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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Yankees76 (talk | contribs) at 18:39, 23 October 2006 (+GA article nomination). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Notion to protect this page from IP addresses

I understand that anyone and everyone can edit Wikipedia, but the majority of vandalism on this page comes from IP addresses and it's annoying as hell. Granted, there are some good contributions from IP's, but if those people really wanted to keep contributing then they would register for a username, a process that takes a mere 45 seconds.

Support. Per nom. --Sportskido8 10:22 EST, 25 August 2006

Steinbrenner vs. Mr. October???

Correct me if I am wrong, but wasn't Steinbrenner usually with Reggie???? It wasn't until his 2nd to last season Steinbrenner started showing any anger.... I think the statement that they feuded during Reggie's entire Yankee career is fraudulant. Reggie feuded with Billy Martin. Steinbrenner really feuded with Yogi Berra.

We need pictures

Eh...I'll try and find some free pictures from other articles or something. If anyone can find some legal ones please add them. --Sportskido8 12:42 EST, 22 August 2006

Famous fans?

Maybe it's just me, but I really don't think this article needs a famous fans section, ESPECIALLY if it contains Christina Aguilera and Carson Daly. Maybe it can go in its own separate article, just like all universities list "famous alumni" in a separate article. --Sportskido8 10:05 EST, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

Agree 100%. I've discussed this below. Yankees76 17:32, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I like it and I'm adding it back. It's informative and fits perfectly within the section on fan support, as long as it doesn't get TOO big.-66.254.235.231 19:18, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Can you please add it back in prose form because in a list it just looks bad. --Sportskido8 15:32 EST, 22 August 2006
Don't take it out. It's just fine the way it is (or was) so just leave it. Patsyanks06 14:16, 7 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Retired Numbers

I really think retired numbers looks better with last names only, and that's why I originally made it that way. Any thoughts on this? Sportskido8 1:33 EST, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

Yankee records, please fill in player names

And the number of homers, etc. Bona Fides 13:52, 11 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

i don't have time to do it, but feel free to do it yourself. here is a reliable reference. Kingturtle 14:09, 11 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Featured Article Attempt #2 - Another Failure

Guys, I think this article is ready for another nomination. It's been cleaned up extensively since I first put it up for consideration like a month ago. If anything needs to be changed, anything, then do it ASAP. ---Sportskido8 16:15, August 3rd, 2006 (UTC)

Yeah, I don't think this will ever be featured. The people who decide this are too picky. We can definitely do away with Quick Facts though, as a start. And can somebody add more references? I don't know where to even look because I didn't write a lot of this. Oh, and splitting the table might be a good idea too. ---Sportskido8 10:54, August 7, 2006 (UTC)

Article Length

This article, while very informative and helpful is around 84 KB long. That was one of the criticisms of the FA-analysis but I'm not sure how much we can cut out of it. I personally don't have a problem with its length because it's the Yankees and there should be a lot written about them. Any ideas? ---Sportskido8 13:35, July 24, 2006 (UTC)

Training Staff

I'm opening this discussion based on my belief that the training staff is a vital role to each organization. Considering people like Gene Monohan actually do sit in the dugout its seems only right that they may be included on this page concerning the Yankees. What do you all think?--Djramey 14:16, 20 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

New Stadium

Someone should update this page with the information about the new stadium. The team is planning to build a new stadium at the site of the city park next door. In return for this land the team plans to tear down the old stadium and make that into city park land. All the governmental approvals have yet to be gotten. The plan is to have government puick up the costs of infrastructure improvements on land adjacent to the new stadium while the team would pick up all the direct construction costs of the stadium proper. No mention is been made in news reports as to the cost to tearing down and making the old stadium into city park land. John wesley 21:06, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Controversy

I'm not sure this is as much a controversy as a simple debate. The Yankees have broken no apparent rules in their spending, and are simply recreating their brand with stars that may or may not be more expensive than others. Having to ultimately pay a luxury tax does not mean the Yankees have broken any guidelines. It is not the Luxury Penalty, it's a Tax.

Further, this page could be listed on a few other teams, but seems to only get mentioned with the Yankees.

Let's recreate this section and talk about it objectively. Start first with a new section head, something along the lines of Luxury Debate.--Djramey 17:57, 6 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The way I see it, the author of this section is looking at it objectively...even listing pros and cons...The Yankees pay the highest salary by far, thus why it is only listed for the Yanks,

Met's spending

The previous version was ungrammatical. This is the argument of the Pro section, so a point of view is acceptable. I didn't make up the argument that Fred Wilpon doesn't spend as much as he should and could - that's been suggested by Allen Barra, a nationally syndicated sports columist in this article: http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0421,essay,53773,1.html. There's nothing wrong with including that view in this section.~GZ 11/8/05

Yes, the Yankees and Mets share the same market. The Yankees, in terms of championships, are more successful, contrasted to the Mets, so the Mets are "less successful" in that regard. "Could spend at the same level if their owner so chose"? ANY owner (of a team in any market) if s/he so chose, could spend at that level. Main article edited with some compromise. -- Win777 03:22, 9 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]
That's not true. Small market teams don't have access to the same revenue streams - TV rights, attendance, etc. The Mets are in the same huge market as the Yankees. I'm going to make a further compromise.~GZ 11/9/05

I didn't say that people could reasonably spend at that level and still have money. Anyone could spend outrageously like the Yankees. Whether they have the money (or not) or are in the red (or not) are other issues.

How about the Met bit in that section is eliminated entirely? The "For" is for the Yankees' spending practices, and I don't see how the Mets are involved, other than sharing the market. "New York, as the largest market with the highest revenues, should spend in accordance with their vast resources." covers how the Yankees are able to spend like they do. The section is pro-Yankees and their spending practices; seemingly randomly "it has also been argued that the New York Mets" shows up. The part is about pro-Yankees spending and not pro-Mets'. "New York" encompasses both teams. -- Win777 22:51, 9 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Obviously, some clubs could bankrupt themselves by spending money they don't have. No one is suggesting that they do so. This is how the Mets are relevant, as I see it: using them as an example points out that in some regards the Yankees higher spending is a virtue, because other clubs could afford to spend as much as the Yankees do (and still be profitable) but for whatever reason they choose not to. It reflects Steinbrenner's commitment to winning, which is what you want out of an owner. Read the Allen Barra article - I think he makes a strong case. I'm reverting for now.



Many teams COULD spend that much, doesn't Paul Allen own the Mariners????? Ted Turner with the Braves?????? Those are just two examples, Paul Allen has WAY more money than Steinbrenner, Ted Turner too. You are kidding yourself if you don't think these Billionaire owners can't shell out some coin for talent, the truth is they like being a "small-market team" so the owner doesn't have to spend much, and the Yankees, BoSox, ChiSox, and Mets, pay all the bills for them.

Missing Section on 1930s and 40s, DiMaggio

I was wondering why there is no mention in this article of the Yankee teams of the 30s and 40s. Instead, it simply skips from "First Successes," which ends with Ruth's 'Called Shot', to "The 50s and 60s", completely bypassing a significant two decade span in Yankees' history when the Yankees continued to dominate the league and fielded some of the greatest teams in Yankee and baseball history. Perhaps most egregious, there is no mention of Joe DiMaggio. I strongly urge someone, if they have the time, to commence work on a section detailing the history of the Yankees from 1932 up to 1950. Such a section is urgently needed here. --Brian Brockmeyer 23:12, 2 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

I've taken a shot at it. It might be too long on POV and too short on facts, but it's a start. Feel free to improve and polish. I kind of like the notion of separating the team into distinctive "eras", provided they make reasonable sense. A 1961 book about the history of the World Series defines the Series eras in a way that almost parallel the Yankees specifically as of that point: The Early Struggles, The Babe Ruth Period, Through Depression and War, and The Casey Stengel Era. Another more truthful but less interesting approach would be to define the eras (the winning ones, at least) by Ed Barrow, George Weiss and George Steinbrenner, the personnel movers-and-shakers. Whatever. d:) Wahkeenah 05:47, 3 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Excellent work. You've linked the Ruth/Gehrig Era to the DiMaggio Era and up to the dawning of Mantle's Yankees quite nicely. I think you've hit it out of the park with this section.--Brian Brockmeyer 06:31, 3 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Origins

Someone commented "What happened to NPOV?" I've read this and the other revisions, and can't decide whether its too pro or too anti Yankees (and I know which side the authors loyalties lie.) Whats up with it, exactly?

