68.6 million in 2023).[184] E. Michael Burke, who assumed the role of team president in 1966, resigned as president in April but stayed with the organization as a consultant to the owner.[185][186] Within a year, Steinbrenner bought out most of his other partners and became the team's principal owner, although Burke continued to hold a minority share into the 1980s.[178]

One of Steinbrenner's major goals was to renovate Yankee Stadium.[187] Both the stadium and the surrounding neighborhood had deteriorated by the late 1960s.[188] CBS initially suggested renovations, but the team needed to play elsewhere, and the Mets refused to open their home, Shea Stadium, to the Yankees.[189] A new stadium in the Meadowlands, across the Hudson River in New Jersey, was suggested (and was eventually built, as Giants Stadium, specifically for football).[190] Finally, in mid-1972, Mayor John Lindsay stepped in. The city bought the stadium and began an extensive two-year renovation period.[187] Since the city also owned Shea Stadium, the Mets were forced to allow the Yankees to play two seasons there.[189] The renovations modernized the look of the stadium, significantly altered the dimensions, and reconfigured some of the seating.[191]

In 1973, Steinbrenner instituted a personal appearance policy that included being clean-shaven, with long hair slicked back or trimmed.[192] In an interview with The New York Times, Steinbrenner stated the policy was to " instill a certain sense of order and discipline" in the players.[193] The policy originated from Steinbrenner's service in the United States Air Force, which had a similar appearance policy.[194][195] This rule is still in effect today, and enforced by his sons after George's passing.[196] The Cincinnati Reds had the same personal appearance policy from 1967 until 1999.[197]

 
During 1974 and 1975, Yankee Stadium was renovated into its final shape and structure, as shown here in 2002, seven years before demolition.

After the 1974 season, Steinbrenner made a move that started the modern era of free agency, signing star pitcher Catfish Hunter away from Oakland.[198] Midway through the 1975 season, the team hired former second baseman Billy Martin as manager.[199] With Martin at the helm, the Yankees reached the 1976 World Series, but were swept by the Cincinnati Reds and their famed "Big Red Machine."[200]

After the 1976 campaign, Steinbrenner added star Oakland outfielder Reggie Jackson—who had spent 1976 with the Baltimore Orioles—to his roster.[201] During spring training of 1977, Jackson alienated his teammates with controversial remarks about the Yankees captain, catcher Thurman Munson.[202] He had bad blood with manager Billy Martin, who had managed the Detroit Tigers when Jackson's Athletics defeated them in the 1972 playoffs.[203] Jackson, Martin, and Steinbrenner repeatedly feuded with each other throughout Jackson's 5-year contract. Martin was hired and fired by Steinbrenner five times over the next 13 years.[204][205] This conflict, combined with the extremely rowdy Yankees fans of the late 1970s and the bad conditions of the Bronx, led to the Yankees organization and stadium being referred to as the "Bronx Zoo".[206][207] Despite the turmoil, Jackson hit four home runs in the 1977 World Series; hit three of those home runs on the first pitch of his at bats in the fourth, fifth and eighth innings of the sixth game of the World Series; earned the Series MVP Award; and got the nickname "Mr. October."[208]

Throughout the late 1970s, the race for the pennant was often a close competition between the Yankees and the Red Sox. Despite that, during the 1978 season, the Red Sox were 14+12 games ahead of the Yankees in July.[209] In late July, Martin suspended Reggie Jackson and fined him $9,000 (equivalent to $42,000 in 2023) for "defiance" after he bunted while Martin had the "swing" signal on.[210] Upon Jackson's return, Martin made a famous statement against both Jackson and owner Steinbrenner: "They deserve each other. One's a born liar; the other's convicted."[211] Martin was forced to resign the next day and was replaced by Bob Lemon. This came while the team was winning five games in a row and Boston was losing five in a row.[212]

The Yankees continued to win games, and by the time they met Boston for a pivotal four-game series at Fenway Park in early September, the Yankees were four games behind the Red Sox. The Yankees swept the Red Sox in what became known as the "Boston Massacre", winning the games 15–3, 13–2, 7–0, and 7–4.[213][214] The third game was a shutout pitched by Ron Guidry, who led the majors with nine shutouts, a 25–3 record, and a 1.74 ERA.[215] On the last day of the season, the two clubs finished in a tie for first place in the AL East, and a tiebreaker game was held at Fenway Park. With Guidry pitching against former Yankee Mike Torrez, the Red Sox took an early 2–0 lead. In the seventh inning, light-hitting Yankee shortstop Bucky Dent drove a three-run home run over the Fenway Park's Green Monster, putting the Yankees up 3–2. Reggie Jackson's solo home run in the following inning sealed the eventual 5–4 win that gave the Yankees their one-hundredth win of the season and their third straight AL East title. Guidry earned his 25th win of the season.[216][217]

After defeating the Kansas City Royals for the third consecutive year in the ALCS, the Yankees faced the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series. They lost the first two games in Los Angeles, but won all three games at Yankee Stadium and Game 6 back in Los Angeles, winning their 22nd world championship.[218] Changes occurred during the 1979 season. Former Cy Young Award-winning closer Sparky Lyle was traded to the Texas Rangers for several players, including Dave Righetti.[219] Tommy John was acquired from the Dodgers and Luis Tiant from the Red Sox to bolster the pitching staff.[220] During the season, Bob Lemon was replaced by Billy Martin, who was serving his second stint as Yankees manager.[221]

 
The mask and catcher's mitt of Thurman Munson, the team captain who was killed in a plane crash in 1979

The 1970s ended on a tragic note for the Yankees. On August 2, 1979, catcher Thurman Munson died when his private plane crashed while he was practicing touch-and-go landings.[222] Four days later, the entire team flew out to Canton, Ohio, for the funeral, despite having a game later that day against the Orioles.[223] Bobby Murcer, a close friend of Munson's, along with Lou Piniella, were chosen to give the eulogy at his funeral.[224] In a nationally televised and emotional game, Murcer used Munson's bat (which he gave to Munson's wife after the game), and drove in all five of the team's runs in a dramatic 5–4 walk-off victory.[225][226] Before the game, Munson's locker sat empty except for his catching gear, a sad reminder for his teammates. His locker, labeled with his number 15, has remained empty in the Yankees clubhouse as a memorial. When the Yankees moved across the street, Munson's locker was torn out and installed in the new stadium's museum.[227] Immediately after Munson's death, the team announced his number 15 would be retired.[228]

The 1980 season brought more changes. Billy Martin was fired once again and Dick Howser took his place.[229] Chris Chambliss was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays for catcher Rick Cerone.[230] Reggie Jackson hit .300 for the only time in his career with 41 homers, and finished second in the MVP voting to Kansas City's George Brett.[231][232] The Yankees won 103 games and the AL East by three games over the Baltimore Orioles, but were swept by the Royals in the ALCS.[233]

After the season ended, the Yankees signed Dave Winfield to a 10-year contract.[234] A contract misunderstanding led to a feud between Winfield and Steinbrenner.[235] The team fired Howser and replaced him with Gene Michael. Under Michael, the Yankees led the AL East before a strike hit in June 1981.[236] The Yankees struggled under Bob Lemon, who replaced Michael for the second half of the season.[237] Thanks to the split-season playoff format, the Yankees faced the second-half winner Milwaukee Brewers in the special 1981 American League Division Series.[238] After defeating Milwaukee 3–2, they swept the Oakland Athletics in a three-game ALCS.[239] In the World Series, the Yankees won the first two games against the Los Angeles Dodgers. But the Dodgers fought back to win the next four games to claim the World Series title. This World Series would be the most recent between the Yankees and the Dodgers.[240]

1982–1995: Struggles during the Mattingly years

 
Don Mattingly headlined a Yankees franchise that struggled in the 1980s.

Following the team's loss to the Dodgers in the 1981 World Series, the Yankees began their longest absence from the playoffs since 1921.[241] Steinbrenner announced his plan to transform the Yankees from the "Bronx Bombers" into the "Bronx Burners", increasing the Yankees' ability to win games based on speed and defense instead of relying on home runs.[242] As a first step towards this end, the Yankees signed Dave Collins from the Cincinnati Reds during the 1981 off-season.[243] Collins was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays after the 1982 season in a deal that also included future All-Stars Fred McGriff and Mike Morgan. In return the Yankees got Dale Murray and Tom Dodd.[244]

The Yankees of the 1980s were led by All-Star first baseman Don Mattingly.[245] In spite of accumulating the most total wins of any major league team, they failed to win a World Series (the 1980s were the first decade since the 1910s in which the Yankees did not win at least two Series) and had only two playoff appearances.[246] They consistently had a powerful offense, with Mattingly and Winfield competing for the best average in the AL for the 1984 season.[247] Despite their offense, the Yankees teams of the 1980s lacked sufficient starting pitching to win a championship in the 1980s.[248] After posting a 22–6 record in 1985, arm problems caught up with Guidry, and his performance declined over the next three years. He retired after the 1988 season.[249] Of the remaining mainstays of the Yankees' rotation, only Dave Righetti stood out, pitching a no-hitter on July 4, 1983, but he was moved to the bullpen the next year where he helped to define the closer role.[250][251]

Despite the Yankees' lack of pitching success during the 1980s, they had three of the premier pitchers of the early 1990s on their roster during these years in Al Leiter, Doug Drabek and José Rijo.[252] All were mismanaged and dealt away before they could reach their full potential, with only Rijo returning much value – he was traded to the Oakland A's in the deal that brought Henderson to New York.[253] The team came close to winning the AL East in 1985 and 1986, finishing second to the Toronto Blue Jays and Boston Red Sox, respectively, but fell to fourth place in 1987 and fifth in 1988, despite having mid-season leads in the AL East both years.[254][255][256][257]

By the end of the decade, the Yankees' offense declined. Henderson and third baseman Mike Pagliarulo had departed by the middle of 1989,[258] while back problems hampered both Winfield (who missed the entire 1989 season)[259] and Mattingly (who missed almost the entire second half of 1990).[260] Winfield's tenure with the team ended when he was dealt to the California Angels.[261] From 1989 to 1992, the team had a losing record, spending significant money on free-agents and draft picks who did not live up to expectations.[262] In 1990, the Yankees had the worst record in the American League, and their fourth last-place finish in franchise history.[263]

During the 1990 season, Yankee fans started to chant "1918!" to taunt the Red Sox, reminding them of the last time they won a World Series one weekend the Red Sox were there in 1990.[264] Each time the Red Sox were at Yankee Stadium afterward, chants of "1918!" echoed through the stadium.[265] Yankee fans also taunted the Red Sox with signs saying "CURSE OF THE BAMBINO", pictures of Babe Ruth, and wearing "1918!" T-shirts each time they were at the stadium.[265] These fans came to be known as the Bleacher Creatures.[266]

The poor showings in the 1980s and early 1990s soon changed. Steinbrenner hired Howard Spira to uncover damaging information on Winfield and was subsequently suspended from day-to-day team operations by Commissioner Fay Vincent for two years when the plot was revealed.[267] This turn of events allowed management to implement a coherent acquisition and development program without owner interference. General Manager Gene Michael, along with manager Buck Showalter, shifted the club's emphasis from high-priced acquisitions to developing talent through the farm system.[268] This new philosophy developed key players such as outfielder Bernie Williams, shortstop Derek Jeter, catcher Jorge Posada, and pitchers Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera.[269] The first significant success came in 1994, when the Yankees had the best record in the AL, but the season was cut short by a players' strike.[270] Because the Yankees were last in a postseason in a season cut short by a strike, the news media constantly reminded the Yankees about the parallels between these two Yankees teams, which included both teams having division leads taken away by strike.[271][272] Throughout October, the media continued to speculate about what might have been if there had not been a strike, making references to the day's games in the postseason would have been played.[273]

A year later, the team qualified for the playoffs in the new wild card slot in the strike-shortened 1995 season. In the memorable 1995 American League Division Series against the Seattle Mariners, the Yankees won the first two games at home and lost the next three in Seattle. Although Mattingly batted .417 with a home run and six RBI in the only postseason series of his career, his back problems led him to retire after the 1997 season after sitting out the 1996 season.[274][275]

1996–2007: Core Four: Jeter, Posada, Pettitte, and Rivera

 
The Yankees' success in the late 1990s and early 2000s was built from a core of productive players that included Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera, and Derek Jeter.

Joe Torre had a mediocre run as a manager in the National League,[276] and the choice was initially derided ("Clueless Joe" was a headline in the New York Daily News).[277] However, his calm demeanor proved to be a good fit, and his tenure was the longest under George Steinbrenner's ownership.[278][279] Torre was announced as the new Yankees manager in November 1995.[280]

The 1996 season saw the rise of three Yankees who formed the core of the team for years to come: rookie shortstop Derek Jeter, second-year starting pitcher Andy Pettitte, and second-year pitcher Mariano Rivera, who served as setup man in 1996 before becoming closer in 1997.[281] Aided by these young players, the Yankees won their first AL East title in 15 years.[282] They defeated the Texas Rangers in the ALDS,[283] and in ALCS beat the Baltimore Orioles 4–1, which included a notable fan interference by Jeffrey Maier that was called as a home run for the Yankees.[284] In the World Series the team rebounded from an 0–2 series deficit and defeated the defending champion Atlanta Braves, ending an 18-year championship drought.[285] Jeter was named Rookie of the Year.[286] In 1997, the Yankees lost the 1997 ALDS to the Cleveland Indians 3–2.[287] General manager Bob Watson stepped down and was replaced by assistant general manager Brian Cashman.[288]

The 1998 Yankees are widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest teams in baseball history, compiling a record of 114–48, a then–AL record for the most wins in a season.[289] On May 17, 1998, David Wells pitched a perfect game against the Minnesota Twins.[290] The Yankees went on to sweep the San Diego Padres in the World Series.[291] Their 125 combined regular and postseason wins remains an MLB single-season record.[292] On July 18, 1999, David Cone pitched a perfect game against the Montreal Expos.[293] The ALCS was the Yankees' first postseason meeting with the rival Red Sox.[294] The 1999 Yankees defeated the Red Sox 4–1 and swept the Braves in the 1999 World Series giving the 1998–99 Yankees a combined 22–3 record in the (including four series sweeps) in the six post-season series those years.[295][296]

In 2000, the Yankees faced the Mets in the first New York City Subway World Series in 44 years. The Yankees won the series in 5 games, but a loss in Game 3 snapped their streak of consecutive games won in World Series contests at 14, surpassing the club's previous record of 12 (in 1927, 1928, and 1932). The Yankees are the last MLB team to repeat as World Series champions and after the 2000 season they joined the Yankees teams of 1936–39 and 1949–53, as well as the 1972–74 Oakland Athletics as the only teams to win at least three consecutive World Series.[297]

In aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the Yankees defeated the Oakland Athletics in the ALDS, and the Seattle Mariners in the ALCS.[298] By winning the pennant for a fourth straight year, the 1998–2001 Yankees joined the 1921–24 New York Giants, and the Yankees teams of 1936–39, 1949–53, 1955–58 and 1960–64 as the only teams to win at least four straight pennants.[299] The Yankees won 11 consecutive postseason series in this 4-year period. In the World Series against the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Yankees lost the series when Rivera uncharacteristically blew a save in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 7.[300] Also, despite a very poor series overall, batting under .200, Derek Jeter got the nickname, "Mr. November", echoing comparisons to Reggie Jackson's "Mr. October", for his walk-off home run in Game 4, though it began October 31, as the game ended in the first minutes of November 1.[301] In addition, Yankee Stadium played host for a memorial service titled "Prayer for America" for the September 11 victims.[302]

A vastly revamped Yankees team finished the 2002 season with an AL-best record of 103–58. The season was highlighted by Alfonso Soriano becoming the first second baseman ever to hit 30 home runs and steal 30 bases in a season.[303] In the ALDS the Yankees lost to the eventual World Series champion Anaheim Angels 3–1.[304] In 2003, the Yankees again had the best league record (101–61), highlighted by Roger Clemens' 300th win and 4000th strikeout. In the ALCS, they defeated the Boston Red Sox in a dramatic seven-game series, which featured a bench-clearing incident in Game 3 and a series-ending walk-off home run by Aaron Boone in the bottom of the 11th inning of Game 7.[305] In the World Series the Yankees lost in 6 games to the Florida Marlins.[306]

 
Yankees' third baseman Alex Rodriguez, 2007

In 2004, the Yankees traded Alfonso Soriano to the Texas Rangers in exchange for star shortstop Alex Rodriguez, who moved to third base from his usual shortstop position to accommodate Jeter.[307] In the ALCS, the Yankees met the Boston Red Sox again, and became the first team in professional baseball history, and only the third team in North American professional sports history, to lose a best-of-seven series after taking a 3–0 series lead.[308][309] The Red Sox would go on to defeat the Cardinals in the World Series, their first championship since 1918.[310] In 2005 Alex Rodriguez won the American League MVP award, becoming the first Yankee to win the award since Don Mattingly in 1985.[311] The 2006 season was highlighted by a 5-game series sweep of the Red Sox at Fenway Park (sometimes referred to as the "Second Boston Massacre"), outscoring the Red Sox 49–26.[312]

The Yankees' streak of nine straight AL East division titles ended in 2007, but they still reached the playoffs with the AL Wild Card.[313] For the third year in a row, the team lost in the first round of the playoffs, as the Cleveland Indians defeated the Yankees, 3–1, in the 2007 ALDS. After the series,[314] Joe Torre declined a reduced-length and compensation contract offer from the Yankees and returned to the National League as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers.[315]

2008–2016: Championship run, followed by pennant drought

 
Joe Girardi was a Yankees catcher before he became manager in 2008.

