Tuesday, December 28, 2021

"I don't know exactly how I'm going to report this while doing a ballgame, but I'll try..." John Sterling announces a turning point in Yankee history, the suspension of George Steinbrenner

This popped up recently on Reddit. I'm appropriating it to add historical context. 

This is arguably the most important moment in modern Yankee history, and it's captured by a young(ish) John Sterling in real time during a game.

The date is July 30, 1990, and the Yankees - under Bucky Dent and Stump Merrill - are destined to finish 7th in the AL with 95 losses. They are already 15 games out and facing mighty Detroit, with Alan Trammel, Travis Fryman and Chet Lemon. It's the bottom of the fourth, 1-to-nothing, and Dave LaPoint is starting for the Yankees. (I suspect it predates his famous "La Lob.") Cecil Fielder is batting for the Tigers. 

The news comes over the wire, and John is flat-out stunned. The Commissioner of Baseball has suspended the owner of the Yankees for his illegal political contributions. His broadcast partner, Jay Johnson, can only say, "Wow."

"George Steinbrenner - the pitch to Fielder is down low, isn't this amazing? - but it is that George Steinbrenner will step down as the managing general partner and stay on as a limited partner."

Folks, this is the Yankee Big Bang, Noah's flood, the asteroid that kills off the dinosaurs...  

Caught red-handed, Steinbrenner is about to disappear for a few years, turning the franchise over to Stick Michael, Dallas Green, Bob Watson and people who actually know the game of baseball. 

This is the moment when everything changes, when future Yankee championships take shape. Without this moment - this action by Fay Vincent - there might be no Core Four, no Canyon of Heroes, no Torre, no late 90s resurgence. 

Of course, it's punctuated with a blast, called by John without a homer-holler or even an IT IS HIGH...

"And this ball is way gone... a humungus home run by Cecil Fielder!"

Close your eyes and listen. This is golden. 

7 comments:

JM said...

Pretty amazing. Now if only something could be done about Hal and Cashman. What kind of scandal will it take if the Kinky Boots didn't get rid of the first, and exactly what was Cashman's relationship with his stalker? Enquiring minds want to know.

AboveAverage said...

How about . . . the discovery of a secret subterranean sex salon and batting cage, located many hundreds of feet beneath Yankee stadium. Overseen for decades by Steve Donohue - this ultra posh club was sanctioned by Cash and the Steinbrenner boys and often featured off-beat and unusual themes that all staff and visiting vips would participate in - like dressing up as Teletubbies or past presidents, or playing popular board games from the sixties as they received their, "THERE IT GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOES!" round tripper.

Can anybody say . . .fidelio?

HoraceClarke66 said...

It is amazing, thanks, Duque.

BUT...I believe that Dallas Green had already come and gone by 1990 (which was not a bad thing). No pushing into the holy trinity of Stick, Buck, and Bob.

Doug K. said...

Above,

Nice try but sadly we pretty much live in a post-shame world so I'm afraid no scandal would be big enough to take Hal out. While GM's and assistant GM's can be fired owners are pretty much untouchable.

Gambling - forgiven especially with Fan Duel an official partner of MLB.

Prostitution - Didn't take Robert Kraft out.

Abusing female employees - Last time I checked Dan Snyder was doing just fine.

Racism - Robert Sarver, who owns the Phoenix Suns still hanging in there.

Sigh.

EricRossNJ said...

"...illegal political contributions..."

Nope, that was back in 1974. This was for the Dave Winfield / Howard Spira affair:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Spira

Stang said...

A great moment in Yankees radio. The thought that the Boss might be banned forever must have been very frightening for people.

HoraceClarke66 said...

Even if HAL did go down for some terrible offense—I think it would have to be a blatant, public murder nowadays, though I guess not in the state of Wisconsin—one of the other Steinbrenner brood would just take over.

It's too late, we've let them spawn!