There were several points where there was plenty of opinion, e.g. "... well-paid asses ..." "... a team with heart, ... no heritage ... "


Good call on those. You're right. GWO

"... restored that team to brilliance ..." Also, the word "dominance" seemed to me to be awfully strong. Feel free to edit that back if you feel otherwise. -- Taral

Much as it pains me, I think "brilliance" and "dominance" does fairly describe some periods of their existence... GWO

Excuse me...what's the source for their having started in MINNEAPOLIS? As I understand it,the Yanks were originally the Indianapolis farm team of the Cincinnati Reds,and moved from there to Baltimore. Louis Epstein/le@put.com/12.144.5.2

Trying to track down anything about possible origins Minneapolis, I haven't found anything. Yes the Western League had a team there, but I've seen no evidence so far that that team was moved to Baltimore. -- rbs, 2004-02-09 01:32 UTC
After more reading today, I can't see that the Western League's Minneapolis team became the Orioles/Yankees. A check of the player roster for the 1901 Baltimore Orioles (baseball-reference.com) shows no overlap with the Minneapolis Millers of 1900. Most of the Orioles seemed to have been raided from National League teams (no surprise). Also, a biography of Ban Johnson in the Journal of Sports History simply indicates that the five-year Western League Agreement expired at the end of 1900 and the league simply re-organized, dropping three teams and adding three. Then again (opening a new can of worms) it may be fair to say that the Highlanders of 1903 were not the Orioles of 1901-1902; I could see some sense in arguing that one team simply ceased to exist at the same time as another was established. - Rbs 00:12, 2004 Mar 6 (UTC)

removal of hyperbole

The article claimed that 26 Championships in 80 years was unchallenged in U.S. sports. Well, the Celtics won 16 championships in 30 years. That is a better rate. Rather than leave the issue up for debate, I removed the claim from the artlce. Kingturtle 09:05, 8 Feb 2004 (UTC)

Andy's Hawkin's Losing No-Hitter

More information is available at the following Retrosheet URL: http://retrosheet.org/boxesetc/B07010CHA1990.htm. The runs were scored in the top of the 8th on three errors and a walk. colinjohnson 01:00, 17 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Apiece

Are people incapable of using a dictionary?

  apiece
      adv : to or from every one of two or more (considered
            individually); "they received $10 each" [syn: {each}, {to
            each one}, {for each one}, {from each one}]

FFS . . . Varitek 19:22, 25 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Curse of Clay Bellinger

According to the VfD debate for Curse of Clay Bellinger that article should be merged somewhere here. Here is the complete text, I have redirected that page to this one for the time being, an someone please do the merge in the appropriate place? Many thanks. -- Graham ☺ | Talk 12:51, 13 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Added a discussion of theories for the Yankees' lack of world series titles since 2000 to 21st century section, including the "Curse". Will move biographical details for Bellinger to his page User:erall 08:28, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC).

The Curse of Clay Bellinger is a tongue-in-cheek explanation proposed by sportswriter Larry Mahnken for the New York Yankees' failure to win the World Series since 2000. By analogy with the Curse of the Bambino, Mahnken points to the departure of utility player Clay Bellinger from the Yankee roster following the 2001 season and asserts that the Yankees will never again win the World Series until either they make amends to Bellinger or they win the championship anyway. The tautology is part of the joke.

Bellinger, meanwhile, played for the Greek baseball team in the 2004 Olympics. Bellinger is an American born with Greek grandparents, like most of the rest of the team.

ALS

Does anyone have information about ALS (Lou Gherig's Disease???)

See ALS, or http://www.als-ma.org/curtspitch/ for Curt (Schilling)'s Pitch For ALS.. (this explains the silver "K ALS" on his boot during the Literal Red Sock games in the ALCS/WS, for those who may have wondered) -Rethcir 04:28, Jan 5, 2005 (UTC)

Retired numbers and Mariano Rivera

I know that Mariano Rivera is the last major leaguer to wear number 42, because of the grandfather clause that allows him to continue to wear it even though it is retired on all teams to honor Jackie Robinson, but what if, in the future the Yankees decide that Mariano's career was distinguished enough that he deserves to have his number retired? Would we have a situation like Yogi Berra and Bill Dickey where 2 players have the same number retired? Rogerd 17:08, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Other players on the Yankee roster that will have their number retired as a NYY include Derek Jeter (2), Bernie Williams (51), and Rivera (42). --Djramey 13:27, 7 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'd say O'Niell's (21) is likely to be retired as well. He represents a significant period in Yankee history.

This is possible, but in 17 years in the Majors I think O'Neill only played 7-8 with NY. All of which included those run of WS titles and a batting championship. But you are probably right he has a good shot at it. And he is still working for the organization with YES so that doesn't hurt.--Djramey 13:34, 10 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think retiring O'Neill's number is justified. The only one I can see being added to Jeter, Rivera and Williams would be Torre, but I think they'll need to win a couple more on his watch first.
Interestingly, if that were to happen, the Yankees would have run out of single-digit numbers. --Chancemichaels 19:37, 4 April 2006 (UTC)Chancemichaels[reply]
I doubt O'Neill gets his number retired, but who knows? My buddies and I were discussing it and one thing that I thought was interesting was that if O'Neill was to have his number retired, his 9 years as a Yankee would be third least, behind Marris (7 years) and Jackson (5 years). If, and it's a big "IF", ARod finishes his career in pinstripes, you add his to the list of guys who will have their number retired. AriGold 20:21, 4 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'd say no for O'Neill too. Yes for Jeter, yes for Bernie and yes for Rivera. At least 2 of those guys are going to the HOF too. But if we start retiring numbers of marginal players like O'Neill, we have to start looking at guys like Tino Martinez, Scotty Brosius and Andy Pettitte - and that's never going to happen. If Red Ruffing, Goose Gossage, Bob Meusel, Bobby Richardson, Graig Nettles and Willie Randolph don't have their numbers retired, why should O'Neill's be? Being popular, winning the World Series and earning one batting title isn't enough in my opinion. If you look at all the retired Yankees numbers, they're either HOFers, hold Yankee records (Mattingly), won an MVP, or died tragically (Munson, Martin). O'Neill, aside from being a popular player, did none of the above. Heck of a player though. Yankees76 21:10, 4 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think O'Neill's number should be retired. Personally, I don't think Mattingly's number should have been retired. I think making the Baseball HoF ought to be a minimum requirement for players, and if they can't make the Hall they should have singular achievements in some way (such as Maris). --Chancemichaels 14:34, 7 April 2006 (UTC)Chancemichaels[reply]

Current Lineups

Are you kidding me? Current lineups complete with 15-day dl? How about we just link to an external source instead?

  • If people want to keep it up to date, there's nothing wrong with it. Kingturtle 23:25, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC)
  • Some of these team sites are nurtured and fed by their fans like they were newborn chicks: not just with the rosters, but with current won-lost record, a running commentary on the flow of the current season, etc. Since it's only baseball, not brain surgery, I don't see any harm. But if it gets to the point where fans start posting the pitch-by-pitch of today's game, you might want to draw the line. I'm sure the wikipedia folks have some upper bound on disk space. Wahkeenah 17:52, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
  • It would be a bit clunky to have a user go to an extrenal source for a player roster, then search wiki for that player's page. But maybe a "current as of ..." would be a good idea but I don't know if it would go with the wiki style. jackalsclaw 14:53. 12 Dec 2005 (UTC)
  • I could keep it up to date. If someone lays the format out on the page for right now, I would have no problem. This is kind of what I do for a career - following the Yankees that is. It wouldn't really be any trouble especially for this team. I say we just keep the 25-man roster as the 40-man would in fact be very difficult to keep track of.--Djramey 13:39, 10 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"Sucky" etc.

I've been skeptical of these entries I've seen seeing, that various American League teams derived from obscure teams in the Western League. The White Sox entry says they originated in St. Paul, which squares with my understanding, but I'm not so sure about others, like the Red Sox and the Orioles-Yankees. More research is needed. It's like saying the Boston-Milwaukee-Atlanta Braves began as the Cincinnati Red Stockings: somewhat yes, somewhat no. However, there is no question that the Yankees began as the 1901-02 Orioles.