After Torre's departure, the Yankees signed former catcher Joe Girardi to a three-year contract to manage the club.[316] The 2008 season was the last season played at Yankee Stadium. To celebrate the final year and history of Yankee Stadium, the 2008 Major League Baseball All-Star Game was played there.[317] The final regular-season game at Yankee Stadium was played on September 21, 2008, with the Yankees defeating the Orioles.[318] After the game, Jeter addressed the crowd, thanking them for their support over the years, and urging them to "take the memories of this field, add them to the new memories that will come at the new Yankee Stadium and continue to pass them on from generation to generation."[319] Despite multiple midseason roster moves, the team was hampered by injuries and missed the playoffs for the first time in 14 seasons.[320]

 
The new Yankee Stadium opened in 2009 and was christened with a World Series victory in the same way that the original Yankee Stadium was christened with a World Series victory when it opened in 1923.

During the off-season, the Yankees retooled their roster with several star free agent acquisitions, including CC Sabathia,[321] Mark Teixeira,[322] and A. J. Burnett.[323] At the beginning of the 2009 season, the Yankees opened the new Yankee Stadium, located just a block north on River Avenue from their former home.[10] The Yankees set a major league record by playing error-free ball for 18 consecutive games from May 14 to June 1, 2009.[324] In the ALDS they swept the Minnesota Twins before defeating the Los Angeles Angels in the ALCS, 4–2. They Yankees defeated the Philadelphia Phillies, in the World Series 4–2, their 27th World Series title.[325]

During the 2010 All-Star break, public address announcer Bob Sheppard and principal owner George Steinbrenner died.[326][327] Eight days later, another longtime Yankee icon, former player and manager Ralph Houk, died.[328]

In a 22–9 win over the Oakland Athletics on August 25, 2011, the Yankees became the first team in Major League history to hit three grand slams in a single game. They were hit by Robinson Canó, Russell Martin, and Curtis Granderson.[329]

In 2012, the Yankees again finished the season with the AL's best record at 95–67. In mid-July, the Yankees traded two prospects to the Seattle Mariners for Ichiro Suzuki.[330] They faced the Orioles in the ALDS. In Game 3, Raúl Ibañez became the oldest player to hit two home runs in a game, the oldest to hit a walk-off home run, the first substitute position player in a postseason game to hit two home runs, and the first to hit two home runs in the 9th inning or later in a postseason game, in the Yankees' 3–2 win.[331] The Yankees defeated the Orioles in five games.[332] However, in the ALCS, the Yankees lost to the Tigers again, this time in a four-game sweep, which was compounded with a struggling offense and a season-ending injury to Derek Jeter.[333]

On April 12, 2013, the Yankees made their second triple play ever. It was scored as 4–6–5–6–5–3–4, the first triple play of its kind in baseball history.[334] On September 25, the Yankees lost to the Tampa Bay Rays, which for the second time in the wild-card era, eliminated them from playoff contention.[335] They ended the season 85–77, finishing in 3rd place in the AL East.[336]

On September 25, 2014, Jeter – playing his final home game – hit a walk-off single off pitcher Evan Meek to defeat the Baltimore Orioles in front of a sold out stadium.[337] Reliever Dellin Betances finished 3rd in voting for AL Rookie of the Year, while starting pitcher Masahiro Tanaka finished 5th.[338]

The Yankees struggled through the 2016 season, ending at 4th place in the AL East.[339] The resurgent 2015 experienced by Rodriguez and Teixeira did not carry over, as they batted .200 and .204 for the season, respectively.[340][341] At the trade deadline, the Yankees stood at an uninspiring 52–52, and decided to become sellers rather than buyers.[342]

2017–present: Baby Bombers

 
Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge quickly became the new face of the team.

The Yankees trades brought a group of players to the team, most notably, Cubs prospect Gleyber Torres. In discussing the midseason trades, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said that the Yankees recognized the "need to look toward the future."[343]

In early August, both Teixeira and Rodriguez revealed their plans to retire by the season's end.[344][345] Rodriguez played his final game on August 12, 2016, accepting a front office job with the Yankees shortly after.[346] In one of his final games, Teixeira hit a walk-off grand slam against the Boston Red Sox, his 409th and last career home run.[347][348] The Yankees called up Tyler Austin and outfielder Aaron Judge in August. They made their debuts on August 13, hitting back-to-back home runs in their first career at-bats.[349] Catcher Gary Sánchez hit 20 home runs in 53 games, finishing 2nd in AL Rookie of the Year voting and setting the record at the time as the fastest to reach 20 career home runs.[350] Sanchez, Judge and Austin, as well as the Yankees' prosperous farm system in general, became nicknamed the "Baby Bombers".[351][352]

In 2017, Judge led the American League with 52 home runs, breaking Mark McGwire's major league record for most home runs by a rookie in a single season (McGwire hit 49 in 1987).[353] Judge won the 2017 Home Run Derby, making the Yankees the team with the most players in history to win a Home Run Derby.[354] Judge would end the season by winning Rookie of the Year, and finishing second in the AL MVP voting.[355]

In the 2017–18 off-season, the Yankees made a couple moves including hiring Aaron Boone to succeed Girardi as their new manager.[356] and trading for reigning National League Most Valuable Player Giancarlo Stanton.[357] A right fielder who bats right-handed, Stanton hit 59 home runs and drove in 132 runs—both major league highs—in 2017;[358] his contract was the largest player contract in the history of professional sports in North America at the time.[359][360]

In 2019 the Yankees traveled to London in late June to play the Red Sox in the first ever MLB London Series, in addition to the first MLB games played in Europe.[361] The Yankees swept Boston in the two-game series, with the first game lasted 4 hours and 42 minutes, 3 minutes shorter than the longest MLB 9-inning game.[362] The Yankees beat the Twins in a three-game sweep to advance to the ALCS for the second time in three seasons.[363] However, on October 19, the Houston Astros beat the Yankees in the ALCS 4–2.[364] With this loss, the 2010s decade became the first since the 1980s to have the Yankees fail to win a World Series and the first since the 1910s to have the Yankees failing to play in one.[365][366]

During the 2019 offseason, on December 18, 2019, the Yankees signed Gerrit Cole to a nine-year, $324 million contract.[367][368]

On May 19, 2021, former Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber threw a no-hitter against the Texas Rangers. This was the Yankees 12th no-hitter of all time, and the first since David Cone's perfect game in 1999.[369] The Yankees also recorded a record-tying three triple plays throughout the 2021 season.[370]

In 2022, the Yankees clinched their 30th straight winning season.[371] On October 4, Aaron Judge hit his 62nd home run, breaking the American League single-season home run record set in 1961 by Roger Maris.[372] In the offseason, Jose Trevino would become the first Yankee ever to win the Platinum Glove Award. Aaron Judge would also win AL MVP after having an historic season, being the first Yankee to win the award since Alex Rodriguez did in 2007.[373]

On December 21, 2022, Aaron Judge was named the 16th captain in Yankees history, after getting resigned to a nine-year, $360 million contract.[374] Judge was named the first captain of the team since Derek Jeter retired in 2014.

On June 28, 2023, Domingo Germán threw the 24th perfect game in MLB history, and 4th in Yankees history.[375] After the 2023 season, shortstop Anthony Volpe became the first Yankee rookie to win the Gold Glove Award,[376] and Gerrit Cole won the AL Cy Young Award after posting a league leading 2.63 ERA and 0.981 WHIP.[377] On December 6, 2023, the Yankees made a blockbuster trade for young superstar Juan Soto.[378]

Distinctions

 
World Series rings

The Yankees have won 27 World Series in 40 appearances, the most in Major League Baseball in addition to major North American professional sports leagues.[365][12] The St. Louis Cardinals are in second place with 11 World Series championships with their last win in 2011. The Dodgers are second in total World Series appearances with 20.[379] The Yankees have lost 13 World Series, the second most in MLB behind the Dodgers, who have 14 losses.[380] The Yankees have faced the Dodgers 11 times, going 8–3.[381] Among North American major sports, the Yankees' success is approached by only the 24 Stanley Cup championships of the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League. The Yankees have played in the World Series against every National League pennant winner except the Houston Astros (who now play in the American League), the Colorado Rockies, and the Washington Nationals.[382]

Through 2023, the Yankees have an all-time regular season winning percentage of .569 (a 10,684 – 8,080 record), the best of any team in MLB history.[383] On June 25, 2019, they set a new major league record for homering in 28 consecutive games, breaking the record set by the 2002 Texas Rangers.[384] The streak would reach 31 games, during which they hit 57 home runs.[385] With the walk-off solo home run by DJ LeMahieu to win the game against the Oakland Athletics on August 31, 2019, the Yankees ended the month of August that year now holding a new record of 74 home runs hit in the month alone, a new record for the most home runs hit in a month by a single MLB team.[386][387]

World Series championships

The Yankees have won a record 27 World Series championships. Their most recent one came when the new stadium opened in 2009; they defeated the Philadelphia Phillies in six games under manager Joe Girardi.[388][389]

Season Manager Opponent Series score Record
1923 Miller Huggins New York Giants 4–2 98–54
1927 Miller Huggins Pittsburgh Pirates 4–0 110–44
1928 Miller Huggins St. Louis Cardinals 4–0 101–53
1932 Joe McCarthy Chicago Cubs 4–0 107–47
1936 Joe McCarthy New York Giants 4–2 102–51
1937 Joe McCarthy New York Giants 4–1 102–52
1938 Joe McCarthy Chicago Cubs 4–0 99–53
1939 Joe McCarthy Cincinnati Reds 4–0 106–45
1941 Joe McCarthy Brooklyn Dodgers 4–1 101–53
1943 Joe McCarthy St. Louis Cardinals 4–1 98–56
1947 Bucky Harris Brooklyn Dodgers 4–3 97–57
1949 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4–1 97–57
1950 Casey Stengel Philadelphia Phillies 4–0 98–56
1951 Casey Stengel New York Giants 4–2 98–56
1952 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4–3 95–59
1953 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4–2 99–51
1956 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4–3 97–57
1958 Casey Stengel Milwaukee Braves 4–3 92–62
1961 Ralph Houk Cincinnati Reds 4–1 109–53
1962 Ralph Houk San Francisco Giants 4–3 96–66
1977 Billy Martin Los Angeles Dodgers 4–2 100–62
1978 Bob Lemon Los Angeles Dodgers 4–2 100–63
1996 Joe Torre Atlanta Braves 4–2 92–70
1998 Joe Torre San Diego Padres 4–0 114–48
1999 Joe Torre Atlanta Braves 4–0 98–64
2000 Joe Torre New York Mets 4–1 87–74
2009 Joe Girardi Philadelphia Phillies 4–2 103–59
Total World Series championships: 27

Team nicknames

The team has acquired different nicknames over the years by both baseball personalities and the media. Sportswriter Fred Lieb, in a 1922 story for the Baseball Magazine, said he will call the club "the Yanks" in his articles.[42]: 18  He stated the nickname "will fit into heads better".[47] Their most prominently used nickname is "the Bronx Bombers" or simply "the Bombers", a reference to their home and their prolific hitting. The nickname "Bronx Bombers" was first used by writer Frank Wallace in a July 5, 1928 article in the New York Daily News.[390] By 1935, the name had caught on among sportswriters around the country.[391][392]

A less used nickname is "the Pinstripes" or "Pinstripers", in reference to the iconic feature on their home uniforms.[393] The term "Murderers' Row" has historically been used to refer to both the 1920s Yankees and the team altogether.[394][395] Critics often refer to the team and the organization as "the Evil Empire", a term applied to the Yankees by Boston Red Sox president Larry Lucchino in a 2002 interview with The New York Times after the Yankees signed pitching prospect José Contreras.[396][397] Ironically, Yankee fans and supporters refer to their team as the "Evil Empire" as a badge of honor and in fact enjoy having their team play the villain.[398] The team also embraced the label as well, with the stadium playing "The Imperial March" from Star Wars, the song associated with antagonist Darth Vader, at home games.[399] A term from the team's tumultuous late 1970s, "the Bronx Zoo", is sometimes used by detractors, as well as the "Damn Yankees", after the musical of the same name.[400]

Logos and uniforms

The Yankees logo and uniform design has changed throughout the team's history. During the inaugural Highlanders season in 1903, the uniform featured a large "N" and a "Y" on each breast.[401]: 288  In 1909, the "N" and "Y" were combined and was added to both the left breast and caps.[1] According to history, the interlocking "NY" letters predates the New York Yankees. The letters appear on the New York City Police Department Medal for Valor, which was established in 1877 and was designed by Tiffany & Co.[1] Three years later, black pinstripes were added to the Highlander uniforms for the first time.[402] The current cap look, a navy blue hat with the white interlocking "NY" letters, was adopted in 1932.[1] Both the home and away uniforms has been relatively unchanged since the 1920s and 1940s, respectively.[401] The away uniform is grey in color with "NEW YORK" across the chest.[403]

Merchandise with the Yankees logo, such as baseball caps, is popular worldwide, including in countries where the sport of baseball is not popular. According to a 2023 New York Times report, for instance, Yankees caps (mostly counterfeit) are "viral" in Brazil. Customers there mostly do not know that the logo represents a baseball team, but think of it as "a classic piece of Americana, a status symbol, or a generic—perhaps chic—emblem of the West".[404]

Popularity

Fan support

 
"Freddy Sez" holding one of his signs near the bleachers entrance before a game between the Yankees and the Texas Rangers

