Retired Numbers
Jim Rice's number 14 was retired by the Boston Red Sox in 2009. |
There are eight retired numbers above the right field grandstand. All of the numbers retired by the Red Sox are red on a white circle. Jackie Robinson's 42, which was retired by Major League Baseball, is blue on a white circle. The two are further delineated through the font difference; Boston numbers are in the same style as the Red Sox jerseys, while Robinson's number is in the more traditional "block" numbering found on the Dodgers jerseys.
Until the late 1990s, the numbers originally hung on the right-field facade in the order in which they were retired: 9-4-1-8. It was pointed out that the numbers, when read as a date (9/4/18), marked the eve of the first game of the 1918 World Series, the last championship series that the Red Sox won before 2004. After the facade was repainted, the numbers were rearranged in numerical order. The numbers remained in numerical order until the 2012 season, when the numbers were quietly rearranged back into the order in which they were retired by the Red Sox.
The Red Sox policy on retiring uniform numbers was once one of the most stringent in baseball—the player had to be elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame, play at least 10 years with the team, and retire as a member of the Red Sox. The final requirement was waived for Carlton Fisk as he had finished his playing career with the Chicago White Sox. However, Fisk was assigned a Red Sox front office job and effectively "finished" his baseball career with the Red Sox in this manner. In 2008, the ownership relaxed the requirements further with the retirement of Johnny Pesky's number 6. Pesky has not been inducted into the Hall of Fame, but in light of his over fifty years of service to the club, the management made an exception. Pesky would have had 10 seasons, but he was credited with the three seasons he served as an Operations Officer in the U.S. Navy during WWII. The most recent number retired was 14, worn by Jim Rice.
Red Sox retired numbers | |||||
Number | Player | Position | Red Sox Years | Date Retired | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bobby Doerr | 2B | 1937–44, 46–51 | May 21, 1988 | US Army, 1945 |
4 | Joe Cronin | SS | 1935–45 | May 29, 1984 | Player-Manager |
6 | Johnny Pesky | SS, 3B, 2B | 1942, 46–52 | September 28, 2008 | US Navy, 1943–45 |
8 | Carl Yastrzemski | LF, 3B, 1B | 1961–83 | August 6, 1989 | |
9 | Ted Williams | LF | 1939–42, 46–60 | May 29, 1984 | US Marines, 1943–45, 52–53 |
14 | Jim Rice | LF | 1974–89 | July 28, 2009 | |
27 | Carlton Fisk | C | 1969, 71–80 | September 4, 2000 | |
42 | Jackie Robinson | Brooklyn Dodgers 1947-1956, retired by Major League Baseball April 15, 1997 |
Read more about this topic: Fenway Park
Famous quotes containing the words retired and/or numbers:
“I am convinced that the best service a retired general can perform is to turn in his tongue along with his suit, and to mothball his opinions.”
—Omar Bradley (18931981)
“The barriers of conventionality have been raised so high, and so strangely cemented by long existence, that the only hope of overthrowing them exists in the union of numbers linked together by common opinion and effort ... the united watchword of thousands would strike at the foundation of the false system and annihilate it.”
—Mme. Ellen Louise Demorest 18241898, U.S. womens magazine editor and womans club movement pioneer. Demorests Illustrated Monthly and Mirror of Fashions, p. 203 (January 1870)