The problem I have with embittered Yankees fans describing their team as "sucky" is that there is a lack of a standard for what constitutes "sucky". The Yanks are just a few games below .500, which may be "sucky" for them, but would be pretty good if you were a fan of a team that other teams feast upon, such as the Kansas City Royales With Cheese or the Tampa Bay Devils Food Cakes. So a specific won-lost record can't be described as "sucky" by itself, but only in relation to expectations. It sounds like some SABRmetrician needs to come up with a "suckiness index" to objectively determine whether a given team at a given time is "sucky" or is merely playing at its natural level.

d:) Wahkeenah 17:40, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Main Rivals?

Do we even need to list "main rivals"? I've never seen listings anywhere on MLB.com about teams and having main rivals. Rivalries are mainly for the fans. Some of the rivals listed in Wikipedia are not even in the same league (AL/NL) as the Yankees. Since there are no "official" listings, the main rivals in the article are from a person's/fan's point of view and opinion. The section was started by a guest.

"Main Rivals: Boston Red Sox, Baltimore Orioles, Los Angeles Dodgers, and the New York Mets mostly, and every other team in baseball in general."

I don't quite get why that anonymous user keeps posting this "main rivals" stuff. I'm not sure if it's sincerity, ignorance or vandalism. It's certainly not objective. Wahkeenah 9 July 2005 01:24 (UTC)

Thankfully another enterprising user has expunged all or most of that junk from the various baseball pages. There are a few links to specific rivalries, and that seems fine. Wahkeenah 23:04, 19 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

FYI I removed the Mets as a traditional rival. Sorry but I think to qualify as a traditional rival you have to play them more than once in the World Series. Expansion teams can't be traditional rivals to original teams. After the Red Sox, the Dodgers have the most history with the Yankees. Yankees76 00:06, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

They do play them in interleague play, but I agree with you. I'd be all for removing talk of "traditional" rivals altogether and just mentioning the Red Sox rivalry someplace. —Cleared as filed. 00:10, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I agree. One series and a handful of meaningless interleague games does not a traditional rival make. The Blue Jays are bigger rivals than the Mets, and I think we'll see that this season. Yankees76 21:14, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The mention of rivals without sources should be stricken altogether IMHO. I'd want to see things like elevated attendance numbers, write-ups from notable sources, etc. My first reaction to your statement about the Blue Jays is "huh?!" What's the source for that assertion? Proof of a Mets rivalry could have been found in the past with the Clemens/Piazza/Estes beanballing/bat-throwing... A Blue Jays rivalry?! I think a poll of fans would go a long way to asserting rivalries - and I'd bet the Blue Jays would be higher-than-average at best. —Wknight94 (talk) 22:22, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Poll of who's fans? Jays or Yankees? You have to look at it from more than just a Yankee perspective. Since the Tigers left the AL East, the Blue Jays chief rivals have been the Yankees and the Sox. Did you think Blue Jays fans come to see them play Devil Rays or Orioles? The Yankees-Mets rivalry is a recent thing. Yankees fans in 1992 could have cared less about the Mets, and will care about the same 5 years from now. Yankees76 23:52, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Poll of both fans actually. Most teams - and most baseball fans for that matter - have a special place in their hearts for the Yankees - whether it's a happy place or an angry place. That doesn't mean the Yankees have a rivalry with all of them. And the bottom line is that we can't even agree with each other, therefore it's not NPOV and shouldn't be in the article. —Wknight94 (talk) 00:01, 25 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What's there to agree about? You're a Mets fan trying to stick the Mets in a Yankees article. I had no plans of adding anything Blue Jays. Just making a point that teams in the AL East have more of a rivalry with the Yanks than a team that's not even in the same league and barely plays them does. Other than Steinbrenner's obsession with outspending the Mets in the offseason, the 2000 World Series, and a few underwhelming interleague games, there's nothing to talk about. BTW check any Toronto newspaper and you'll find out who the writers there consider to be the teams rivals. I'll give you a hint - it's not the Indians. Yankees76 04:44, 25 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Huh? I'm not trying to stick the Mets in any article. Check my edits - you'll see I never put the Mets in this article and I never would. My point is you'll find the writers in almost every A.L. city consider the Yankees to be their team's rivals. I'm in Tampa Bay now and the Yanks even get extra press here! That doesn't mean you should list every A.L. team as rivals in this article. What makes Toronto special? Take a poll of which team Yankees fans think is the Yankees' rivals - you'd get 1.) Boston, 2.) Toronto?! I don't think so. I don't know who #2 would be but I highly doubt it would be Toronto. I lived in NY for 30 years and I never remember Toronto getting more press than any other team there - even when the Jays were back-to-back World Champs. But don't look for some hidden agenda on my part - I'm just saying the wild speculation in this Talk page about Toronto vs. Baltimore vs. the Mets has no business making it into this article since no one has more proof of a rivalry than any other. —Wknight94 (talk) 13:08, 25 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
For those of use who have been following baseball for longer than just since 2000, we know that he Jays and Yankees play each other as many times as the Yanks play the Sox. The Toronto Blue Jays and their fans consider the Yankees, Red Sox and to a lesser extent Tigers as their biggest rivals. That's my point. Ask JP Riccardi who his teams rivals are. He'll say, Yanks and Sox. Why? Because they're AL EAST RIVALS. After the obvious Red Sox, the Yankees have a few other teams they battle for a playoff spot with (hint: check what teams the Yankees play most often during the season - there are 4 of them - that's why the D-Rays writers give the Yankees press). When the Blue Jays knock the Red Sox out of the playoffs this year, you'll see what I'm talking about. No they don't belong in the article yet - but neither do the Mets. Yankees76 01:36, 26 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Did I call that or what? Jays in second - Boston in third!Yankees76 03:18, 26 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Agreed. For the record, I never said the Mets do belong in the article. I'm just commenting on the fact that the whole concept is barely encyclopedic and I'd almost vote to remove even the Red Sox, except that they've been widely documented as rivals. —Wknight94 (talk) 02:49, 26 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

'Traditional' Rivals?

Quickly, why are we continuing to put the the word "traditional" when it comes to describing the rivalry with the Red Sox? I've removed it and yet it's been re-added. Even a casual Yankees fan will know that the Yankees traditional rivals were the New York Giants. Review Lou Gehrigs 'Luckiest Man' speech. It's not the Red Sox he mentions (When the New York Giants, a team you would give your right arm to beat, and vice versa ...). In fact the first real 'moment' (outside of the final series of 1949) of the rivalry after the sale of Babe Ruth didn't really occur until May 20, 1976 with the Fisk-Pinella altercation. That really kicked off the rivalry we know today. I'd go so far as to content that The Sox traditional rival were the Boston Braves. Just pointing this out, but please stop reverting changes w/out discussing first. Yankees76 20:03, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

How are you defining "traditional"? From 1941 to 1981, the Yankees played the Dodgers eleven times compared to the Giants only twice. With all of the Podres/Koufax/Snider/Ford/Mantle/Reggie/etc. matchups, I'd consider that to be more of a traditional rivalry personally. —Wknight94 (talk) 20:22, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
True. I guess traditional could be the same as 'original'? Or 'classic'? I guess they (the Dodgers and Giants) should be considered for addition as they've met what, 17 times combined against the Yankees in the world series? The Red Sox rivalry tends to make us overlook some of the old-time rivalries that were just as fierce. Yankees76 21:10, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think it's as simple as "if you can find good sources, you can add it to the article". Sounds like it might be an interesting paragraph or two all by itself if it can be sourced well enough. I'd be interested to see if someone could find info on a supposed Boston-Boston rivalry (like you contend) considering the two never played each other. (Almost did one year - I don't recall which - but someone spoiled it by winning the pennant in the last week or so). —Wknight94 (talk) 21:46, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Nope they never played. I suppose that rivalry was more from the standpoint of playing in the same city - competing for fan loyalty and money - and it forced one team right out of town. Yankees76 22:47, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"New York, New York"

While it made for great bar conversation on Friday night, I'm still pondering this on Monday morning. Does anyone know when "Theme From New York, New York" was first played regularly after Yankee home games?