With their recurring success since the 1920s, the Yankees have since been one of the most popular teams in the world,[405] with their fan base coming from much further than the New York metropolitan area.[406] The Yankees typically bring an upsurge in attendance at all or most of their various road-trip venues, drawing crowds of their own fans, as well as home-town fans whose interest is heightened when the Yankees come to town.[407]

The Yankees have consistently been the most attended MLB games. The first 1 million-fan season was in 1920, when more than 1.2 millions fans attended Yankee games at the Polo Grounds. According to Baseball-Reference.com, the 2008 season saw the most fans per game in Yankees history, with an average of 53,000 per game.[11] In the past seven years, the Yankees have drawn over three million fans each year, with an American League record-setting 4,090,696 in 2005, becoming only the third franchise in sports history to draw over four million in regular-season attendance in their own ballpark.[408] The Yankees were the league leaders in "road attendance" each year from 2001 through 2006.[409]

Some Yankees superfans have become notable in their own right. One famous fan was Freddy Schuman, popularly known as "Freddy Sez."[410] For over 50 years, he came to the Yankees' home games with a baseball cap, a Yankees' jersey (which on the back bears his own name), and a cake pan with a shamrock painted on it, which was connected to a sign inscribed with words of encouragement for the home team. Schuman died on October 17, 2010, at the age of 85.[411] The popularity of the Yankees also extended internationally. According to a Major League Baseball executive, the Yankees logo is considered a "sign of quality" despite many people not knowing the team.[23][412]

The Bleacher Creatures

 
A shirt worn by a number of Bleacher Creatures

The "Bleacher Creatures" are a group of fans known for their strict allegiance to the Yankees and are often merciless to opposing fans who sit in the section and cheer for the road team. They occupied Section 39 in the right-field bleachers at the old Yankee Stadium and occupy Section 203 in the new stadium.[413] The Bleacher Creatures are known for their use of chants and songs, with the "roll call" at the beginning of each home game being the most prominent.[414]

The "creatures" got their nickname from New York Daily News columnist Filip "Flip" Bondy, who spent the 2004 season sitting in the section for research on his book about the group, Bleeding Pinstripes: A Season with the Bleacher Creatures of Yankee Stadium, published in 2005.[415] Throughout the years both at the old and new stadiums, the Bleacher Creatures have attracted controversy for the use of derogatory and homophobic chants and rowdiness aimed at both opposing fans and players.[416][417]

The Judge's Chambers at Yankee Stadium

In 2017, team management ordered the creation of a special cheer section within Section 104 for fans of Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge, called "the Judge's Chambers".[418] They were the second AL team to create a special cheering section, following the Seattle Mariners and the "King's Court" for pitcher Félix Hernández.[419] The Judge's Chambers was added in response to his rise as one of the league's most popular young stars.[420] The section's 18 seats are given to lucky ticketholders and their families, along with black judicial robes with the team logo on the front and Judge's 99 jersey number on the back; prior to the addition of the section, fans were wearing white wigs and judicial robes to games in support of Judge.[421] Occasionally, community organizations, charities and Little League teams are given precedence when selecting participants. The seats, which are close to his position in right field, are surrounded by mahogany wood to emulate the appearance of the city's courthouses.[422][423]

Team ownership

The Yankees baseball club is formally owned by Yankee Global Enterprises, a holding company in turn majorly owned by the Steinbrenner family.[424] Yankee Global Enterprises also has a majority stake in the YES Network, the Yankees main television network.[425] Since purchasing the team from CBS in 1973, George Steinbrenner was involved in daily team operations, including player and manager signings.[426] Steinbrenner retired from day-to-day team operations in 2005, handing over control to Steve Swindal, his then son-in-law.[427] Swindal was bought out in 2007 with George's son Hal Steinbrenner becoming chairman of Yankee Global Enterprises and the team's managing partner.[428] George Steinbrenner, citing declining health, formally handed control of the team to both Hal and brother Hank in October 2007.[429] George Steinbrenner died in 2010 and Hank died ten years later, leaving Hal as the main managing partner.[430] In 2008, the Yankees announced a joint venture with the National Football League's Dallas Cowboys to form the basis for a partnership in running food and beverage, and other catering services to both teams' stadiums.[431]

The Yankees has consistently been one of the most valuable sport teams in the world. In 2013, Forbes magazine ranked New York Yankees as the fourth most valuable sports team in the world, behind association football clubs Real Madrid of La Liga, Manchester United of the Premier League and Barcelona of La Liga, a value of $2.3 billion.[432] In 2017, Forbes magazine ranked the Yankees as the second most valuable sports team at $3.7 billion behind the Dallas Cowboys, up 9% from 2016.[433] In 2019, Forbes magazine again ranked the Yankees as the most valuable MLB team at $4.6 billion, up 15% from 2018, behind only the Dallas Cowboys.[434] In 2022, the Yankees were again ranked as the second most valuable team behind the Cowboys, valued at $6 billion.[435] The team's value rose again in 2023, rising 17% from 2022 to $7.1 billion, and keeping the Yankees as the second most valuable sports team in the world behind the Cowboys.[436]

Criticism

With the long-term success of the franchise and a large Yankee fanbase, many fans of other teams have come to dislike the Yankees.[437] When the Yankees are on the road, it is common for the home fans to chant "Yankees Suck".[438] According to the opinion poll and analytics website FiveThirtyEight, the Yankees were MLB's least liked team, with 48% of fans expressing an "unfavorable" view of the team.[21]

Much of the animosity toward the team may derive from its high payroll and "buying" champions instead of developing players.[439][440] Their payroll was around $200 million at the start of the 2008 season, the highest of any American sports team.[441] In 2005, the team's average player salary was $2.6 million with the Yankees having the five highest paid players in MLB.[442] During his tenure as team owner, George Steinbrenner attracted controversy for his public criticism of players and managers and for high personnel turnover.[443] Manager Billy Martin was hired and fired a total of five times under Steinbrenner.[205] Chicago Tribune columnist Mike Royko noted, "Hating the Yankees is as American as pizza pie, unwed mothers, and cheating on your income tax."[444]

Fight and theme songs

 
The grounds crew at Yankee Stadium dancing to "Y.M.C.A."

The official fight song for the Yankees is "Here Come the Yankees", written in 1967 by Bob Bundin and Lou Stallman. The song was used extensively in radio and television broadcast introductions. The song, however, did not catch on with fans and has been rarely used past the 1990s.[445]: 193–197  This is contrasted to other, more popular fight songs such as "Meet the Mets", which is played at every Mets home game.[446] Another song strongly linked to the team is "New York, New York", which is played in the stadium after home games. George Steinbrenner started playing the song during the 1980 season. The Frank Sinatra cover version is traditionally played after victories, and the Liza Minnelli original version after losses.[447][448] However, due to a complaint from Minnelli, the Frank Sinatra version is played after home games, regardless of the result.[449][445]: 108 

A wide selection of songs are played regularly at the stadium, many of them live on the Stadium's Hammond organ.[450] One of the popular songs is "God Bless America", which has been played during the seventh-inning stretch since September 11.[451] The version typically played for many years since 2001 was an abbreviated version of Kate Smith's rendition.[452] In 2019 the Yankees stopped playing Smith's rendition to allegations of racism in some of her songs.[453] The team switched to a live version by the stadium organist during the stretch in the interim.[454] In 2021, the organ version was replaced by a recording of the Robert Merrill cover of the song.[455] Merrill was the national anthem singer in the old Yankees Stadium for Opening Day and other special events before passing away in 1998.[456] During the 5th inning, the grounds crew, while performing their duties, dance to "Y.M.C.A.". Former Yankees executive Joseph Molloy said that he saw fans dancing to the song during a spring training game in the mid-1990s.[457] Molloy told Steinbrenner, who started to play the song at the stadium.[458]

Radio and television

 
Announcers Michael Kay, Paul O'Neill, Ken Singleton, and Ryan Ruocco in the YES Network broadcast booth at Yankee Stadium in 2009

The Yankees Entertainment and Sports (YES) Network was launched in 2002 and serves as the primary home of the New York Yankees.[459] As of 2022, Michael Kay is the play-by-play announcer with David Cone, John Flaherty, and Paul O'Neill working as commentators as part of a three-man, or occasionally two-man, booth. Bob Lorenz hosts both the pre-game and the post-game shows with Jack Curry, and Meredith Marakovits and Nancy Newman are the on-site reporters.[460] Select games are available streaming only on Amazon Prime in the New York metropolitan area, these games formally aired on WPIX and WWOR-TV.[461] Radio broadcasts are on the Yankees Radio Network, the flagship station being WFAN 660 AM, with Justin Shackil and Emmanuel Berbari as the play-by-play announcers and Suzyn Waldman providing the commentary.[462][463][464] Spanish-language broadcasts are on WADO 1280 AM, with Rickie Ricardo calling the games.[465]

Past announcers

  • Mel Allen was the team's lead announcer from 1948 to 1964. He was known as "The voice of the Yankees."[466]
  • Russ Hodges had a brief stint with Mel Allen before he took over as the lead announcer with the New York Giants.[467]
  • Red Barber called Yankees games for 13 seasons, from 1954 to 1966.[468]
  • Jerry Coleman called Yankees games from 1963 to 1970. Coleman was the Yankees second baseman from 1949 to 1957.[469][470]
  • Joe Garagiola called Yankees games from 1965 to 1967.[471]
  • Frank Messer, Phil Rizzuto and Bill White teamed together in the 1970s and 1980s. Rizzuto, with 40 years in the broadcast booth, was the longest-serving broadcaster in the history of the club.[472] Messer and White each worked nearly two decades for the Yankees,[473] with White notably moving on to become president of the National League in 1989.[474]
  • Bobby Murcer also called games for over twenty years, and continued with the YES Network until shortly before his death from brain cancer in 2008.[475]
  • John Sterling called Yankees games on radio from 1989 to 2024, and also hosted select team-related programs on the YES Network.[476]

Personnel

Active roster

Active roster Inactive roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers
Starting rotation

Bullpen

Closer(s)


Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Designated hitters

Pitchers

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders


Manager

Coaches

60-day injured list


Retired numbers

The Yankees have retired 22 numbers for 24 individuals, the most in Major League Baseball.[477][478]

 
Billy
Martin

2B, M
Retired
August 10, 1986
 
Derek
Jeter

SS
Retired
May 14, 2017
 
Babe
Ruth

RF
Retired
June 13, 1948
 
Lou
Gehrig

1B
Retired
July 4, 1939
 
Joe
DiMaggio

CF
Retired
April 18, 1952
 
Joe
Torre

M
Retired
August 23, 2014
 
Mickey
Mantle

CF, Coach
Retired
June 8, 1969
 
Bill
Dickey

C, M, Coach
Retired
July 22, 1972
 
Yogi
Berra

C, M, Coach
Retired
July 22, 1972
 
Roger
Maris

RF
Retired
July 21, 1984
 
Phil
Rizzuto

SS
Retired
August 4, 1985
 
Thurman
Munson

C
Retired
August 3, 1979
 
Whitey
Ford

SP, Coach
Retired
August 3, 1974
 
Jorge
Posada

C
Retired
August 22, 2015
 
Paul
O'Neill

RF
Retired
August 21, 2022
 
Don
Mattingly

1B, Coach
Retired
August 31, 1997
 
Elston
Howard

C, Coach
Retired
July 21, 1984
 
Casey
Stengel

M
Retired
August 8, 1970
 
Mariano
Rivera

CP
Retired
September 22, 2013
 
Reggie
Jackson

RF
Retired
August 14, 1993
 
Andy
Pettitte

SP
Retired
August 23, 2015
 
Ron
Guidry

SP, Coach
Retired
August 23, 2003
 
Bernie
Williams

CF
Retired
May 24, 2015
 
Jackie
Robinson

All MLB
Honored
April 15, 1997
 
 
The row of retired numbers at the old stadium (top) and new stadium.

The retired numbers were displayed behind the old Yankee Stadium's left-field fence and in front of the opposing team's bullpen, forming a little alley that connects Monument Park to the left-field stands. When the franchise moved across the street to the new stadium, the numbers were incorporated into Monument Park that sits place in center field between both bullpens.[479] The 21 numbers are placed on the wall in chronological order, beginning with Lou Gehrig's number 4.[480] This was retired soon after Gehrig left baseball on July 4, 1939, the same day he gave his famous farewell speech. His was the first number retired in Major League Baseball history.[481] Beneath the numbers are plaques with the names of the players and a descriptive paragraph.[479]

The number 42 was retired throughout Major League Baseball in honor of Jackie Robinson on April 15, 1997, the 50th anniversary of his breaking the color barrier. The day was declared Jackie Robinson Day, and was later observed by all of baseball, with select players from every team wearing the number 42.[482] Players who wore No. 42 at the time were allowed to continue to wear it until they left the team with which they played on April 15, 1997; Mariano Rivera was the last active player covered under that grandfather clause.[483]

In 1972, the number 8 was retired for two players on the same day, in honor of catcher Bill Dickey and his protege, catcher Yogi Berra. Berra inherited Dickey's number in 1948 after Dickey ended his playing career and became a coach.[484] The numbers 37 and 6, retired for Casey Stengel and Joe Torre respectively, are the only numbers retired by the Yankees for someone who served solely as manager of the team. Stengel managed the Yankees to ten pennants and seven world championships between 1949 and 1960, including a record five consecutive world championships from 1949 through 1953.[485] Joe Torre managed the Yankees from 1996 to 2007, winning six pennants and four World Series championships.[486] On May 14, 2017, the Yankees retired number 2 in honor of Derek Jeter.[487] This leaves 0 as the only single-digit number available for future Yankees, currently worn by pitcher Marcus Stroman.

Hall of Famers

New York Yankees Hall of Famers
Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
New York Yankees

Frank "Home Run" Baker[497]
Ed Barrow [498]
Yogi Berra
[499]
Wade Boggs[500]
Frank Chance[501]
Earle Combs[502]
Stan Coveleski[503]
Bobby Cox[504]
Bill Dickey[505]
Joe DiMaggio[506]

Leo Durocher[507]
Whitey Ford[508]
Lou Gehrig[509]
Lefty Gomez[510]
Joe Gordon[511]
Goose Gossage[512]
Burleigh Grimes[513]
Bucky Harris[514]
Rickey Henderson[515]
Waite Hoyt[516]
Miller Huggins[517]

Catfish Hunter[518]
Reggie Jackson[519]
Derek Jeter[520]
Randy Johnson[521]
Jim Kaat[522]
Tony Lazzeri[523]
Bob Lemon[524]
Larry MacPhail[525]
Lee MacPhail[526]
Mickey Mantle[527]
Joe McCarthy[528]

Johnny Mize[529]
Mike Mussina[530]
Phil Niekro[531]
Herb Pennock[532]
Gaylord Perry[533]
Tim Raines[534]
Mariano Rivera[535]
Phil Rizzuto[536]
Iván Rodríguez[537]
Red Ruffing[538]
Jacob Ruppert[539]

Babe Ruth[540]
Joe Sewell[541]
Enos Slaughter[542]
Lee Smith[543]
Casey Stengel[544]
Joe Torre[545]
Dazzy Vance[546]
Paul Waner[547]
George Weiss[548]
Dave Winfield[549]

  • Players and managers listed in bold are depicted on their Hall of Fame plaques wearing a Yankees or Highlanders cap insignia.
  • † denotes New York Yankees listed as primary team according to the Hall of Fame
New York Yankees Ford C. Frick Award recipients
Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
  • Names in bold received the award based primarily on their work as broadcasters for the Yankees.
  • ** Played as a Yankee

Rivalries

The Yankees have multiple rivalries across the league, most notably The Boston Red Sox. The Yankees have also had historical rivalries with former crosstown National League teams the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants, and current crosstown rivals the New York Mets. The much storied Dodgers-Yankees rivalry goes back to the Dodgers' tenure in Brooklyn. The two teams have met in the World Series 11 times including four matchups since the Dodgers relocated to Los Angeles in 1958. The Yankees also forged an unlikely rivalry with the Cleveland Guardians, built by stark financial contrasts between the two teams, a fatal on-field death in 1920, and heated pennant races and postseason matchups in subsequent years. During the late 1990s, the Yankees built a rivalry with the Seattle Mariners as the two teams met in the postseason three times near the end of the decade. Most recently the team has developed a rivalry with the Houston Astros, fueled in part by the Houston Astros sign stealing scandal, believed by some Yankee fans to have contributed to their team's loss in the 2017 ALCS.[559] The two teams have met in the postseason four times since 2015, and have pursued the same free agents and shared vitriol between both fanbases.

Boston Red Sox

The Yankees–Red Sox rivalry is one of the oldest, most famous, and fiercest rivalries in professional sports.[560][561][562] The inaugural game between the two teams occurred more than 100 years ago, in 1903, when the Yankees (then known as the Highlanders) hosted the Red Sox (then named the Americans) at Hilltop Park.[563] One of the major aspects of the rivalry is the Curse of the Bambino, where Babe Ruth was traded to the Yankees in 1920.[564] Following the trade, the Red Sox did not win a World Series for 86 years, until 2004.[565]

The rivalry is sometimes so polarizing that it is often a heated subject, especially in the Northeastern United States.[566][567] Since the inception of the wild card team and an added Division Series, the rivals have met in the playoffs five times (with the Yankees winning the 1999 and 2003 American League Championship Series and the Red Sox winning in the 2004 American League Championship Series, 2018 American League Division Series and the 2021 American League Wild Card Game).[568][569] In addition, the teams have twice met in the last regular-season series of a season to decide the AL pennant, in 1904 (when the Red Sox won) and 1949 (when the Yankees won).[568] Games between the two teams are often broadcast on national television and often yield high television ratings.[570][571]

The teams also finished tied for first in 1978, when the Yankees won a high-profile tie-breaker playoff for the AL East division title.[572] The 1978 division race is memorable for the Red Sox having held a 14-game lead over the Yankees more than halfway through the season.[573] Similarly, the 2004 ALCS is notable for the Yankees leading 3 games to 0 and ultimately losing the next four games and the series.[574] The Red Sox comeback was the only time in MLB history that a team has come back from a 0–3 deficit to win a postseason series.[575]

Subway Series

The Subway Series is a series of games played between teams based in New York City. The name originates from the New York City Subway and the accessibility of the each team's stadium within the subway system.[576] Historically, the term "Subway Series" referred to games played between the Yankees and either the New York Giants or the Brooklyn Dodgers.[577] When the Dodgers and Giants moved to California in the late 1950s, the New York Mets were established as an expansion team in 1962.[578] The term's historic usage has been in reference to World Series games played between New York teams. The Yankees have appeared in all Subway Series games as they have been the only American League team in the city, and have compiled an 11–3 record in the 14 championship Subway Series.[579] The most recent World Series between the two New York teams was in 2000, when the Yankees defeated the Mets, in five games.[580] Since 1997, the term Subway Series has also been applied to interleague play during the regular season between the Yankees and National League New York Mets.[581]

Minor league affiliations

The New York Yankees farm system consists of six minor league affiliates.[582]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Although the history of the New York Yankees can be traced back to the 1901–1902 Baltimore Orioles, the Orioles team is considered a separate team by Baseball-Reference.com,[7] official Major League Baseball historian John Thorn,[8] and the official Yankees history.[6]
  2. ^ The Polo Grounds were actually four different stadiums,[52] the stadiums mentioned in this article are Polo Grounds III and IV.