According to Tony Morante, the team began using Liza Minelli's version in 1976, and Frank Sinatra's in 1977. Huge thanks to Mr. Morante for the timely info.felix142 September 12, 2005
Has it always been "Reward the fans with Frank when we win, punish them with Liza when we lose?"  ;-) --Chancemichaels 14:48, 7 April 2006 (UTC)Chancemichaels[reply]

Haha. I am not sure how long they have been doing that. But there is nothing worse than leaving the stadium dissapointed and not hearing Sinatra makes it all worse. 68.192.78.133 01:39, 26 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"Payroll"

I have put together some estimates for the 2006 yankee's payroll (Around 181 million), does anyone know where this might go? I put it here for now New York Yankees Payroll. please tell me what you think.Jackalsclaw 09:12, 26 December 2005 (UTC)(sorry this was unsigned for a while,I think my log in timed out and I didn't notice"[reply]

This is likely very good information for the page, but I wonder if maybe it should be retitled to reflect the payroll for the MLB team, and how accuratly we can judge that. Any ideas? --Djramey 13:12, 30 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I will state I am a Red Sox fan, but I think it is important that the Yankees' entry mentions their significant spending advantage compared to other MLB teams. Yes, I understand that there is a luxury tax, and I do not presume to imply that the Yankees have broken any MLB rules by spending more than other teams. However, I think it is folly to *not* mention their spending in light of their success as a team; indeed as a team with a barely-effective farm system their ability to pay players well contributes significantly to their success.

The Red Sox are also benefited by being a big-market team, and as such I think their salaries are the 2nd-highest in baseball. ESPN.com lists the Yankees' payroll at $198m, Red Sox second with $120m. Page is here: http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/teams/salaries?team=nyy Chris 19:54, 2 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Current Notable Players with Minor league Contracts

Please let us know if Tino Martinez is there


By "there" I am making the assumption that this poster is refering to one of the Yankee Minor League teams. If my assumption is correct, than the answer is no. And here is the reason: When Tino Martinez was signed by the New York Yankees for his second time, its was under the terms of 1 year and a club option of around US$3 Million for a second year. On November 8, 2005 the ball club declined the option thus making Tino Martinez a free agent post haste. --Djramey 13:48, 24 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Tino Martinez has retired. He's going to be an analyst on Baseball Tonight on ESPN this season. Yankees76 00:15, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Want about new jersey's own al leiter? John wesley 21:17, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Al is in camp as a non-roster invitee. It'll take a miracle (or an injury) for him to make the team, especially with the signings of Mike Myers and Ron Villone. He's also on the U.S. provisional roster for the World Baseball Classic. Yankees76 21:26, 24 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Just an obvious update. Al Leiter announced he will retire after the World Baseball Classic (which he became a participant of after CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner pulled out of). Thus making him no longer a Yankee player. His name should not be removed from the roster, I don't believe, until this announcement becomes official by an announcement from the New York Yankee organization.--Djramey 18:50, 8 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"America's Team"

You're just lucky no Dallas Cowboys fans have seen that. I've heard many, many teams call themselves "America's Team", that term in that section is OR POV. It'll have to be replaced, but with what, i'm unsure. Karmafist 15:11, 4 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Enterence music question

Does any one know where I can find a current and coplete list of all the player's enterence music for the yankees. I have found partial lists here http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page3/story?page=schrager/040806 and a old one here http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page3/story?page=songs/yankees.

Unwarranted Sections and Missing History

I've noticed there are a number or really unnecessary sections (2005/06 offseason for example) while there are still huge holes in the history of the team (ie: very little mention of the 80s', no mention of Don Mattingly's MVP season, nothing much about Billy Martin's firing/re-hiring/firing/death, no mention of Thurman Munson or his death, nothing about the start of the modern Red Sox rivalry May 20, 1976, or Chris Chambliss ALCS winning homer in 1976, Guidry striking out 18, George Frazier losing 3 games in the '81 series - or the 81 series at all for that matter etc.,) Can we focus on getting the relevant history correct before we start adding useless sections like "Famous Fans" (where we list a grand total of 8). Is it really that important to list that a few famous people cheer for the Yankees, while Thurman Munson dying in a plane crash in the middle of the 1979 season is completely omitted? Thoughts? Yankees76 16:50, 15 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I've removed 'Famous Fans', I see I'm not the only editor who has questioned it's existence. 71.247.73.73, since you added this section and nearly all of the fans feel free to comment. Yankees76 17:00, 15 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I just removed a "Famous Fans" section that was added by 67.86.122.109. -- Win777 20:33, 29 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

about the "WOrld Series Drought #2" Just because Yankee fans are completwley unreasonable doesn't mean that their complaining should be in a encyclopedia entry, I recomend getting rid of it.

I think that "Post-2004 Era" needs to be removed as a title because it can be combined with "21st century". As for "World Series Drought #2", that may also need to be removed. --Sportskido8 11:16, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Excluding the retired numbers section there is no mention of Munson, the Yankees' first Captain since Gehrig. Anyone else think he should be mentioned somewhere? AriGold 13:57, 4 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I mentioned this above. Yankees76 21:45, 4 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]


So your contention is that the official Yankees' website and MLB are wrong and they don't know when their logo was first used and we should trust www.baseball-almanac.com which is a site that is provided information from anon sources like wikipedia? "What would become the most recognizable insignia in sports the interlocking 'NY' made its first appearance on the uniforms of the New York Highlanders in 1909." [1] AriGold 13:33, 6 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, the Yankees first used their version of the NY logo in 1909, but they were not the first team to use an Interlocking NY. In 1901 the Yankees were the Baltimore Orioles, however that year the New York Giants used the Interlocking NY logo as their official team logo (though not on the uniform) - 2 years before the New York Highlanders existed. The article doesn't specify the first appearace of the Yankees NY logo, it states that " An interlocking "NY" (based on an element of the original Tiffany design of the New York Police Department's Medal of Honor, although the concept of the interlocking NY was first used by". Your statement is therefore wrong. The concept was not first used by the Higlanders. The Giants first used the interlocking NY. Please read more carefully - I'm reverting it back. Yankees76 13:43, 6 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And if you're worried about verifiability, please refer to the Baseball Hall of Fame website - have a look at the 1908 NY Giants uniforms - you'll notice the Interlocking NY on the left sleave of both the home and road jersey. [2] The NY logo on the Highlanders uniform appeared a year later. Thanks. Yankees76 13:51, 6 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And just while we're at it, the logo identified as being from the Highlander days is a modern print logo. I'm aware that Sportslogos.net has mis-identified it as such, but we should not perpetuate the error. I have corrected the caption and moved the logo down to the "21st Century" section. --Chancemichaels 21:13, 11 September 2006 (UTC)Chancemichaels[reply]

Non-neutral POV

I cannot believe this did not get noticed this pro-Yankee paragraph added by someone with the IP address 207.219.117.254:

Some argue that the mere consideration of five years without a championship as some sort of "drought" it testament to the level of expectation the Yankees have created. No other franchise would consider a five year stretch as any kind of drought. Indeed, the Yankees are a franchise in a league of their own, and this level of dominance and expectation started with the deal that brought George "Babe" Ruth from the Boston Red Sox and can support the contention that the Curse of the Bambino will remain as long as the Yankees position as the class of the MLB is a reality. Any team can win a championship (no one would consider the Arizona Diamondbacks or Florida Marlins, recent World Series champions, to be franchises threatening to topple the Yankees legacy over the last 85 years), so the Red Sox finally winning one doesn't put them back to the position of dominance over the MLB they held through the WWI years.

If 207.219.117.254 does not consider the last five years a drought, he or she may as well remove the entire section. Plus, I am sure many Yankee fans will concede that the curse is broken (although the Yankees still hold the most championships at this point).

Whether five years is enough to be a drought is up to debate, though one must admit the expectations are still very high for teams such as the Red Sox, the Yankees, the Braves, the Cardinals, and all the other teams who are almost always in the hunt for division titles, league pennants, and championships.

On a related note, a user with IP address 68.187.229.249 keeps wiping out the entire article. Three words: banned for life!