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york, yankees, this, article, about, baseball, team, other, uses, disambiguation, yankee, disambiguation, bronx, bombers, redirects, here, theatrical, play, bronx, bombers, play, american, professional, baseball, team, based, york, city, borough, bronx, yankee. This article is about the New York Yankees baseball team For other uses see New York Yankees disambiguation and Yankee disambiguation Bronx Bombers redirects here For the theatrical play see Bronx Bombers play The New York Yankees are an American professional baseball team based in the New York City borough of the Bronx The Yankees compete in Major League Baseball MLB as a member club of the American League AL East Division They are one of two major league clubs based in New York City alongside the National League NL s New York Mets The team was founded in 1903 when Frank Farrell and Bill Devery purchased the franchise rights to the defunct Baltimore Orioles no relation to the current team of the same name after it ceased operations and used them to establish the New York Highlanders 6 a The Highlanders were officially renamed the Yankees in 1913 9 New York Yankees2024 New York Yankees seasonEstablished in 1903Team logoCap insigniaMajor league affiliationsAmerican League 1903 present East Division 1969 present Current uniformRetired numbers12345678891015162021233237424244464951ColorsMidnight navy blue white 1 2 NameNew York Yankees 1913 present New York Highlanders 1903 1912 Other nicknamesThe Bronx Bombers The Yanks The Pinstripers The Evil Empire 3 BallparkYankee Stadium II 2009 present Shea Stadium 1974 1975 Yankee Stadium I 1923 1973 1976 2008 Polo Grounds IV 1913 1922 Hilltop Park 1903 1912 Major league titlesWorld Series titles 27 192319271928193219361937193819391941194319471949195019511952195319561958196119621977197819961998199920002009AL Pennants 40 1921192219231926192719281932193619371938193919411942194319471949195019511952195319551956195719581960196119621963196419761977197819811996199819992000200120032009AL East Division titles 20 19761977197819801981199619981999200020012002200320042005200620092011201220192022Wild card berths 9 199519972007201020152017201820202021Front officePrincipal owner s Yankee Global Enterprises Hal Steinbrenner chairman 4 5 PresidentRandy LevineGeneral managerBrian CashmanManagerAaron BooneWebsitemlb com yankees The team is owned by Yankee Global Enterprises a limited liability company that is controlled by the family of the late George Steinbrenner Steinbrenner purchased the team from CBS in 1973 Currently Brian Cashman is the team s general manager Aaron Boone is the team s field manager and Aaron Judge is the team captain The team s home games were played at the original Yankee Stadium in the Bronx from 1923 to 1973 and from 1976 to 2008 In 1974 and 1975 the Yankees shared Shea Stadium with the Mets in addition to the New York Jets and the New York Giants In 2009 they moved into a new ballpark of the same name that was constructed adjacent to the previous facility which was closed and demolished 10 The team is perennially among the leaders in MLB attendance 11 Arguably the most successful professional sports franchise in the United States 12 13 the Yankees have won 20 American League East Division titles 40 American League pennants and 27 World Series championships all of which are MLB records 14 15 The team has won more titles than any other franchise in the four major North American sports leagues after briefly trailing the NHL s Montreal Canadiens between 1993 and 1999 16 The Yankees have had 44 players and 11 managers inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame including many of the most iconic figures in the sport s history such as Babe Ruth Lou Gehrig Joe DiMaggio Mickey Mantle Yogi Berra Whitey Ford and Reggie Jackson more recent inductees include Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter who received the two highest vote percentages of all Hall of Fame members 17 18 According to Forbes the Yankees are the second highest valued sports franchise in the world after the NFL s Dallas Cowboys with an estimated value in 2023 of approximately 7 1 billion 19 The team has garnered enormous popularity and a dedicated fanbase as well as widespread enmity from fans of other MLB teams 20 21 The team s rivalry with the Boston Red Sox is one of the most well known rivalries in North American sports 22 The team s logo is internationally known as a fashion item and an icon of New York City and the United States 23 From 1903 through the 2023 season the Yankees overall win loss record is 10 684 8 080 88 a 569 winning percentage 24 Contents 1 History 1 1 1901 1902 Origins in Baltimore 1 2 1903 1912 Establishment in New York and the Highlanders years 1 3 1913 1922 New owners a new home and a new name Years at the Polo Grounds 1 4 1923 1935 Sluggers and the Stadium Ruth Gehrig and Murderer s Row 1 5 1936 1951 Joltin Joe DiMaggio 1 6 1951 1959 Stengel s Squad 1 7 1960 1964 Mantle and Maris 1 8 1965 1972 New ownership and a steep decline 1 9 1973 1981 Steinbrenner Martin Jackson and Munson the Bronx Zoo 1 10 1982 1995 Struggles during the Mattingly years 1 11 1996 2007 Core Four Jeter Posada Pettitte and Rivera 1 12 2008 2016 Championship run followed by pennant drought 1 13 2017 present Baby Bombers 2 Distinctions 3 World Series championships 4 Team nicknames 5 Logos and uniforms 6 Popularity 6 1 Fan support 6 2 The Bleacher Creatures 6 3 The Judge s Chambers at Yankee Stadium 6 4 Team ownership 6 5 Criticism 7 Fight and theme songs 8 Radio and television 8 1 Past announcers 9 Personnel 9 1 Active roster 9 2 Retired numbers 9 3 Hall of Famers 10 Rivalries 10 1 Boston Red Sox 10 2 Subway Series 11 Minor league affiliations 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 Citations 14 2 Bibliography 15 External linksHistoryMain article History of the New York Yankees 1901 1902 Origins in Baltimore Main article Baltimore Orioles 1901 1902 In 1900 Ban Johnson the president of a minor league known as the Western League 1894 1899 25 changed the Western League name to the American League AL and asked the National League to classify it as a major league 26 Johnson held that his league would operate on friendly terms with the National League but the National League demanded concessions which Johnson did not agree with and declared major league status for the AL in 1901 anyway 27 28 29 Plans to add an AL team in New York City were blocked by the NL s New York Giants 30 A team was instead placed in Baltimore Maryland in 1901 and named the Orioles 31 The Orioles were managed by John McGraw who was also a part owner After many personal clashes with Johnson during the 1902 season McGraw jumped to become the new manager of the Giants taking many players with him 32 The Orioles limped through the remainder of the season under league control using a roster of players loaned from the rest of the AL clubs The Orioles were disbanded at the end of the season 33 In early 1903 the two leagues decided to settle their disputes and try to coexist 34 At a conference Johnson requested that an AL team be put in New York to play alongside the NL s Giants 35 It was put to a vote and 15 of the 16 major league owners agreed on it 30 The franchise was awarded to Frank J Farrell and William S Devery 36 37 1903 1912 Establishment in New York and the Highlanders years nbsp Hilltop Park home of the Highlanders The team s new ballpark Hilltop Park formally known as American League Park 38 was constructed in one of Upper Manhattan s highest points between 165th and 168th Streets in the Washington Heights neighborhood 39 The team was named the New York Highlanders 40 Fans believed the name was chosen because of the team s elevated location in Upper Manhattan or as a nod to team president Joseph Gordon s Scottish Irish heritage the Gordon Highlanders were a well known Scottish military unit 41 42 18 The land was owned by the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind and was leased to the Highlanders for 10 years 43 Initially the team was commonly referred to as the New York Americans 44 The team was also referred to as the Invaders in the Evening Journal and The Evening World 45 46 New York Press Sports Editor Jim Price coined the unofficial nickname Yankees or Yanks for the club as early as 1904 because it was easier to fit in headlines 47 The Highlanders finished second in the AL in 1904 1906 and 1910 48 In 1904 they lost the deciding game on a wild pitch to the Boston Americans who later became the Boston Red Sox 49 50 That year Highlander pitcher Jack Chesbro set the single season wins record at 41 51 At this time there was no formal World Series agreement wherein the AL and NL winners would play each other 51 1913 1922 New owners a new home and a new name Years at the Polo Grounds nbsp The Polo Grounds home of the Yankees from 1913 to 1922 was demolished in 1964 after the Mets had moved to Shea Stadium in Flushing The Polo Grounds b located on the shore of the Harlem River in Washington Heights was home to the New York Giants of the National League 53 The Giants were inter city rivals with the Highlanders dating back to when Giants manager John McGraw feuded with Ban Johnson after McGraw jumped from the Orioles to the Giants 54 55 Polo Grounds III burned down in 1911 and the Highlanders shared Hilltop Park with the Giants during a two month renovation period 56 57 Later from 1913 to 1922 the Highlanders shared the Polo Grounds with the Giants after their lease with Hilltop Park expired 58 While playing at the Polo Grounds the name Highlanders fell into disuse among the press 47 In 1913 the team became officially known as the New York Yankees 59 In the mid 1910s the Yankees finished towards the bottom of the standings 42 66 69 The relationship between Farrell and Devery became strained due to money issues and the team performance 60 At the start of 1915 the pair sold the team to Colonel Jacob Ruppert a brewer and Captain Tillinghast L Hommedieu Huston a contractor engineer 6 61 Ruppert and Huston paid 350 000 equivalent to 9 375 000 in 2021 with both men contributing half of the total price 62 After the purchase Ruppert assumed the role of team president with Huston becoming team secretary and treasurer 63 1923 1935 Sluggers and the Stadium Ruth Gehrig and Murderer s Row nbsp With his hitting prowess Babe Ruth 1895 1948 ushered in an offensive oriented era of baseball and helped lead the Yankees to four World Series titles In the years around 1920 the Yankees the Red Sox and the Chicago White Sox had a detente 64 The trades between the three ball clubs antagonized Ban Johnson and garnered the teams the nickname The Insurrectos 65 66 This detente paid off well for the Yankees as they increased their payroll Most new players who later contributed to the team s success came from the Red Sox whose owner Harry Frazee was trading them for large sums of money to finance his theatrical productions 67 68 Pitcher turned outfielder Babe Ruth was the most talented of all the acquisitions from Boston and the outcome of that trade would haunt the Red Sox for the next 86 years a span in which the team did not win a single World Series championship 69 This phenomenon eventually became known as the Curse of the Bambino which was coined by writer Dan Shaughnessy in the 1990 book of the same name 70 Ruth s multitude of home runs proved so popular that the Yankees began drawing more people than their National League counterpart the Giants 66 In 1921 the year after acquiring Ruth the Yankees played in their first World Series 71 72 They competed against the Giants 73 and all eight games of the series were played in the Polo Grounds 74 After the 1922 season the Yankees were told to move out of the Polo Grounds 75 Giants manager John McGraw became upset with the increase of Yankees attendance along with the number of home runs 76 He was said to have commented that the Yankees should move to some out of the way place like Queens 77 but they instead broke ground for a new ballpark in the Bronx right across the Harlem River from the Polo Grounds 78 In 1922 the Yankees returned to the World Series again and were dealt a second defeat at the hands of the Giants 79 Manager Miller Huggins and general manager Ed Barrow were important newcomers in this period 80 The hiring of Huggins by Ruppert in 1918 caused a rift between the owners that eventually led to Ruppert buying Huston out in 1923 81 nbsp Lou Gehrig 1903 1941 was the first Yankees player to have his number retired in 1939 which was the same year that he retired from baseball due to a crippling disease In 1923 the Yankees moved to their new home Yankee Stadium 82 which took 11 months to build and cost 2 5 million equivalent to 40 000 000 in 2021 83 The team announced that 99 200 fans showed up on Opening Day and 25 000 were turned away 84 In the first game at Yankee Stadium Ruth hit a home run 85 The stadium was nicknamed The House That Ruth Built due mainly to the fact that Ruth had doubled Yankees attendance which helped the team pay for the new stadium 86 At the end of the season the Yankees faced the Giants in the World Series for the third straight year and won their first championship 87 In the 1927 season the Yankees featured a lineup that became known as Murderers Row 88 and some consider this team to be the best in the history of baseball though similar claims have been made for other Yankee squads notably those of 1939 1961 and 1998 89 The name originated from The Tombs a jail complex in Lower Manhattan that had specific cell block for murderers 90 That season the Yankees became the first team in baseball to occupy first place every day of the season winning 110 games 91 The team also swept the Pittsburgh Pirates in the World Series 92 Ruth s home run total of 60 in 1927 set a single season home run record that stood until it was broken by Roger Maris in 1961 although Maris had eight additional games in which to break the record 91 Meanwhile first baseman Lou Gehrig had his first big season batting 373 with 47 home runs and 175 runs batted in RBI 93 beating Ruth s single season RBI mark which he had set in 1921 94 The Yankees won the World Series again in 1928 95 In 1931 Joe McCarthy who was previously manager of the Chicago Cubs was hired as manager and brought the Yankees back to the top of the AL 96 They swept the Chicago Cubs in the 1932 World Series and brought the team s streak of consecutive World Series game wins to 12 97 This series was made famous by Babe Ruth s Called Shot in game three of the series at Wrigley Field in which Ruth pointed to center field before hitting a home run 98 In 1935 Ruth left the Yankees to join the NL s Boston Braves 99 and he made his last major league baseball appearance on May 30 of that year 100 1936 1951 Joltin Joe DiMaggio nbsp In 1941 Joe DiMaggio 1914 1999 set an MLB record with a 56 game hitting streak that stands to this day and will probably never be broken After Ruth left the Yankees following the 1934 season Gehrig finally had a chance to take center stage but it was only one year before a new star appeared Joe DiMaggio 101 The team won an unprecedented four straight World Series titles from 1936 to 1939 102 For most of 1939 however they had to do it without Gehrig who took himself out of the lineup on May 2 and retired due to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis which was later known as Lou Gehrig s Disease in his memory 103 104 The Yankees declared July 4 1939 to be Lou Gehrig Day on which they retired his number 4 the first retired number in baseball 105 Gehrig made a famous speech in which he declared himself to be the luckiest man on the face of the earth 106 He died two years later on June 2 1941 107 The acclaimed movie The Pride of the Yankees about Gehrig was released in 1942 The 1941 season was often described as the last year of the Golden Era before the United States entered World War II and other realities intervened 108 Numerous achievements were made in the early 1940s including Ted Williams of the Red Sox hitting for the elusive 400 batting average and Joe DiMaggio getting hits in consecutive ballgames 109 By the end of his hitting streak DiMaggio hit in 56 consecutive games the current major league record and one often deemed unbreakable 110 Two months after the Yankees beat the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1941 World Series the first of seven October meetings between the two crosstown rivals before the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles 111 As a result of the mandatory draft following the attack on Pearl Harbor more than 90 percent of the players including DiMaggio were forced to suspend their playing careers and enter the military 112 Despite losing many of their players the Yankees still managed to pull out a win against the St Louis Cardinals in the 1943 World Series 113 Following Jacob Ruppert s death in 1939 his heirs assumed control on the team 114 In 1945 construction and real estate magnate Del Webb along with partners Dan Topping and Larry MacPhail purchased the team from the Ruppert estate for 2 8 million equivalent to roughly 47 8 million in 2023 115 116 MacPhail who was the team president treasurer and general manager was bought out following the 1947 World Series 117 After a few slumping seasons McCarthy left the organization in 1946 118 A few interim managers later Bucky Harris took the job righting the ship and taking the Yankees to a hard fought series victory against the Dodgers 119 120 Despite finishing only three games behind the Cleveland Indians in the 1948 pennant race Harris was relieved of his duties and replaced by Casey Stengel who had a reputation of being a clown and managing bad teams 121 122 His tenure as Yankees field manager however was marked with success 123 The underdog Yankees came from behind to catch and surprise a powerful Red Sox team on the last two days of the 1949 season a face off that fueled the beginning of the modern Yankees Red Sox rivalry 124 By this time however DiMaggio s career was winding down and the Yankee Clipper retired after the 1951 season after numerous injuries 125 That year marked the arrival of Mickey Mantle who was one of several rookies to fill the gap 126 1951 1959 Stengel s Squad nbsp Opening Day of the 1951 baseball season at Griffith Stadium President Harry Truman throws out the first ball as Bucky Harris and Casey Stengel look on Bettering the clubs managed by Joe McCarthy the Yankees won the World Series five consecutive times from 1949 to 1953 under Stengel which remains an MLB record 127 Led by players like center fielder Mickey Mantle pitcher Whitey Ford and catcher Yogi Berra Stengel s teams won ten pennants and seven World Series titles in his 12 seasons as the Yankees manager 123 The 1950 title was the only one of those five championships not to be won against either the New York Giants or Brooklyn Dodgers it was won in four straight games against the Whiz Kids of the Philadelphia Phillies 128 129 In 1954 the Yankees won 103 games but the Cleveland Indians took the pennant with a then AL record 111 wins 1954 was famously referred to as The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant 130 The term was coined by writer Douglass Wallop who wrote a novel of the same name 131 The novel was then adapted into a musical called Damn Yankees 132 In 1955 the Dodgers finally beat the Yankees in the World Series after five previous Series losses to them The Yankees came back strong the next year 133 In Game 5 of the 1956 World Series against the Dodgers pitcher Don Larsen threw the only perfect game in World Series history 134 which remains the only perfect game in postseason play and the only postseason no hitter until 2010 135 The Yankees lost the 1957 World Series to the Milwaukee Braves when Lew Burdette won three games for the Braves and was awarded World Series MVP 136 137 Following the Series the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers both left for San Francisco and Los Angeles respectively 138 This left the Yankees as New York s only baseball team In the 1958 World Series the Yankees got their revenge against the Braves and became the second team to win the Series after being down 3 1 139 For the decade the Yankees won six World Series championships 1950 1951 1952 1953 1956 1958 and eight American League pennants those six plus 1955 and 1957 140 Led by Mantle Ford Berra Elston Howard the Yankees first African American player 141 and the newly acquired Roger Maris the Yankees entered the 1960s seeking to replicate their success of the 1950s 142 1960 1964 Mantle and Maris nbsp Mickey Mantle 1931 1995 was one of the franchise s most celebrated hitters highlighted by his 1956 Triple Crown and World Series championship Arnold Johnson owner of the Kansas City Athletics was a longtime business associate of Yankees co owners Del Webb and Dan Topping 115 Because of this special relationship with the Yankees he traded young players to them in exchange for cash and aging veterans 143 Invariably these trades ended up being heavily tilted in the Yankees favor leading to accusations that the Athletics were little more than a Yankees farm team at the major league level 144 145 Kansas City had been home to the Yankees top farm team the