"The Yankees also have more championships than any other top league professional team." This information in the article is false, the Yankees have 26 championships, Juventus has 28. DaDoc540 06:55, 3 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well, 27 actually. And I'm not sure that all 27 are very credible at the moment.... --Chancemichaels 20:18, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Chancemichaels[reply]

disputed

I doubt the factual accuracy of the claim that the Yankees can directly trace their history back to the Indianapolis team of the Western League. Although the five teams of the Western League to survive merged with the American League, it was my understanding that there wasn't a specific translation that team x is now team y. I cite Baseball_Reference's section on the Yankees that the history of the team begins in 1901 in Baltimore. Roodog2k 22:38, 20 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You know what, if baseballreference.com says that they started in Baltimore, and there is no reference to this day that says that they started in Indianapolis, then I am going to remove Indianapolis. Sportskido8 00:31, 25 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Current record

As I've stated in edit summaries, I don't think it is a good idea to include daily updated team records for sports teams: [3]. There are two key reasons:

  1. Wikipedia is not a news service, and providing current standings is not what an encyclopedia is for;
  2. MostlyRainy's caveat of "as long as I can update it" [4] admits the inherent problem that if an update is missed (which is a reasonable assumption), the information would immediately be inaccurate.

Other editors at other pages seem to agree [5]. --mtz206 (talk) 12:20, 23 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Another edit that agrees: [6] -- Win777 18:53, 23 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Further to that, season highlights should be kept to a minimum. See some of my most recent reversions - the entry for the 2006 season should not contain more than a few historical events. The Yankees beating Billy Wagner and the Mets is not a significant point in the teams history and should not be added. Neither is Matsui's broken wrist. As has been mentioned above, this is not a news service. The entries for 2004 and up contain too many minor details when compared to the entries for the 50's, 60's and 70's. A few years should not overshadow entire decades. 22:11, 13 June 2006 (UTC)

Nationality of players

Can we check the nationality of players on the roster. I'm not a big big fan, so i'm not sure myself, but I doubt Mussina is Chinese and Jeter is Japanese. ???

I'm sure this as an act of vandalism. It has been corrected previously.Djramey 18:41, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Forgotten Mascot

I find it interesting that the quick facts sections firmly states, "The Yankees have no mascot". This should be changed to, "currently have no" or alternately, "no longer have a". This statements' predominant appearance is most likely due to the fact that most Yankees fans want to forget about their original mascot; a big eagle that was named "Doodle" or "Dandy" (I'm not sure which), who was reviled by the fans and quickly gotten rid of. Nevertheless, this info should be noted and added as it is a part of Yankees history, albeit trivial.

Find a verifiable source of this information and add it to the article. Yankees76 22:55, 18 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Second Half Outlook

As the All-Star Break approaches, it's time to assess how the Yankees are doing this season. They surely miss Hideki Matsui and Gary Sheffield. True they managed to get two lopsided wins, but with two ugly losses sandwiched in between it's clear they could use another bat. As I write this, the Yankees for scheduled to finish a series with the Cleveland Indians and then head to play a three game series with the Devil Rays before the break. While the Devil Rays have not played well overall, they have played the Yankees tough -- two of the four Yankee victories against them were decided by two runs in extra innings. This will be an important series because each win will allow the Yankees to gain ground in wild-card or AL East standings. After an extended four day break, the Yankees get to play the White Sox themselves in the Bronx, followed by a series against the Toronto Blue Jays at Skydome. They will meet the White Sox at Comiskey on August 8. The Yankees will play not one, but two doubleheaders against the Red Sox on August 18 and September 16. The Yankees will also play 7 games against the Angels, but only one of them will be at 10pm. We will ultimately see if the Yankees can continue their playoff run. While they're not playing as bad as the Braves, they will need some consisent pitching and hitting if they Yankees hope to be one of the elite eight vying for that elusive ring every play dreams of getting this October. Mostly Rainy 07:18, 6 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]


---I believe you are referring to this: http://www.baseballroadtrip.net/A/AAdvanced/Midwest/BattleCreek/images/PICT0031.jpg the mascot, doodle, of the battle creek yankees. A yankees minor league affiliate.

Controversy, revisited

The Controversy section in the article is an interesting debate, but is not encyclopedic: it cites no sources and appears to be mostly original research. Wikipedia is not a soapbox. I suggest its removal. --MichaelZimmer (talk) 16:25, 17 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I agree. It doesn't belong. Yankees76 19:03, 17 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I also agree. While I was editing the article today I saw this section and wondered if I should remove it. Sportskido8
Since no opposition in a week, I removed the section. --MichaelZimmer (talk) 17:46, 24 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Quick Facts

This section needs some work. For one, the bleacher creatures paragraph is not a "quick fact" and should probably be its own section. I may work on this a little and if anyone has some input let me know. Sportskido8

Split "Season records & postseason appearances"

To help manage the size of this large article, the "Season records & postseason appearances" section should be split into its own article. Comments? --MichaelZimmer (talk) 17:44, 24 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

That's a tough call. It does take up a lot of room but it's a nice change from viewing a big block of text. If it's on it's own page it might be ignored too. I'm indifferent to its splitting. --Sportskido8
As soon as we get this figured out I can re-nominate it for a featured article. It will get a lot more consideration this time around I think. --Sportskido8 (talk) 14:02, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'm gonna remove the "split box" for a few days to see what the general public has to say about the table. --Sportskido8 (talk) 14:29, 04 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Disabled List

Two players (Sturtze and Rasner) are listed as 60-Day's. Do we then need to also list 15-Day players? Phillips, Cairo, Matsui, Sheffield et al... Djramey 18:37, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Elston Howard

I can't believe no one has noticed this, but the number under his name in the Retired Numbers section is incorrect. Number 32, NOT 34, was retired for Howard. I have removed the image with the number 34 on it from the section, and left a message on the talk page of the contributor who uploaded the image to correct it. Rollosmokes 18:34, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hah! Sorry about that. Already explained the situation on Rollosmokes' talk page, but might as well explain here too.
If you look at the edit when I added them all, I put in a link to number 32, which led to nowhere. When I looked I realized that I had linked to an image that didn't exist, since I'd made 34. I linked to that one, thinking that the mistake was in linking to 32.
I made an image of the circle with the pinstripes, and numbers 1-0, so I could easily make any number, but it looks like Sportskiddo fixed it already. Figures something like this pops up the one day I don't check the articles. And yeah, I'm surprised this slid under everyone else's noses until now.Silent Wind of Doom 08:06, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Nazi Storm Troopers?

Maybe for some reason my wikipedia/I.E. interface is screwy, but when I click on "Thurman Munson" where his name appears in the "Retired Numbers" section beneath his #15, the page I get redirected to is this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_shirt Obviously, nothing to do with Thurman Munson... I had two of my friends click on the link, one had that come up and the other didn't... is this practical vandalism? Either way, I suggest someone with more wiki experience than myself fix it.

Now fixed, was some uncaught vandalism. Thanks Jaranda wat's sup 03:53, 3 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Nominated September 4, 2006; needs at least 9 votes by September 25, 2006
Reason

Most well known baseball team. Jaranda wat's sup 02:04, 4 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Support
  1. Jaranda wat's sup 02:04, 4 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  2. Deville (Talk) 00:46, 8 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  3. ForestH2 t/h/c 01:55, 8 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  4. --Mike 02:11, 8 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  5. Michael Greiner 03:06, 8 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  6. --Nishkid64 00:34, 9 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  7. Sportskido8 23:11 CST, 10 September 2006
  8. PoliticalJunkie 23:49, 11 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  9. Chancemichaels 20:08, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Chancemichaels[reply]
Comments
  • In general I support this. I'd love to see it selected for October 3, which will be the first day of the playoffs. (NO, you CAN'T assume they're winning it all this year...) -- dakern74 (talk) 02:05, 8 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  • Greatest team in all of baseball. --Nishkid64 00:34, 9 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  • The article needs a few more pictures I think. I had more on there but they got stripped away. I know we can get this to FA-status, so let's all give a lot of effort and make it happen. --Sportskido8 23:18 CST, 10 September 2006

Let's get it started! --Nishkid64 20:44, 12 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Criticism

I have issue with "their reputation for being a team full of acquired superstars". It's commonly stated, but quite frankly not true. Sorted by games played this year, 6 of the top 9 batters are lifetime Yankees, and it's been that way for quite some time. When compared to other top teams like the Red Sox (3), Tigers (3), Mets (2), and Cardinals (3), they're overwhelmingly a "home-grown" team.