Kansas City Blues for almost 20 years before the Athletics moved there from Philadelphia in 1954 146 In 1960 Charles O Finley purchased the Athletics and put an end to the trades with the Yankees 147 At that point however the Yankees had already strengthened their supply of future prospects which included a young outfielder named Roger Maris 148 In 1960 Maris led the league in slugging percentage RBI and extra base hits 149 He finished second in home runs one behind Mickey Mantle and total bases and won a Gold Glove which garnered enough votes for the American League MVP award 150 The year 1961 was one of the most memorable in Yankees history 151 152 n12 Mantle and Maris hit home runs at a fast pace and became known as the M amp M Boys 153 Ultimately a severe hip infection forced Mantle to leave the lineup at the end of the regular season 154 Maris continued though and on October 1 the last day of the regular season he hit home run number 61 surpassing Babe Ruth s single season home run record of 60 155 However MLB Commissioner Ford Frick decreed that since Maris had played in a 162 game season and Ruth in 1927 had played in a 154 game season 156 They were considered two separate records for 30 years until MLB reversed course and stated Maris held the record alone 157 His record would be broken by Mark McGwire who hit 70 home runs in 1998 158 Maris held the American League record until 2022 when Aaron Judge hit 62 159 The Yankees won the pennant with a 109 53 record and went on to defeat the Cincinnati Reds in the 1961 World Series 160 The team finished the year with 240 home runs which was an MLB record until surpassed by the 1996 Baltimore Orioles team with 257 home runs 161 In 1962 the sports scene in New York changed when the National League added an expansion team the New York Mets 162 The Mets played at the Giants former home the Polo Grounds for two seasons while Shea Stadium was under construction in nearby Flushing Queens 163 This restored New York as a city with more than one team as it had been from the late 1800s until 1957 164 The Yankees won the 1962 World Series their tenth in the past sixteen years defeating the San Francisco Giants 4 3 165 It was the Yankees last championship until 1977 166 The Yankees easily reached the 1963 World Series when they won the pennant by 10 5 games but they scored only four runs in the series and were swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers and their ace pitcher Sandy Koufax 167 The series was the first between the Yankees and the new Los Angeles Dodgers after their move in 1958 168 After the season Yogi Berra who had just retired from playing took over managerial duties 169 The aging Yankees returned the next year for a fifth straight World Series but were beaten 4 3 by the St Louis Cardinals It would be the Yankees last World Series appearance until 1976 170 171 1965 1972 New ownership and a steep decline After the 1964 season broadcasting company CBS purchased 80 of the Yankees from Topping and Webb for 11 2 million equivalent to 110 million in 2023 172 With the new ownership the team began to decline 173 The 1965 edition of the team posted a record of 77 85 the Yankees first losing record in 40 years 174 In 1966 the Yankees finished in last place in the AL for the first time since 1912 175 It also marked their first consecutive losing seasons since 1917 and 1918 176 The 1967 season was not much better they finished only ahead of the Kansas City Athletics in the American League 177 While their fortunes improved somewhat in the late 1960s and early 1970s they finished higher than fourth only once during CBS ownership in 1970 178 The Yankees were not able to replace their aging superstars with promising young talent as they had consistently done in the previous five decades 179 As early as the 1961 62 off season longtime fans noticed that the pipeline of talent from the minor league affiliates had started to dry up 180 This was worsened by the introduction of the amateur draft that year which meant that the Yankees could no longer sign any player they wanted 181 The Yankees were one of four teams who voted against the establishment of the draft with the Dodgers Mets and Cardinals also objecting 182 While the Yankees usually drafted fairly early during this period due to their lackluster records Thurman Munson was the only pick who lived up to his billing 183 1973 1981 Steinbrenner Martin Jackson and Munson the Bronx Zoo nbsp Reggie Jackson On January 3 1973 CBS announced they were selling the club to a group of investors led by Cleveland based shipbuilder George Steinbrenner 1930 2010 for 10 million equivalent to 68 6 million in 2023 184 E Michael Burke who assumed the role of team president in 1966 resigned as president in April but stayed with the organization as a consultant to the owner 185 186 Within a year Steinbrenner bought out most of his other partners and became the team s principal owner although Burke continued to hold a minority share into the 1980s 178 One of Steinbrenner s major goals was to renovate Yankee Stadium 187 Both the stadium and the surrounding neighborhood had deteriorated by the late 1960s 188 CBS initially suggested renovations but the team needed to play elsewhere and the Mets refused to open their home Shea Stadium to the Yankees 189 A new stadium in the Meadowlands across the Hudson River in New Jersey was suggested and was eventually built as Giants Stadium specifically for football 190 Finally in mid 1972 Mayor John Lindsay stepped in The city bought the stadium and began an extensive two year renovation period 187 Since the city also owned Shea Stadium the Mets were forced to allow the Yankees to play two seasons there 189 The renovations modernized the look of the stadium significantly altered the dimensions and reconfigured some of the seating 191 In 1973 Steinbrenner instituted a personal appearance policy that included being clean shaven with long hair slicked back or trimmed 192 In an interview with The New York Times Steinbrenner stated the policy was to instill a certain sense of order and discipline in the players 193 The policy originated from Steinbrenner s service in the United States Air Force which had a similar appearance policy 194 195 This rule is still in effect today and enforced by his sons after George s passing 196 The Cincinnati Reds had the same personal appearance policy from 1967 until 1999 197 nbsp During 1974 and 1975 Yankee Stadium was renovated into its final shape and structure as shown here in 2002 seven years before demolition After the 1974 season Steinbrenner made a move that started the modern era of free agency signing star pitcher Catfish Hunter away from Oakland 198 Midway through the 1975 season the team hired former second baseman Billy Martin as manager 199 With Martin at the helm the Yankees reached the 1976 World Series but were swept by the Cincinnati Reds and their famed Big Red Machine 200 After the 1976 campaign Steinbrenner added star Oakland outfielder Reggie Jackson who had spent 1976 with the Baltimore Orioles to his roster 201 During spring training of 1977 Jackson alienated his teammates with controversial remarks about the Yankees captain catcher Thurman Munson 202 He had bad blood with manager Billy Martin who had managed the Detroit Tigers when Jackson s Athletics defeated them in the 1972 playoffs 203 Jackson Martin and Steinbrenner repeatedly feuded with each other throughout Jackson s 5 year contract Martin was hired and fired by Steinbrenner five times over the next 13 years 204 205 This conflict combined with the extremely rowdy Yankees fans of the late 1970s and the bad conditions of the Bronx led to the Yankees organization and stadium being referred to as the Bronx Zoo 206 207 Despite the turmoil Jackson hit four home runs in the 1977 World Series hit three of those home runs on the first pitch of his at bats in the fourth fifth and eighth innings of the sixth game of the World Series earned the Series MVP Award and got the nickname Mr October 208 Throughout the late 1970s the race for the pennant was often a close competition between the Yankees and the Red Sox Despite that during the 1978 season the Red Sox were 14 1 2 games ahead of the Yankees in July 209 In late July Martin suspended Reggie Jackson and fined him 9 000 equivalent to 42 000 in 2023 for defiance after he bunted while Martin had the swing signal on 210 Upon Jackson s return Martin made a famous statement against both Jackson and owner Steinbrenner They deserve each other One s a born liar the other s convicted 211 Martin was forced to resign the next day and was replaced by Bob Lemon This came while the team was winning five games in a row and Boston was losing five in a row 212 The Yankees continued to win games and by the time they met Boston for a pivotal four game series at Fenway Park in early September the Yankees were four games behind the Red Sox The Yankees swept the Red Sox in what became known as the Boston Massacre winning the games 15 3 13 2 7 0 and 7 4 213 214 The third game was a shutout pitched by Ron Guidry who led the majors with nine shutouts a 25 3 record and a 1 74 ERA 215 On the last day of the season the two clubs finished in a tie for first place in the AL East and a tiebreaker game was held at Fenway Park With Guidry pitching against former Yankee Mike Torrez the Red Sox took an early 2 0 lead In the seventh inning light hitting Yankee shortstop Bucky Dent drove a three run home run over the Fenway Park s Green Monster putting the Yankees up 3 2 Reggie Jackson s solo home run in the following inning sealed the eventual 5 4 win that gave the Yankees their one hundredth win of the season and their third straight AL East title Guidry earned his 25th win of the season 216 217 After defeating the Kansas City Royals for the third consecutive year in the ALCS the Yankees faced the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series They lost the first two games in Los Angeles but won all three games at Yankee Stadium and Game 6 back in Los Angeles winning their 22nd world championship 218 Changes occurred during the 1979 season Former Cy Young Award winning closer Sparky Lyle was traded to the Texas Rangers for several players including Dave Righetti 219 Tommy John was acquired from the Dodgers and Luis Tiant from the Red Sox to bolster the pitching staff 220 During the season Bob Lemon was replaced by Billy Martin who was serving his second stint as Yankees manager 221 nbsp The mask and catcher s mitt of Thurman Munson the team captain who was killed in a plane crash in 1979 The 1970s ended on a tragic note for the Yankees On August 2 1979 catcher Thurman Munson died when his private plane crashed while he was practicing touch and go landings 222 Four days later the entire team flew out to Canton Ohio for the funeral despite having a game later that day against the Orioles 223 Bobby Murcer a close friend of Munson s along with Lou Piniella were chosen to give the eulogy at his funeral 224 In a nationally televised and emotional game Murcer used Munson s bat which he gave to Munson s wife after the game and drove in all five of the team s runs in a dramatic 5 4 walk off victory 225 226 Before the game Munson s locker sat empty except for his catching gear a sad reminder for his teammates His locker labeled with his number 15 has remained empty in the Yankees clubhouse as a memorial When the Yankees moved across the street Munson s locker was torn out and installed in the new stadium s museum 227 Immediately after Munson s death the team announced his number 15 would be retired 228 The 1980 season brought more changes Billy Martin was fired once again and Dick Howser took his place 229 Chris Chambliss was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays for catcher Rick Cerone 230 Reggie Jackson hit 300 for the only time in his career with 41 homers and finished second in the MVP voting to Kansas City s George Brett 231 232 The Yankees won 103 games and the AL East by three games over the Baltimore Orioles but were swept by the Royals in the ALCS 233 After the season ended the Yankees signed Dave Winfield to a 10 year contract 234 A contract misunderstanding led to a feud between Winfield and Steinbrenner 235 The team fired Howser and replaced him with Gene Michael Under Michael the Yankees led the AL East before a strike hit in June 1981 236 The Yankees struggled under Bob Lemon who replaced Michael for the second half of the season 237 Thanks to the split season playoff format the Yankees faced the second half winner Milwaukee Brewers in the special 1981 American League Division Series 238 After defeating Milwaukee 3 2 they swept the Oakland Athletics in a three game ALCS 239 In the World Series the Yankees won the first two games against the Los Angeles Dodgers But the Dodgers fought back to win the next four games to claim the World Series title This World Series would be the most recent between the Yankees and the Dodgers 240 1982 1995 Struggles during the Mattingly years nbsp Don Mattingly headlined a Yankees franchise that struggled in the 1980s Following the team s loss to the Dodgers in the 1981 World Series the Yankees began their longest absence from the playoffs since 1921 241 Steinbrenner announced his plan to transform the Yankees from the Bronx Bombers into the Bronx Burners increasing the Yankees ability to win games based on speed and defense instead of relying on home runs 242 As a first step towards this end the Yankees signed Dave Collins from the Cincinnati Reds during the 1981 off season 243 Collins was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays after the 1982 season in a deal that also included future All Stars Fred McGriff and Mike Morgan In return the Yankees got Dale Murray and Tom Dodd 244 The Yankees of the 1980s were led by All Star first baseman Don Mattingly 245 In spite of accumulating the most total wins of any major league team they failed to win a World Series the 1980s were the first decade since the 1910s in which the Yankees did not win at least two Series and had only two playoff appearances 246 They consistently had a powerful offense with Mattingly and Winfield competing for the best average in the AL for the 1984 season 247 Despite their offense the Yankees teams of the 1980s lacked sufficient starting pitching to win a championship in the 1980s 248 After posting a 22 6 record in 1985 arm problems caught up with Guidry and his performance declined over the next three years He retired after the 1988 season 249 Of the remaining mainstays of the Yankees rotation only Dave Righetti stood out pitching a no hitter on July 4 1983 but he was moved to the bullpen the next year where he helped to define the closer role 250 251 Despite the Yankees lack of pitching success during the 1980s they had three of the premier pitchers of the early 1990s on their roster during these years in Al Leiter Doug Drabek and Jose Rijo 252 All were mismanaged and dealt away before they could reach their full potential with only Rijo returning much value he was traded to the Oakland A s in the deal that brought Henderson to New York 253 The team came close to winning the AL East in 1985 and 1986 finishing second to the Toronto Blue Jays and Boston Red Sox respectively but fell to fourth place in 1987 and fifth in 1988 despite having mid season leads in the AL East both years 254 255 256 257 By the end of the decade the Yankees offense declined Henderson and third baseman Mike Pagliarulo had departed by the middle of 1989 258 while back problems hampered both Winfield who missed the entire 1989 season 259 and Mattingly who missed almost the entire second half of 1990 260 Winfield s tenure with the team ended when he was dealt to the California Angels 261 From 1989 to 1992 the team had a losing record spending significant money on free agents and draft picks who did not live up to expectations 262 In 1990 the Yankees had the worst record in the American League and their fourth last place finish in franchise history 263 During the 1990 season Yankee fans started to chant 1918 to taunt the Red Sox reminding them of the last time they won a World Series one weekend the Red Sox were there in 1990 264 Each time the Red Sox were at Yankee Stadium afterward chants of 1918 echoed through the stadium 265 Yankee fans also taunted the Red Sox with signs saying CURSE OF THE BAMBINO pictures of Babe Ruth and wearing 1918 T shirts each time they were at the stadium 265 These fans came to be known as the Bleacher Creatures 266 The poor showings in the 1980s and early 1990s soon changed Steinbrenner hired Howard Spira to uncover damaging information on Winfield and was subsequently suspended from day to day team operations by Commissioner Fay Vincent for two years when the plot was revealed 267 This turn of events allowed management to implement a coherent acquisition and development program without owner interference General Manager Gene Michael along with manager Buck Showalter shifted the club s emphasis from high priced acquisitions to developing talent through the farm system 268 This new philosophy developed key players such as outfielder Bernie Williams shortstop Derek Jeter catcher Jorge Posada and pitchers Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera 269 The first significant success came in 1994 when the Yankees had the best record in the AL but the season was cut short by a players strike 270 Because the Yankees were last in a postseason in a season cut short by a strike the news media constantly reminded the Yankees about the parallels between these two Yankees teams which included both teams having division leads taken away by strike 271 272 Throughout October the media continued to speculate about what might have been if there had not been a strike making references to the day s games in the postseason would have been played 273 A year later the team qualified for the playoffs in the new wild card slot in the strike shortened 1995 season In the memorable 1995 American League Division Series against the Seattle Mariners the Yankees won the first two games at home and lost the next three in Seattle Although Mattingly batted 417 with a home run and six RBI in the only postseason series of his career his back problems led him to retire after the 1997 season after sitting out the 1996 season 274 275 1996 2007 Core Four Jeter Posada Pettitte and Rivera nbsp The Yankees success in the late 1990s and early 2000s was built from a core of productive players that included Jorge Posada Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter Joe Torre had a mediocre run as a manager in the National League 276 and the choice was initially derided Clueless Joe was a headline in the New York Daily News 277 However his calm demeanor proved to be a good fit and his tenure was the longest under George Steinbrenner s ownership 278 279 Torre was announced as the new Yankees manager in November 1995 280 The 1996 season saw the rise of three Yankees who formed the core of the team for years to come rookie shortstop Derek Jeter second year starting pitcher Andy Pettitte and second year pitcher Mariano Rivera who served as setup man in 1996 before becoming closer in 1997 281 Aided by these young players the Yankees won their first AL East title in 15 years 282 They defeated the Texas Rangers in the ALDS 283 and in ALCS beat the Baltimore Orioles 4 1 which included a notable fan interference by Jeffrey Maier that was called as a home run for the Yankees 284 In the World Series the team rebounded from an 0 2 series deficit and defeated the defending champion Atlanta Braves ending an 18 year championship drought 285 Jeter was named Rookie of the Year 286 In 1997 the Yankees lost the 1997 ALDS to the Cleveland Indians 3 2 287 General manager Bob Watson stepped down and was replaced by assistant general manager Brian Cashman 288 The 1998 Yankees are widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest teams in baseball history compiling a record of 114 48 a then AL record for the most wins in a season 289 On May 17 1998 David Wells pitched a perfect game against the Minnesota Twins 290 The Yankees went on to sweep the San Diego Padres in the World Series 291 Their 125 combined regular and postseason wins remains an MLB single season record 292 On July 18 1999 David Cone pitched a perfect game against the Montreal Expos 293 The ALCS was the Yankees first postseason meeting with the rival Red Sox 294 The 1999 Yankees defeated the Red Sox 4 1 and swept the Braves in the 1999 World Series giving the 1998 99 Yankees a combined 22 3 record in the including four series sweeps in the six post season series those years 295 296 In 2000 the Yankees faced the Mets in the first New York City Subway World Series in 44 years The Yankees won the series in 5 games but a loss in Game 3 snapped their streak of consecutive games won in World Series contests at 14 surpassing the club s previous record of 12 in 1927 1928 and 1932 The Yankees are the last MLB team to repeat as World Series champions and after the 2000 season they joined the Yankees teams of 1936 39 and 1949 53 as well as the 1972 74 Oakland Athletics as the only teams to win at least three consecutive World Series 297 In aftermath of the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks the Yankees defeated the Oakland Athletics in the ALDS and the Seattle Mariners in the ALCS 298 By winning the pennant for a fourth straight year the 1998 2001 Yankees joined the 1921 24 New York Giants and the Yankees teams of 1936 39 1949 53 1955 58 and 1960 64 as the only teams to win at least four straight pennants 299 The Yankees won 11 consecutive postseason series in this 4 year period In the World Series against the Arizona Diamondbacks the Yankees lost the series when Rivera uncharacteristically blew a save in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 7 300 Also despite a very poor series overall batting under 200 Derek Jeter got the nickname Mr November echoing comparisons to Reggie Jackson s Mr October for his walk off home run in Game 4 though it began October 31 as the game ended in the first minutes of November 1 301 In addition Yankee Stadium played host for a memorial service titled Prayer for America for the September 11 victims 302 A vastly revamped Yankees team finished the 2002 season with an AL best record of 103 58 The season was highlighted by Alfonso Soriano becoming the first second baseman ever to hit 30 home runs and steal 30 bases in a season 303 In the ALDS the Yankees lost to the eventual World Series champion Anaheim Angels 3 1 304 In 2003 the Yankees again had the best league record 101 61 highlighted by Roger Clemens 300th win and 4000th strikeout In the ALCS they defeated the Boston Red Sox in a dramatic seven game series which featured a bench clearing incident in Game 3 and a series ending walk off home run by Aaron Boone in the bottom of the 11th inning of Game 7 305 In the World Series the Yankees lost in 6 games to the Florida Marlins 306 nbsp Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez 2007 In 2004 the Yankees traded Alfonso Soriano to the Texas Rangers in exchange for star shortstop Alex Rodriguez who moved to third base from his usual shortstop position to accommodate Jeter 307 In the ALCS the Yankees met the Boston Red Sox again and became the first team in professional baseball history and only the third team in North American professional sports history to lose a best of seven series after taking a 3 0 series lead 308 309 The Red Sox would go on to defeat the Cardinals in the World Series their first championship since 1918 310 In 2005 Alex Rodriguez won the American League MVP award becoming the first Yankee to win the award since Don Mattingly in 1985 311 The 2006 season was highlighted by a 5 game series sweep of the Red Sox at Fenway Park sometimes referred to as the Second Boston Massacre outscoring the Red Sox 49 26 312 The Yankees streak of nine straight AL East division titles ended in 2007 but they still reached the playoffs with the AL Wild Card 313 For the third year in a row the team lost in the first round of the playoffs as the Cleveland Indians defeated the Yankees 3 1 in the 2007 ALDS After the series 314 Joe Torre declined a reduced length and compensation contract offer from the Yankees and returned to the National League as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers 315 2008 2016 Championship run followed by pennant drought nbsp Joe Girardi was a Yankees catcher before he became manager in 2008 After Torre s departure the Yankees signed former catcher Joe Girardi to a three year contract to manage the club 316 The 2008 season was the last season played at Yankee Stadium To celebrate the final year and history of Yankee Stadium the 2008 Major League Baseball All Star Game was played there 317 The final regular season game at Yankee Stadium was played on September 21 2008 with the Yankees defeating the Orioles 318 After the game Jeter addressed the crowd thanking them for their support over the years and urging them to take the memories of this field add them to the new memories that will come at the new Yankee Stadium and continue to pass them on from generation to generation 319 Despite multiple midseason roster moves the team was hampered by injuries and missed the playoffs for the first time in 14 seasons 320 nbsp The new Yankee Stadium opened in 2009 and was christened with a World Series victory in the same way that the original Yankee Stadium was christened with a World Series victory when it opened in 1923 During the off season the Yankees retooled their roster with several star free agent acquisitions including CC Sabathia 321 Mark Teixeira 322 and A J Burnett 323 At the beginning of the 2009 season the Yankees opened the new Yankee Stadium located just a block north on River Avenue from their former home 10 The Yankees set a major league record by playing error free ball for 18 consecutive games from May 14 to June 1 2009 324 In the ALDS they swept the Minnesota Twins before defeating the Los Angeles Angels in the ALCS 4 2 They Yankees defeated the Philadelphia Phillies in the World Series 4 2 their 27th World Series title 325 During the 2010 All Star break public address announcer Bob Sheppard and principal owner George Steinbrenner died 326 327 Eight days later another longtime Yankee icon former player and manager Ralph Houk died 328 In a 22 9 win over the Oakland Athletics on August 25 2011 the Yankees became the first team in Major League history to hit three grand slams in a single game They were hit by Robinson Cano Russell Martin and Curtis Granderson 329 In 2012 the Yankees again finished the season with the AL s best record at 95 67 In mid July the Yankees traded two prospects to the Seattle Mariners for Ichiro Suzuki 330 They faced the Orioles in the ALDS In Game 3 Raul Ibanez became the oldest player to hit two home runs in a game the oldest to hit a walk off home run the first substitute position player in a postseason game to hit two home runs and the first to hit two home runs in the 9th inning or later in a postseason game in the Yankees 3 2 win 331 The Yankees defeated the Orioles in five games 332 However in the ALCS the Yankees lost to the Tigers again this time in a four game sweep which was compounded with a struggling offense and a season ending injury to Derek Jeter 333 On April 12 2013 the Yankees made their second triple play ever It was scored as 4 6 5 6 5 3 4 the first triple play of its kind in baseball history 334 On September 25 the Yankees lost to the Tampa Bay Rays which for the second time in the wild card era eliminated them from playoff contention 335 They ended the season 85 77 finishing in 3rd place in the AL East 336 On September 25 2014 Jeter playing his final home game hit a walk off single off pitcher Evan Meek to defeat the Baltimore Orioles in front of a sold out stadium 337 Reliever Dellin Betances finished 3rd in voting for AL Rookie of the Year while starting pitcher Masahiro Tanaka finished 5th 338 The Yankees struggled through the 2016 season ending at 4th place in the AL East 339 The resurgent 2015 experienced by Rodriguez and Teixeira did not carry over as they batted 200 and 204 for the season respectively 340 341 At the trade deadline the Yankees stood at an uninspiring 52 52 and decided to become sellers rather than buyers 342 2017 present Baby Bombers nbsp Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge quickly became the new face of the team The Yankees trades brought a group of players to the team most notably Cubs prospect Gleyber Torres In discussing the midseason trades Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said that the Yankees recognized the need to look toward the future 343 In early August both Teixeira and Rodriguez revealed their plans to retire by the season s end 344 345 Rodriguez played his final game on August 12 2016 accepting a front office job with the Yankees shortly after 346 In one of his final games Teixeira hit a walk off grand slam against the Boston Red Sox his 409th and last career home run 347 348 The Yankees called up Tyler Austin and outfielder Aaron Judge in August They made their debuts on August 13 hitting back to back home runs in their first career at bats 349 Catcher Gary Sanchez hit 20 home runs in 53 games finishing 2nd in AL Rookie of the Year voting and setting the record at the time as the fastest to reach 20 career home runs 350 Sanchez Judge and Austin as well as the Yankees prosperous farm system in general became nicknamed the Baby Bombers 351 352 In 2017 Judge led the American League with 52 home runs breaking Mark McGwire s major league record for most home runs by a rookie in a single season McGwire hit 49 in 1987 353 Judge won the 2017 Home Run Derby making the Yankees the team with the most players in history to win a Home Run Derby 354 Judge would end the season by winning Rookie of the Year and finishing second in the AL MVP voting 355 In the 2017 18 off season the Yankees made a couple moves including hiring Aaron Boone to succeed Girardi as their new manager 356 and trading for reigning National League Most Valuable Player Giancarlo Stanton 357 A right fielder who bats right handed Stanton hit 59 home runs and drove in 132 runs both major league highs in 2017 358 his contract was the largest player contract in the history of professional sports in North America at the time 359 360 In 2019 the Yankees traveled to London in late June to play the Red Sox in the first ever MLB London Series in addition to the first MLB games played in Europe 361 The Yankees swept Boston in the two game series with the first game lasted 4 hours and 42 minutes 3 minutes shorter than the longest MLB 9 inning game 362 The Yankees beat the Twins in a three game sweep to advance to the ALCS for the second time in three seasons 363 However on October 19 the Houston Astros beat the Yankees in the ALCS 4 2 364 With this loss the 2010s decade became the first since the 1980s to have the Yankees fail to win a World Series and the first since the 1910s to have the Yankees failing to play in one 365 366 During the 2019 offseason on December 18 2019 the Yankees signed Gerrit Cole to a nine year 324 million contract 367 368 On May 19 2021 former Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber threw a no hitter against the Texas Rangers This was the Yankees 12th no hitter of all time and the first since David Cone s perfect game in 1999 369 The Yankees also recorded a record tying three triple plays throughout the 2021 season 370 In 2022 the Yankees clinched their 30th straight winning season 371 On October 4 Aaron Judge hit his 62nd home run breaking the American League single season home run record set in 1961 by Roger Maris 372 In the offseason Jose Trevino would become the first Yankee ever to win the Platinum Glove Award Aaron Judge would also win AL MVP after having an historic season being the first Yankee to win the award since Alex Rodriguez did in 2007 373 On December 21 2022 Aaron Judge was named the 16th captain in Yankees history after getting resigned to a nine year 360 million contract 374 Judge was named the first captain of the team since Derek Jeter retired in 2014 On June 28 2023 Domingo German threw the 24th perfect game in MLB history and 4th in Yankees history 375 After the 2023 season shortstop Anthony Volpe became the first Yankee rookie to win the Gold Glove Award 376 and Gerrit Cole won the AL Cy Young Award after posting a league leading 2 63 ERA and 0 981 WHIP 377 On December 6 2023 the Yankees made a blockbuster trade for young superstar Juan Soto 378 Distinctions nbsp World Series rings See also List of New York Yankees seasons and New York Yankees award winners and league leaders The Yankees have won 27 World Series in 40 appearances the most in Major League Baseball in addition to major North American professional sports leagues 365 12 The St Louis Cardinals are in second place with 11 World Series championships with their last win in 2011 The Dodgers are second in total World Series appearances with 20 379 The Yankees have lost 13 World Series the second most in MLB behind the Dodgers who have 14 losses 380 The Yankees have faced the Dodgers 11 times going 8 3 381 Among North American major sports the Yankees success is approached by only the 24 Stanley Cup championships of the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League The Yankees have played in the World Series against every National League pennant winner except the Houston Astros who now play in the American League the Colorado Rockies and the Washington Nationals 382 Through 2023 the Yankees have an all time regular season winning percentage of 569 a 10 684 8 080 record the best of any team in MLB history 383 On June 25 2019 they set a new major league record for homering in 28 consecutive games breaking the record set by the 2002 Texas Rangers 384 The streak would reach 31 games during which they hit 57 home runs 385 With the walk off solo home run by DJ LeMahieu to win the game against the Oakland Athletics on August 31 2019 the Yankees ended the month of August that year now holding a new record of 74 home runs hit in the month alone a new record for the most home runs hit in a month by a single MLB team 386 387 World Series championshipsThe Yankees have won a record 27 World Series championships Their most recent one came when the new stadium opened in 2009 they defeated the Philadelphia Phillies in six games under manager Joe Girardi 388 389 Season Manager Opponent Series score Record 1923 Miller Huggins New York Giants 4 2 98 54 1927 Miller Huggins Pittsburgh Pirates 4 0 110 44 1928 Miller Huggins St Louis Cardinals 4 0 101 53 1932 Joe McCarthy Chicago Cubs 4 0 107 47 1936 Joe McCarthy New York Giants 4 2 102 51 1937 Joe McCarthy New York Giants 4 1 102 52 1938 Joe McCarthy Chicago Cubs 4 0 99 53 1939 Joe McCarthy Cincinnati Reds 4 0 106 45 1941 Joe McCarthy Brooklyn Dodgers 4 1 101 53 1943 Joe McCarthy St Louis Cardinals 4 1 98 56 1947 Bucky Harris Brooklyn Dodgers 4 3 97 57 1949 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4 1 97 57 1950 Casey Stengel Philadelphia Phillies 4 0 98 56 1951 Casey Stengel New York Giants 4 2 98 56 1952 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4 3 95 59 1953 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4 2 99 51 1956 Casey Stengel Brooklyn Dodgers 4 3 97 57 1958 Casey Stengel Milwaukee Braves 4 3 92 62 1961 Ralph Houk Cincinnati Reds 4 1 109 53 1962 Ralph Houk San Francisco Giants 4 3 96 66 1977 Billy Martin Los Angeles Dodgers 4 2 100 62 1978 Bob Lemon Los Angeles Dodgers 4 2 100 63 1996 Joe Torre Atlanta Braves 4 2 92 70 1998 Joe Torre San Diego Padres 4 0 114 48 1999 Joe Torre Atlanta Braves 4 0 98 64 2000 Joe Torre New York Mets 4 1 87 74 2009 Joe Girardi Philadelphia Phillies 4 2 103 59 Total World Series championships 27Team nicknamesThe team has acquired different nicknames over the years by both baseball personalities and the media Sportswriter Fred Lieb in a 1922 story for the Baseball Magazine said he will call the club the Yanks in his articles 42 18 He stated the nickname will fit into heads better 47 Their most prominently used nickname is the Bronx Bombers or simply the Bombers a reference to their home and their prolific hitting The nickname Bronx Bombers was first used by writer Frank Wallace in a July 5 1928 article in the New York Daily News 390 By 1935 the name had caught on among sportswriters around the country 391 392 A less used nickname is the Pinstripes or Pinstripers in reference to the iconic feature on their home uniforms 393 The term Murderers Row has historically been used to refer to both the 1920s Yankees and the team altogether 394 395 Critics often refer to the team and the organization as the Evil Empire a term applied to the Yankees by Boston Red Sox president Larry Lucchino in a 2002 interview with The New York Times after the Yankees signed pitching prospect Jose Contreras 396 397 Ironically Yankee fans and supporters refer to their team as the Evil Empire as a badge of honor and in fact enjoy having their team play the villain 398 The team also embraced the label as well with the stadium playing The Imperial March from Star Wars the song associated with antagonist Darth Vader at home games 399 A term from the team s tumultuous late 1970s the Bronx Zoo is sometimes used by detractors as well as the Damn Yankees after the musical of the same name 400 Logos and uniformsMain article Logos and uniforms of the New York Yankees The Yankees logo and uniform design has changed throughout the team s history During the inaugural Highlanders season in 1903 the uniform featured a large N and a Y on each breast 401 288 In 1909 the N and Y were combined and was added to both the left breast and caps 1 According to history the interlocking NY letters predates the New York Yankees The letters appear on the New York City Police Department Medal for Valor which was established in 1877 and was designed by Tiffany amp Co 1 Three years later black pinstripes were added to the Highlander uniforms for the first time 402 The current cap look a navy blue hat with the white interlocking NY letters was adopted in 1932 1 Both the home and away uniforms has been relatively unchanged since the 1920s and 1940s respectively 401 The away uniform is grey in color with NEW YORK across the chest 403 nbsp Cap insignia nbsp Jersey logo nbsp Print insignia nbsp Team logo Merchandise with the Yankees logo such as baseball caps is popular worldwide including in countries where the sport of baseball is not popular According to a 2023 New York Times report for instance Yankees caps mostly counterfeit are viral in Brazil Customers there mostly do not know that the logo represents a baseball team but think of it as a classic piece of Americana a status symbol or a generic perhaps chic emblem of the West 404 PopularityFan support nbsp Freddy Sez holding one of his signs near the bleachers entrance before a game between the Yankees and the Texas Rangers With their recurring success since the 1920s the Yankees have since been one of the most popular teams in the world 405 with their fan base coming from much further than the New York metropolitan area 406 The Yankees typically bring an upsurge in attendance at all or most of their various road trip venues drawing crowds of their own fans as well as home town fans whose interest is heightened when the Yankees come to town 407 The Yankees have consistently been the most attended MLB games The first 1 million fan season was in 1920 when more than 1 2 millions fans attended Yankee games at the Polo Grounds According to Baseball Reference com the 2008 season saw the most fans per game in Yankees history with an average of 53 000 per game 11 In the past seven years the Yankees have drawn over three million fans each year with an American League record setting 4 090 696 in 2005 becoming only the third franchise in sports history to draw over four million in regular season attendance in their own ballpark 408 The Yankees were the league leaders in road attendance each year from 2001 through 2006 409 Some Yankees superfans have become notable in their own right One famous fan was Freddy Schuman popularly known as Freddy Sez 410 For over 50 years he came to the Yankees home games with a baseball cap a Yankees jersey which on the back bears his own name and a cake pan with a shamrock painted on it which was connected to a sign inscribed with words of encouragement for the home team Schuman died on October 17 2010 at the age of 85 411 The popularity of the Yankees also extended internationally According to a Major League Baseball executive the Yankees logo is considered a sign of quality despite many people not knowing the team 23 412 The Bleacher Creatures nbsp A shirt worn by a number of Bleacher Creatures Main article Bleacher Creatures The Bleacher Creatures are a group of fans known for their strict allegiance to the Yankees and are often merciless to opposing fans who sit in the section and cheer for the road team They occupied Section 39 in the right field bleachers at the old Yankee Stadium and occupy Section 203 in the new stadium 413 The Bleacher Creatures are known for their use of chants and songs with the roll call at the beginning of each home game being the most prominent 414 The creatures got their nickname from New York Daily News columnist Filip Flip Bondy who spent the 2004 season sitting in the section for research on his book about the group Bleeding Pinstripes A Season with the Bleacher Creatures of Yankee Stadium published in 2005 415 Throughout the years both at the old and new stadiums the Bleacher Creatures have attracted controversy for the use of derogatory and homophobic chants and rowdiness aimed at both opposing fans and players 416 417 The Judge s Chambers at Yankee Stadium In 2017 team management ordered the creation of a special cheer section within Section 104 for fans of Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge called the Judge s Chambers 418 They were the second AL team to create a special cheering section following the Seattle Mariners and the King s Court for pitcher Felix Hernandez 419 The Judge s Chambers was added in response to his rise as one of the league s most popular young stars 420 The section s 18 seats are given to lucky ticketholders and their families along with black judicial robes with the team logo on the front and Judge s 99 jersey number on the back prior to the addition of the section fans were wearing white wigs and judicial robes to games in support of Judge 421 