I agree - the common criticism that the Yankees buy their titles is usually leveled by those with only a passing knowledge of the team and the game itself. I've removed the statement and reworded it to be more NPOV. Yankees76 20:21, 20 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
6 of the 9 top batters by games? that's cherry-picking your stats. Looking at the starting lineup for the playoffs, only 3 of the 9 starters are from the farm system: Cano, Jeter and Posada. Six of the 9 were acquired by trade or free-agency: Giambi, Sheffield, Rodriguez, Matsui, Damon, Abreu. If you look at the beginning of the season, essentially sub Williams for Abreu, and it's 4 of the 9 from the farm system. Now 3 or 4 out of 9 from the farm system may not be much different from other teams, but lets at least use reasonable measures. Simon12 05:04, 3 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Matsui has never played a game for another MLB team (see wording 'lifetime Yankees' in the post at the top), and the Game 1 playoff starter Chien-Ming Wang, is also from the farm system. Good try though. Yankees76 18:42, 3 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I never said Matsui wasn't a lifetime Yankee. What I said was Matsui is an acquired superstar, and is not home-grown by any definition, as he did not come from the farm system. You want to use Matsui as an example of how they are "overwhelmingly a home-grown team"? I don't think you'll get very far with that argument. And I'll see your Wang, and counter with Johnson, Mussina, and Wright/Lidle, all acquired from elsewhere. My point was not that the post at top was inaccurate, but that it was worded to make the Yankees look better, as it picked a stat (Games this year) that managed to avoid including Matsui, Sheffield and Abreu, all acquired from elsewhere. I don't know if the Yankees have more or less farm system players than other teams, but their payroll clearly gives them the ability to acquire more expensive players than other teams. By the way, none of this is a criticism of how the Yankees acquire players - they are operating totally with the rules. But to deny the fact that the Yankees are mostly "a team full of acquired superstars", when 9 of their 14 (starting lineup, 4 starters, Rivera) key players starting the playoffs are acquired from elsewhere, is just denying reality.

I think a lot of the criticism is poorly-worded. To be more articulate, the Yankees rely a lot less on their farm system than many other teams do -- something they are able to do because they are particularly well-funded. When the Yankees seek to plug a large hole in their roster, they are able to do it by throwing a lot of money at the problem -- again, because of their funding. Compare guys like A-Rod and Randy Johnson to Mike Lowell and Jon Lester. Sure, the Red Sox have their big stars as well, but they have been with the team arguably longer and are surrounded by a lot more ex-farm guys. I don't hide my Red Sox support, but I'm more interested in calling a spade a spade. The Yankees and the Red Sox have the 1st and 2nd largest payrolls in the MLB, and parts of their success are attributed to that. I don't believe it's disingenuous in saying that the Yankees have had particularly more success as a result of their payroll than, for example, their farm system. Chris 22:56, 21 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"Critics"

This section seems unsourced and biased please fix or remove it if you can't verify criticisms they should be removed see also WP:POV--20-px yo 19:32, 20 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Team captains

There was no reason to move the Teams Captains table the article on New York Yankees award winners and league leaders so I have revereted it back to its' previous form. MOving it to that article makes no sense, as Captain status has nothing to do with MLB awards like every other one of the awards listed in that article. Yankees' Captain status is one of the more treasured pieces of history in the organization, removing it from this article here is unwarranted. It is just as relevent as retired numbers and I have added it near that section to reflect as such. AriGold 16:34, 21 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Important Things

  1. There needs to be A LOT more than 17 references for this article. Can somebody make this their main priority? Like take an hour or so to gather up as many as possible?
  2. The 1960's section needs a picture or two.

These two things will really help. --Sportskido8 15:11 CST, 22 September 2006

21st Century section balance

Now that the season is over, some serious work needs to be done on this section. The 2002 season has one sentence. The ultimately very similar 2006 season (AL best record, lost in ALDS in 4 games) has about 23 sentences. A little more detail on 2002, and a lot less on 2006, would improve things. Simon12 03:15, 8 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well I cut a good deal, so it's a bit better now, but still could be cut more.Simon12 03:49, 8 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The word 'surprisingly' needs to be removed from the notice about them being defeated in the 2006 ALDS - it is purely opinion and does not reflect team facts.

You're right. Good luck with that.  ;) —Wknight94 (talk) 02:59, 9 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, it's not an opinion, it's fact that it was a surprise. The Yankees were heavy favorites in this series. For example, 7 writers/editors from the Sporting News all picked the Yankees to win, and none in more than 4 games. Four predictions from writers from the Detroit News, all for the Yankees. Betting odds before the series had the Yankees at 1/1 to win the pennant, the Tigers were at 7/1. (I can't find direct odds on the Yankees/Tigers series). But the Yankees were heavy favorites, so their loss was a surprise. But I'll change it to "heavy favorite", it probably reads better. Simon12 03:34, 9 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Please also add in at least a few of those citations in the article itself. (If I missed them, I apologize). —Wknight94 (talk) 03:59, 9 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I added a couple in.
The whole 21st century needs to be summarized - with alot of historically insignificant information pulled. There does not need to be a year by year breakdown of the last 6 years. Check out the DiMaggio era, where an entire decade (1930's) is summarized in just over two blocks of text, and the 50's - arguably the team's most successful decade, which takes up about as much space as the entire 2005-2006 entry. The fact that Matsui's injury gets an entire paragraph is ludicrous, as it's a minor event in the team's history. Melky Cabrera is barely a footnote in team history - why is he even mentioned? Should we put a mention about someone like Clete Boyer too then? Of course not.
The 2005-2006 offseason gets as much text as Don Larsen's perfect game in the World Series! Did Jeremy Bonderman and Joel Zumaya do anything that warrants their mention on the Yankees article? Not really. One well-written sentence can summarize this year's ALDS loss to the Tigers. Let the Tigers page or even Bonderman and Kenny Rogers individual page discuss their contributions in depth. These are reasons (when all added up) why the article is too long and it clearly needs to be addressed so that there is a concise summarization of periods of time. I'm going to wait a week or so and then begin this clean up unless I get overwhelming feedback that says the opposite. I want to get this article profiled, and nothing is getting done to bring that closer to fruition. Discuss. Yankees76 19:41, 18 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Retired number formatting

The formatting of the retired numbers is inconsistent. Some of the years appear to the left of the number, others appear on top. This is due to some having break tags and others not having them. I fixed it once, but for some reason it was changed back. I'll fix it one more time, and if someone reverts it, I'd appreciate it if they could explain why. Brad E. Williams 13:42, 10 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hmm... Odd. I don't know why the years would appear to the left, and it never has when I viewed it. I put the break tags in whenever they're taken out, although I forget if I figured it out on my own, or if someone else was the first to do it. You see, the boxes center vertically as well as horizontally. Therefore, when the name needs to take up two lines, the number and year are pushed up to compensate. This puts the years and numbers out of allignment, which makes the section look horrible. I don't know if it comes out alligned on your computer, which doesn't seem to see eye-to-eye with mine. With the added breaks, the names all take up two lines, and everything lines up, making the section look a whole lot neater, and overall better. Silent Wind of Doom 05:53, 12 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
As they are now, they look fine. What I was referring to was that some were like this -
|'''(1986)''' [[Image:YankeesRetired1.PNG|95px|]]<br><br><b>[[Billy Martin]]
and that made the year appear on the side. Right now, they're all like this:
| <br> '''(1986)''' <br> [[Image:YankeesRetired1.PNG|95px|]]<br><br><b>[[Billy Martin]]
and they look fine. That explanation is a little convoluted, so I hope you understand what I mean. Brad E. Williams 17:32, 12 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The retired numbers really line up for you? Lemme see if I can format it some other way to make it look good for both of us. Silent Wind of Doom 05:06, 13 October 2006 (UTC) (EDIT: I put things together, erasing some of the unneeded gaps, and added the part they played in the organization. If anyone thinks it looks to crowded, I can alter it. Heh. I must say, I'm proud at what we've done with this section, and we seem to be starting a trend. I noticed that the Red Sox and Brewers pages have done the same thing within the last few weeks, including making the background color the color of the wall the numbers hang on.)[reply]
I like that addition, but it might look better if the parentheses were removed and the font was made smaller (maybe 75%?). Also, I'm wondering if we should just make each name two lines so that the table cells are all the same size and that part is consistent. What do you think? Brad E. Williams 11:44, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I did some rearranging in the section. I reduced the font size of the year and moved that note to the bottom, split all the names into two lines for consistency, removed the parentheses around the position, and removed captaincies from their positions. Feel free to revert or edit if you think it sucks. Brad E. Williams 13:06, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Umm... I'd already made all the names two lines with my last changes. I do, however, like the new version. I'd like to acknowledge captaincies, but I suppose it's not necessary with the captain list right under it. By the way, anyone have a decent detailed picture of the retired numbers at Shea, so I can fix this up for the Mets too? Just upload it and put it in my discussion page. Silent Wind of Doom 17:57, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Weird. I double-checked the revision immediately before mine, and the names of DiMaggio, Mantle, Mattingly, Howard, Stengel, and Jackson don't have their first and last names split up. I uploaded a screencap here: [7] Anyway, glad you like the new version.  :-) Brad E. Williams 18:52, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Okay. Thanks for the screenshot. I figured out the problem. It seems there is a difference between how our computers format the lettering. I don't know if it's the browser, or a setting we have set differently, but for me, Dimaggio, Mattingly, and a few others skipped to two lines because of their length. Hence, they screwed up everything. The extra formatting helped, but it screwed up things on your computer. To make things look better, I only made the single-line names into two lines, figuring the others already were, but they weren't on yours. That's what the problem was. Silent Wind of Doom 07:52, 14 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Nickname: "The Bronx Bombers"

The nicknames of various teams have been added to the templates in quotation marks under the name. It was editted out of here, and the editor said that he worried that it would be considered official. While the nickname is basically official, being used constantly by personnel and the like. However, it's probably best not to get into an editting war, so what do you guys think? We can discuss it here. Silent Wind of Doom 06:03, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I think it's fine, but it should be noted that there are other nicknames for the team (though less popular)Yankees76 19:05, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I really can't think of any besides the Bronx Bombers, but I know there are others. Can we get a pretty good list going here, whether current or defunct? When we have enough, we can put them in the article. Silent Wind of Doom 22:41, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Off the top of my head - The Pinstripers, Yanks, Men in Pinstripes, Murderers' Row, The Bronx Zoo... Yankees76 05:04, 18 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
When Miller Huggins was manager they were often referred to as the "Hugmen". Apparently using a manager based nickname was common back then, as an article I saw on the Yanks vs Connie Mack's A's was titled "Hugmen beat Mackmen 8-3". Simon12 14:41, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Doesn't Murderer's Row really refer to a part (sometimes a big part) of the lineup, not the team as a whole? The Bronx Zoo was Sparky Lyle's book title, not a real nickname for the team. Bronx Bombers and the Yanks are the only ones, in my opinion, in the running, and I'd say put 'em both up.Tvoz 18:25, 18 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'm cool with that. Murderer's Row was the nickname given to the 1927 Yankees. The Pinstripers" is also very common.[8] Yankees old-timers day teams are usually called "The Bombers" and "The Pinstripers". Yankees76 19:02, 18 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, you're right about Pinstripers, but to me it's really more about the old guys, not the current team. You're also right that Murderer's Row refers to the '27 Yanks, and I've heard it used for the power part of the current lineup when things are going well. In any case, I think Yanks and Bronx Bombers are the leaders. Any other folks want to weigh in? (Go Mets, I guess)Tvoz 04:47, 19 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"Cap Logo" is Wrong

Just for the record, the cap logo currently on the page next to the Uncle Sam hat logo is the wrong logo - it's not featured on the Yankees caps. There are two logos on Yankee game uniforms, and the one on the page is neither. The first logo is on the breast of the home jersey and it looks like this: [9]. The second logo is on the cap, and it looks like this:[10]. The logo on the main page is the logo that is on the field behind home plate at Yankee stadium:[11] - not on the cap or uniform. There are unauthentic caps [12] with that logo on them, however they are not worn by the New York Yankees. I've been unable to remove the logo on the page without seriously ruining the formatting. Can somebody look after this? Thanks! Yankees76 20:15, 18 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]


I thought I was the only one bothered by this.. It's a common mistake, but the logo shown is the Yankees' current print logo. The cap logo is very similar, closer to the print logo than it is to the jersey logo, but it's not the same. The easy way to see the distinction is the diagonal bar on the "N" - it's straight, as opposed to the curved bar of the print logo.
For the record, the Yankees have no less than four versions of the interlocking "NY" logo - one for the jerseys, one for the caps, a thicker version for the batting helmets and the print logo. Carryovers from an earlier age, when logos weren't processed and vetted by armies of ad agencies and focus groups.
I'll see if I can work up a vector image of the real cap logo - best thing to do, I think, is swap out images. --Chancemichaels 01:48, 23 October 2006 (UTC)Chancemichaels[reply]
Die-hard fans tend to notice things that casual and bandwagon fans do not. Thanks in advance for looking after this! Yankees76 14:47, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Keeping Quick Facts

I disagree with the removal of "Quick Facts" and have reinstated the section, but I'm bringing it here for discussion in the spirit of not shooting first and asking questions later, which the precipitous removal seems to me to have been. I am not an administrator and I have no connection to the creator of "Quick Facts" or the editor who removed it, by the way - I'm just another Wiki reader and editor trying like most here to make it as useful and comprehensible as possible.

To me, "Quick Facts" is a useful section, especially in an article of this length. It's another version of infoboxes that are used throughout this encyclopedia, but "Quick Facts" here organizes another set of information for quick retrieval by readers who don't necessarily have the time or inclination to read the whole page.

The simple statement that "Quick facts do not belong in an encyclopedia article" is not self-explanatory. It seems to me to be without basis, considering the prominence of infoboxes, so I think the section should remain. But I'd be interested in knowing what others think and if there was a rationale or precedent behind the removal. I don't have a horse in this race, as I said - this is just my opinion as a user.

I don't want to get involved in an edit war, and I hope that keeping the section in, and trying to reach consensus here, is productive. Tvoz 20:32, 22 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm removing the rivals part per Wikipedia:WikiProject Baseball guidelines. Michael Greiner 22:52, 22 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Umm...me and several others have been working on this article for a very long time and when this was submitted for a peer review and eventually a FA nomination, several critics said to remove the quick facts part of it. It simply is not encyclopedic...meaning that it should be in prose form instead of a list. Sorry, but I must remove it. --Sportskido8 19:01 C.S.T. 22 October 2006
Quick facts got removed? It is a part of EVERY baseball team article. Every single baseball article has a quick facts page, and that's because it has very useful information. This is information about the team, put in a form that is easy to read, doesn't have mindless babble, and doesn't unesecarily stretch the team template. Most of this stuff doesn't deserve it's own heading, but still needs mention. We could put it in the team template, but that doesn't need to be stretched any longer. It's the same as the trivia section almost every article in Wikipedia has, but in a better form. Who in their right minds said at the review that it was unencyclopedic to put this in? You might as well have people telling you to delete the whole team template and turn it all into prose. Take all the lists out of the whole friggin' encyclopedia. These people obviously would rather have a site that makes them hunt around for information instead of a site that helps them. Silent Wind of Doom 01:36, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Heh. One should never post in a talk page while angry. Anyway, I still stand beside my statement that the quick facts section should stand, and it's ludicrous to take it out. Silent Wind of Doom 03:26, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Uh, wait a second, Sportskido8 - what do you mean "Sorry but I must remove it"? What happened to discussion and consensus? I put the section back in earlier after you removed it precipitously, without any discussion and a non-explanation in the edit summary, and I posted a request for discussion here. Your response is to remove it again and say sorry, but you must?

I don't doubt that you've worked on this article for a long time, but I don't see what difference that makes, and your only "explanation" of why this is not encyclopedic seems to be that some critics thought so. You didn't respond to my point - like, what about the infoboxes which are the same sort of lists and are ubiquitous here as are many other lists. I just did a random look at five or six disparate MLB teams' articles and I see that indeed all of them have similar, useful, quick facts sections, as Silent Wind of Doom said. It belongs here too.

And by the way, who said that everything in an encyclopedia has to be in prose form? Furthermore, if you thought it should be in prose form rather than a list, why, may I ask, didn't you take the time to convert it into prose and put it where you think it should be, rather than just arbitrarily lopping it off? Are you aware that you removed some information, like about music, that appears nowhere else? I think this is not the way to edit a page, and I object to the high-handedness of your action, and then your repeat performance, in the face of this discussion having been opened.