Occasionally community organizations charities and Little League teams are given precedence when selecting participants The seats which are close to his position in right field are surrounded by mahogany wood to emulate the appearance of the city s courthouses 422 423 Team ownership See also List of New York Yankees owners and executives The Yankees baseball club is formally owned by Yankee Global Enterprises a holding company in turn majorly owned by the Steinbrenner family 424 Yankee Global Enterprises also has a majority stake in the YES Network the Yankees main television network 425 Since purchasing the team from CBS in 1973 George Steinbrenner was involved in daily team operations including player and manager signings 426 Steinbrenner retired from day to day team operations in 2005 handing over control to Steve Swindal his then son in law 427 Swindal was bought out in 2007 with George s son Hal Steinbrenner becoming chairman of Yankee Global Enterprises and the team s managing partner 428 George Steinbrenner citing declining health formally handed control of the team to both Hal and brother Hank in October 2007 429 George Steinbrenner died in 2010 and Hank died ten years later leaving Hal as the main managing partner 430 In 2008 the Yankees announced a joint venture with the National Football League s Dallas Cowboys to form the basis for a partnership in running food and beverage and other catering services to both teams stadiums 431 The Yankees has consistently been one of the most valuable sport teams in the world In 2013 Forbes magazine ranked New York Yankees as the fourth most valuable sports team in the world behind association football clubs Real Madrid of La Liga Manchester United of the Premier League and Barcelona of La Liga a value of 2 3 billion 432 In 2017 Forbes magazine ranked the Yankees as the second most valuable sports team at 3 7 billion behind the Dallas Cowboys up 9 from 2016 433 In 2019 Forbes magazine again ranked the Yankees as the most valuable MLB team at 4 6 billion up 15 from 2018 behind only the Dallas Cowboys 434 In 2022 the Yankees were again ranked as the second most valuable team behind the Cowboys valued at 6 billion 435 The team s value rose again in 2023 rising 17 from 2022 to 7 1 billion and keeping the Yankees as the second most valuable sports team in the world behind the Cowboys 436 Criticism With the long term success of the franchise and a large Yankee fanbase many fans of other teams have come to dislike the Yankees 437 When the Yankees are on the road it is common for the home fans to chant Yankees Suck 438 According to the opinion poll and analytics website FiveThirtyEight the Yankees were MLB s least liked team with 48 of fans expressing an unfavorable view of the team 21 Much of the animosity toward the team may derive from its high payroll and buying champions instead of developing players 439 440 Their payroll was around 200 million at the start of the 2008 season the highest of any American sports team 441 In 2005 the team s average player salary was 2 6 million with the Yankees having the five highest paid players in MLB 442 During his tenure as team owner George Steinbrenner attracted controversy for his public criticism of players and managers and for high personnel turnover 443 Manager Billy Martin was hired and fired a total of five times under Steinbrenner 205 Chicago Tribune columnist Mike Royko noted Hating the Yankees is as American as pizza pie unwed mothers and cheating on your income tax 444 Fight and theme songs nbsp The grounds crew at Yankee Stadium dancing to Y M C A The official fight song for the Yankees is Here Come the Yankees written in 1967 by Bob Bundin and Lou Stallman The song was used extensively in radio and television broadcast introductions The song however did not catch on with fans and has been rarely used past the 1990s 445 193 197 This is contrasted to other more popular fight songs such as Meet the Mets which is played at every Mets home game 446 Another song strongly linked to the team is New York New York which is played in the stadium after home games George Steinbrenner started playing the song during the 1980 season The Frank Sinatra cover version is traditionally played after victories and the Liza Minnelli original version after losses 447 448 However due to a complaint from Minnelli the Frank Sinatra version is played after home games regardless of the result 449 445 108 A wide selection of songs are played regularly at the stadium many of them live on the Stadium s Hammond organ 450 One of the popular songs is God Bless America which has been played during the seventh inning stretch since September 11 451 The version typically played for many years since 2001 was an abbreviated version of Kate Smith s rendition 452 In 2019 the Yankees stopped playing Smith s rendition to allegations of racism in some of her songs 453 The team switched to a live version by the stadium organist during the stretch in the interim 454 In 2021 the organ version was replaced by a recording of the Robert Merrill cover of the song 455 Merrill was the national anthem singer in the old Yankees Stadium for Opening Day and other special events before passing away in 1998 456 During the 5th inning the grounds crew while performing their duties dance to Y M C A Former Yankees executive Joseph Molloy said that he saw fans dancing to the song during a spring training game in the mid 1990s 457 Molloy told Steinbrenner who started to play the song at the stadium 458 Radio and televisionMain article List of New York Yankees broadcasters nbsp Announcers Michael Kay Paul O Neill Ken Singleton and Ryan Ruocco in the YES Network broadcast booth at Yankee Stadium in 2009 The Yankees Entertainment and Sports YES Network was launched in 2002 and serves as the primary home of the New York Yankees 459 As of 2022 Michael Kay is the play by play announcer with David Cone John Flaherty and Paul O Neill working as commentators as part of a three man or occasionally two man booth Bob Lorenz hosts both the pre game and the post game shows with Jack Curry and Meredith Marakovits and Nancy Newman are the on site reporters 460 Select games are available streaming only on Amazon Prime in the New York metropolitan area these games formally aired on WPIX and WWOR TV 461 Radio broadcasts are on the Yankees Radio Network the flagship station being WFAN 660 AM with Justin Shackil and Emmanuel Berbari as the play by play announcers and Suzyn Waldman providing the commentary 462 463 464 Spanish language broadcasts are on WADO 1280 AM with Rickie Ricardo calling the games 465 Past announcers Mel Allen was the team s lead announcer from 1948 to 1964 He was known as The voice of the Yankees 466 Russ Hodges had a brief stint with Mel Allen before he took over as the lead announcer with the New York Giants 467 Red Barber called Yankees games for 13 seasons from 1954 to 1966 468 Jerry Coleman called Yankees games from 1963 to 1970 Coleman was the Yankees second baseman from 1949 to 1957 469 470 Joe Garagiola called Yankees games from 1965 to 1967 471 Frank Messer Phil Rizzuto and Bill White teamed together in the 1970s and 1980s Rizzuto with 40 years in the broadcast booth was the longest serving broadcaster in the history of the club 472 Messer and White each worked nearly two decades for the Yankees 473 with White notably moving on to become president of the National League in 1989 474 Bobby Murcer also called games for over twenty years and continued with the YES Network until shortly before his death from brain cancer in 2008 475 John Sterling called Yankees games on radio from 1989 to 2024 and also hosted select team related programs on the YES Network 476 PersonnelFurther information List of New York Yankees coaches List of New York Yankees managers New York Yankees award winners and league leaders and New York Yankees team captains Active roster New York Yankees rostervte Active roster Inactive roster Coaches Other Pitchers Starting rotation 65 Nestor Cortes Jr 81 Luis Gil 55 Carlos Rodon 36 Clarke Schmidt 0 Marcus Stroman Bullpen 57 Nick Burdi 64 Caleb Ferguson 47 Victor Gonzalez 71 Ian Hamilton 53 Dennis Santana 50 Michael Tonkin 30 Luke Weaver Closer s 35 Clay Holmes Catchers 39 Jose Trevino 28 Austin Wells Infielders 19 Jon Berti 95 Oswaldo Cabrera 14 Jahmai Jones 48 Anthony Rizzo 25 Gleyber Torres 11 Anthony Volpe Outfielders 12 Trent Grisham 99 Aaron Judge 22 Juan Soto 24 Alex Verdugo Designated hitters 27 Giancarlo Stanton Pitchers 29 Clayton Beeter 54 Jake Cousins 94 Yoendrys Gomez 41 Tommy Kahnle nbsp 97 Ron Marinaccio 82 Cody Morris 72 Cody Poteet Colby White Catchers 94 Carlos Narvaez 96 Agustin Ramirez Infielders 26 DJ LeMahieu nbsp 91 Oswald Peraza nbsp 90 Jorbit Vivas Outfielders 80 Everson Pereira Manager 17 Aaron Boone Coaches 68 Brad Ausmus bench 77 Matt Blake pitching 75 Travis Chapman first base infield 79 Desi Druschel assistant pitching 78 Casey Dykes assistant hitting 60 Mike Harkey bullpen 66 Pat Roessler assistant hitting 67 Luis Rojas third base outfield 62 James Rowson hitting 76 Tanner Swanson quality control catching 60 day injured list JT Brubaker 45 Gerrit Cole 89 Jasson Dominguez 59 Scott Effross 43 Jonathan Loaisiga 56 Lou Trivino 26 active 14 inactive nbsp 7 10 or 15 day injured list Personal leaveRoster and coaches updated May 10 2024Transactions Depth chart All MLB rosters Retired numbers See also List of Major League Baseball retired numbers The Yankees have retired 22 numbers for 24 individuals the most in Major League Baseball 477 478 nbsp BillyMartin2B M Retired August 10 1986 nbsp DerekJeterSSRetired May 14 2017 nbsp BabeRuthRFRetired June 13 1948 nbsp LouGehrig1BRetired July 4 1939 nbsp JoeDiMaggioCFRetired April 18 1952 nbsp JoeTorreMRetired August 23 2014 nbsp MickeyMantleCF CoachRetired June 8 1969 nbsp BillDickeyC M CoachRetired July 22 1972 nbsp YogiBerraC M CoachRetired July 22 1972 nbsp RogerMarisRFRetired July 21 1984 nbsp PhilRizzutoSSRetired August 4 1985 nbsp ThurmanMunsonCRetired August 3 1979 nbsp WhiteyFordSP CoachRetired August 3 1974 nbsp JorgePosadaCRetired August 22 2015 nbsp PaulO NeillRFRetired August 21 2022 nbsp DonMattingly1B CoachRetired August 31 1997 nbsp ElstonHowardC CoachRetired July 21 1984 nbsp CaseyStengelMRetired August 8 1970 nbsp MarianoRiveraCPRetired September 22 2013 nbsp ReggieJacksonRFRetired August 14 1993 nbsp AndyPettitteSPRetired August 23 2015 nbsp RonGuidrySP CoachRetired August 23 2003 nbsp BernieWilliamsCFRetired May 24 2015 nbsp JackieRobinsonAll MLBHonored April 15 1997 nbsp nbsp The row of retired numbers at the old stadium top and new stadium The retired numbers were displayed behind the old Yankee Stadium s left field fence and in front of the opposing team s bullpen forming a little alley that connects Monument Park to the left field stands When the franchise moved across the street to the new stadium the numbers were incorporated into Monument Park that sits place in center field between both bullpens 479 The 21 numbers are placed on the wall in chronological order beginning with Lou Gehrig s number 4 480 This was retired soon after Gehrig left baseball on July 4 1939 the same day he gave his famous farewell speech His was the first number retired in Major League Baseball history 481 Beneath the numbers are plaques with the names of the players and a descriptive paragraph 479 The number 42 was retired throughout Major League Baseball in honor of Jackie Robinson on April 15 1997 the 50th anniversary of his breaking the color barrier The day was declared Jackie Robinson Day and was later observed by all of baseball with select players from every team wearing the number 42 482 Players who wore No 42 at the time were allowed to continue to wear it until they left the team with which they played on April 15 1997 Mariano Rivera was the last active player covered under that grandfather clause 483 In 1972 the number 8 was retired for two players on the same day in honor of catcher Bill Dickey and his protege catcher Yogi Berra Berra inherited Dickey s number in 1948 after Dickey ended his playing career and became a coach 484 The numbers 37 and 6 retired for Casey Stengel and Joe Torre respectively are the only numbers retired by the Yankees for someone who served solely as manager of the team Stengel managed the Yankees to ten pennants and seven world championships between 1949 and 1960 including a record five consecutive world championships from 1949 through 1953 485 Joe Torre managed the Yankees from 1996 to 2007 winning six pennants and four World Series championships 486 On May 14 2017 the Yankees retired number 2 in honor of Derek Jeter 487 This leaves 0 as the only single digit number available for future Yankees currently worn by pitcher Marcus Stroman Hall of Famers New York Yankees Hall of Famers Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Baltimore Orioles Roger Bresnahan 488 Joe Kelley 489 Joe McGinnity 490 John McGraw 491 Wilbert Robinson 492 New York Highlanders Jack Chesbro 493 Clark Griffith 494 Willie Keeler 495 Branch Rickey 496 New York Yankees Frank Home Run Baker 497 Ed Barrow 498 Yogi Berra 499 Wade Boggs 500 Frank Chance 501 Earle Combs 502 Stan Coveleski 503 Bobby Cox 504 Bill Dickey 505 Joe DiMaggio 506 Leo Durocher 507 Whitey Ford 508 Lou Gehrig 509 Lefty Gomez 510 Joe Gordon 511 Goose Gossage 512 Burleigh Grimes 513 Bucky Harris 514 Rickey Henderson 515 Waite Hoyt 516 Miller Huggins 517 Catfish Hunter 518 Reggie Jackson 519 Derek Jeter 520 Randy Johnson 521 Jim Kaat 522 Tony Lazzeri 523 Bob Lemon 524 Larry MacPhail 525 Lee MacPhail 526 Mickey Mantle 527 Joe McCarthy 528 Johnny Mize 529 Mike Mussina 530 Phil Niekro 531 Herb Pennock 532 Gaylord Perry 533 Tim Raines 534 Mariano Rivera 535 Phil Rizzuto 536 Ivan Rodriguez 537 Red Ruffing 538 Jacob Ruppert 539 Babe Ruth 540 Joe Sewell 541 Enos Slaughter 542 Lee Smith 543 Casey Stengel 544 Joe Torre 545 Dazzy Vance 546 Paul Waner 547 George Weiss 548 Dave Winfield 549 Players and managers listed in bold are depicted on their Hall of Fame plaques wearing a Yankees or Highlanders cap insignia denotes New York Yankees listed as primary team according to the Hall of Fame New York Yankees Ford C Frick Award recipients Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Mel Allen 550 Red Barber 551 Buck Canel 552 Jerry Coleman 553 Joe Garagiola 554 Curt Gowdy 555 Al Helfer 556 Russ Hodges 557 Tony Kubek 558 Names in bold received the award based primarily on their work as broadcasters for the Yankees Played as a YankeeRivalriesThe Yankees have multiple rivalries across the league most notably The Boston Red Sox The Yankees have also had historical rivalries with former crosstown National League teams the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants and current crosstown rivals the New York Mets The much storied Dodgers Yankees rivalry goes back to the Dodgers tenure in Brooklyn The two teams have met in the World Series 11 times including four matchups since the Dodgers relocated to Los Angeles in 1958 The Yankees also forged an unlikely rivalry with the Cleveland Guardians built by stark financial contrasts between the two teams a fatal on field death in 1920 and heated pennant races and postseason matchups in subsequent years During the late 1990s the Yankees built a rivalry with the Seattle Mariners as the two teams met in the postseason three times near the end of the decade Most recently the team has developed a rivalry with the Houston Astros fueled in part by the Houston Astros sign stealing scandal believed by some Yankee fans to have contributed to their team s loss in the 2017 ALCS 559 The two teams have met in the postseason four times since 2015 and have pursued the same free agents and shared vitriol between both fanbases Boston Red Sox Main article Yankees Red Sox rivalry The Yankees Red Sox rivalry is one of the oldest most famous and fiercest rivalries in professional sports 560 561 562 The inaugural game between the two teams occurred more than 100 years ago in 1903 when the Yankees then known as the Highlanders hosted the Red Sox then named the Americans at Hilltop Park 563 One of the major aspects of the rivalry is the Curse of the Bambino where Babe Ruth was traded to the Yankees in 1920 564 Following the trade the Red Sox did not win a World Series for 86 years until 2004 565 The rivalry is sometimes so polarizing that it is often a heated subject especially in the Northeastern United States 566 567 Since the inception of the wild card team and an added Division Series the rivals have met in the playoffs five times with the Yankees winning the 1999 and 2003 American League Championship Series and the Red Sox winning in the 2004 American League Championship Series 2018 American League Division Series and the 2021 American League Wild Card Game 568 569 In addition the teams have twice met in the last regular season series of a season to decide the AL pennant in 1904 when the Red Sox won and 1949 when the Yankees won 568 Games between the two teams are often broadcast on national television and often yield high television ratings 570 571 The teams also finished tied for first in 1978 when the Yankees won a high profile tie breaker playoff for the AL East division title 572 The 1978 division race is memorable for the Red Sox having held a 14 game lead over the Yankees more than halfway through the season 573 Similarly the 2004 ALCS is notable for the Yankees leading 3 games to 0 and ultimately losing the next four games and the series 574 The Red Sox comeback was the only time in MLB history that a team has come back from a 0 3 deficit to win a postseason series 575 Subway Series For the current rivalry see Subway Series and Mets Yankees rivalry For previous teams see Dodgers Yankees rivalry and Giants Yankees rivalry The Subway Series is a series of games played between teams based in New York City The name originates from the New York City Subway and the accessibility of the each team s stadium within the subway system 576 Historically the term Subway Series referred to games played between the Yankees and either the New York Giants or the Brooklyn Dodgers 577 When the Dodgers and Giants moved to California in the late 1950s the New York Mets were established as an expansion team in 1962 578 The term s historic usage has been in reference to World Series games played between New York teams The Yankees have appeared in all Subway Series games as they have been the only American League team in the city and have compiled an 11 3 record in the 14 championship Subway Series 579 The most recent World Series between the two New York teams was in 2000 when the Yankees defeated the Mets in five games 580 Since 1997 the term Subway Series has also been applied to interleague play during the regular season between the Yankees and National League New York Mets 581 Minor league affiliationsMain article List of New York Yankees minor league affiliates The New York Yankees farm system consists of six minor league affiliates 582 Class Team League Location Ballpark Affiliated Triple A Scranton Wilkes Barre RailRiders International League Moosic Pennsylvania PNC Field 2007 Double A Somerset Patriots Eastern League Bridgewater Township New Jersey TD Bank Ballpark 2021 High A Hudson Valley Renegades South Atlantic League Wappingers Falls New York Heritage Financial Park 2021 Single A Tampa Tarpons Florida State League Tampa Florida George M Steinbrenner Field 1994 Rookie FCL Yankees Florida Complex League Tampa Florida George M Steinbrenner Field 1980 DSL Yankees Dominican Summer League Boca Chica Santo Domingo New York Yankees Complex 1994See alsoList of World Series champions List of New York Yankees managersNotes Although the history of the New York Yankees can be traced back to the 1901 1902 Baltimore Orioles the Orioles team is considered a separate team by Baseball Reference com 7 official Major League Baseball historian John Thorn 8 and the official Yankees history 6 The Polo Grounds were actually four different stadiums 52 the stadiums mentioned in this article are Polo Grounds III and IV ReferencesCitations a b c d Hoch Bryan February 4 2021 NYPD amp Tiffany The story behind Yanks logo MLB Advanced Media Retrieved October 21 2022 The interlocking NY of the Yankees logo is arguably the most recognizable in all of professional sports spotted on streets from The Bronx to Beijing Manhattan to Melbourne Their navy blue and white caps have transcended baseball becoming a global cultural touchstone Hoch Bryan April 22 2021 Yankees making Stadium greener than ever Yankees com MLB Advanced Media Retrieved October 22 2023 The official colors of the Yankees uniforms are midnight navy and white but thanks to the sustainability initiatives incorporated by the organization over the past several seasons Yankee Stadium has become one of the greenest facilities in the Majors Schoenfield David March 28 2018 The Evil Empire Strikes Back Why the Yankees being good is great for baseball ESPN Retrieved February 27 2023 Yankees Front Office Yankees com MLB Advanced Media Retrieved October 17 2022 Kepner Tyler September 29 2007 Steinbrenner Son Elected Chairman of Yankees The New York Times Archived from the original on June 5 2015 Retrieved July 4 2022 a b c Yankees Timeline 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