Does anyone else want to comment? I said I don't want to get involved in an edit war - and I don't - but I think asking for discussion and consensus was the right way to proceed, and ignoring that request and high-handedly going in and removing a section again is not. I'll wait to put it back in, but not for too long. Tvoz 04:13, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm with Sportskido8 on this. This article was a Featured Article Candidate, and upon review, one of the key points that was used to deny it being a featured article was the "Quick Facts" section. It was described as "horrible and unencyclopedic", and was suggested by number of reviewers that it "needs to be turned into prose and distributed elsewhere." Not all of the suggested edits from this review have been completed at this time, in part because of amount of time used debating issues like this, as well as the time needed to constantly review/revert/verify the edits of vandals and other POV inserts that pop up daily. Not to mention the lack of organization amongst WikiProject Baseball members who made this the current Baseball Article Improvement Drive collaboration some weeks ago but have yet to incorporate any meaningful edits or take any steps to prepare this article for a second FA review. Also, some of the information in the Quick Facts is either redudant (having already appeared elsewhere in the aritcle), factually incorret (George Steinbrenner III is technically not owner of the team - the team is owned by Yankee Global Enterprises LLC an ownership group of which Steinbrenner is the principal owner), or simply unsourced. Have any of the other teams with a "quick facts" section been reivewed or passed as a featured article? If so the quick facts section could be revisted, if not there's no reason to put it back in pending another review that determines it needs one. Yankees76 14:04, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
If some of the facts were wrong, then you should have gone in and changed them. There's a certain amount of redundancy always on a page, especially of this length, regarding basic facts like date the team began for example; the purpose of Quick Facts seems to be to pull together a set of data points and put them in one place for a quick reader. Like infoboxes, which you and Sportskido8 have avoided responding to. Saying that this type of section is "unencyclopedic" and leaving it at that is opinion, and in mine it is just plain wrong - look around wiki. The article, by the way, was horrible at the time it was submitted for FA for reasons that went well beyond some reviewers' dislike for Quick Facts. Read the critics after Quick Facts was removed. I wouldn't know if these same people have complained about Quick Facts on other team pages, or if those pages were submitted and accepted or rejected for FA. I'm not a Wiki baseball fanatic. I'm interested in the Yankees article, and I think QUick Facts -obviously with the correct information in it - enhances the article. I don't need a review to determine that - it's not all about the opinions of reviewers. Quick Facts makes it consistent with all other MLB teams' pages, and it should go back in unless some kind of Wiki-wide decision is made (and why would it be??) to remove it from all MLB articles. Yes, you're right that energy should be put into improving the page - but I don't see that taking out a useful section is the way to do that. Our mutual goal should be to make it a good page, useful to readers - not to satisfy the particular feelings of some individual critics. Tvoz 15:30, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Why would I edit a section that is not in the article? I was merely looking at what you're looking to insert into the article by looking through the history of the page. Sure the info is wrong, but I'm not resinserting it with the correct information if I don't feel the section belongs in the first place.
The goal with the Yankees article is to have it featured. It's been rejected twice. Both times, the Quick Facts section was pointed out as something "needs to be converted into prose". As such some of the editors who have been working diligently on the article over the last few months have removed it so that that third review doesn't fail for this same reason. No other MLB team has been qualified (or as far as I know even been considered) as a Featured Article, so it makes little sense to base what we're doing here on those teams articles. Instead, check out the Chicago Bears and New England Patriots articles - thease are the only two featured articles of sports teams and neither has a "quick facts" section. Yankees76 16:08, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]


By the way, it was claimed somewhere that all of the peer review complaints were fixed - yet I see just in the first paragraph that it still calls "dynasty" a phrase. I'm going in to fix that, but actually I think the energy used to remove "Quick facts" in the first place would have been better spent correcting the incredibly poor writing that some of the page has - I'm guessing that QF was an easy target. The page needs work by people who can write. Tvoz 15:54, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I agree, unfortuneately, this is a popular article, and gets upwards of 10 edits/day or more depending on the time of year. There are alot of new contributors/IP addresses and others who make alot of changes with different writing styles and levels of education. Poor writing is bound to happen. Yankees76 16:11, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
A few things to keep in mind Tvoz. One, a lot of the MLB team pages look like garbage. I hate to be that drastic, but many of them contain huge lists and quick facts sections that just make them look terrible...like they were put together in a matter of minutes. Second, we DID convert most or all of the old quick facts section into prose already. As you can see, the Bears and Patriots articles do not have them for a reason. I understand that they're "quick" and useful but the critics have spoken and I'll have to go along with them on it. As for FA-status, this article needs a lot of things. It needs better writing, a LOT more references and it may need to be split up into "History of the New York Yankees" and "New York Yankees". I have always been opposed to the latter, but if that's what it takes then I guess it may have to be done at some point. --Sportskido8 11:23 CST, 23 October 2006

Keeping/Removing the Quick Facts Pt. 2

There are only 10 B-Class baseball team articles, and only one of them has had a peer review and FA review (the Houston Astros - and it failed on 3 suggestions in total - not really a "review"). This article has had 1 peer review and 2 FA reviews. It's had the most (and really only) feedback on what should be included and what shouldn't of any MLB team. Other teams should be basing their articles on what is done here - not the other way around. Yankees76 16:33, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
EXAMPLE OF MATERIAL LOST IN REMOVING QUICK FACTS: where's all the stuff about the music? It could go into a Trivia section, I suppose, but that was a nice part of Quick Facts, and now it's gone. And I think it would be overkill to start a "music" section. So the wholesale removal of the section still seems to me to be the wrong move. Also, for the record, the music stuff was more prose than a list - it just had bullets. Are they also teling us not to have bullets, making the page just a mass of "prose"?Tvoz 17:57, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Actually I think our goal should be to have this be a good article - even a Wiki-endorsed "GOOD" article - and that it be clear, correct, and useable by readers. If it is chosen as a featured article, terrific, but I don't think that should be a goal unto itself, and it certainly isn't mine. As for the specifics - I went in and edited the piece through 1979 for grammar, sense, and to improve the writing. I'll do more too. Without good writing the piece will never be a FA - no matter if you shorten it, or take out Quick Facts, or follow any other suggestions made. I understand that other pages had little more than lists and QFs, but that's not the case with this page at this time. We have text, charts, pictures, and a list or two - in my view that makes for the beginnings of a very good article, whether or not some arbitrary people decide to name it such. This article is not dominated by Quick Facts - that's a silly suggestion.
I'd be interested in hearing from other folks on this. meanwhile I'll continue to do what I can to improve the writing. (Btw, I thought IP addresses are banned from editing this page - so the bad writing can't be blamed on them, not in an ongoing way anyway.)
Oh - I also think that the Casey Stengel Time cover is a great pic and I added text to justify its inclusion - the article now refers to the cover as an example of Casey's publicity acumen. (I also think Wiki takes an incorrect position regarding fair use of magazine covers vs book covers - in the proper circumstances both should be allowed - but in order to avoid the pic being removed again, I followed their requirement.) Tvoz 17:50, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
IP addresses were only banned on October 5th. Acheiving a GA or A class rating really goes hand-in-hand with becoming a Featured Article. and I think that if we submitted today, we could get a GA rating. The Yankees article is just as good as the last article I took to GA rating, Mickey Mantle. The review process is similar too -so you're bound to get the same critique about removing the Quick Facts (possibly by the same reviewers). As a side note the San Francisco Giants have had the Quick Facts section removed. (done by another editor - not one of us - in August). I do like your idea and it might be a good idea to grab the GA rating now while we work towards the A and Featured rating.
With regards to the music - is it notable enough to be included in this article? If asked, are you able to provide verifiable sources for that information? Information like that and the whole "The Bleacher Creatures", "Celebrity fans", "Critics" sections (actually the whole "Popularity" sub section) really either should get their own articles or belong on a different article other than the teams main entry. As Sportskido noted above, the full length history of the team will probably need to be made into it's own article, with a short history left here. There are far more important issues than wether or not "Enter Sandman" is included. That info will have already been on Rivera's article anyways. (or at least it should) Yankees76 18:13, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]