Inhistoric: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:


Pro Quality. Fan Perspective.
Login-facebook
New Blog: The Nova Blog for Villanova Fans!

Yankees-Phillies: A Contrast in Histories

(Also posted this at Athletics Nation)

Repeat after me: the last team to repeat will now try to keep the only team with a chance to repeat from repeating.

Or something like that.

With apologies to those who had dreams of an All-California Series, or Torre's Revenge, this year's World Series is loaded with firepower, power pitching, and the all-important star power.

And yeah I could have formulated some sort of position-by-position statistical breakdown, but that just isn't my style, now is it?

Instead we will take a look at some World Series (and other) history involving this season's participants.  You're stunned; I can tell.

But first some trivia: There are 14 former A's players who would later leave Oakland and hit a home run for another team in the World Series.  Joe Blanton did it last year (and he's actually the only one to do it in the same season that he played for the A's).  Name the other 13.  Answer at the end of this post.  Don't peek.

Phillies Champs

Yeah, you want this, doncha, Yankees? 

Star-divide

If the New York Yankees have experienced an embarrassment of riches since their inception in 1901, the Philadelphia Phillies have mostly been an embarrassment.

For the Bronx Bombers, this is their 40th trip to the Big Dance.  The most mind-boggling thing about that is it might not be the most mind-boggling number you read here today.

Not counting the 1994 strike season, New York has finished in first place 45 times, with 16 division titles and three wild-card finishes, as compared to 11, 9, and one for the Phillies.

The Yankees actually lost three of the first World Series' in which they played: 1921, 1922, and 1926.  In that last Fall Classic, they held a 3-2 lead, with the last two games to be played in their backyard. St. Louis won them both, as Babe Ruth was caught stealing second to end the Series.  In a one-run game.  With Bob Meusel at the plate and Lou Gehrig on-deck.

New York- and the Babe- more than made up for that gaffe the following season.  While Ruth became the first player to hit 60 home runs in a single season, the Yankees assembled what is widely regarded as the "Greatest Team in History" in 1927, finishing it off with a sweep of the Pittsburgh Pirates.  The next year, they avenged their loss to St. Louis from two seasons before with another sweep.  New York won each of the four games by three runs or more; the only other team to do that during a Series sweep are the 1989 Oakland A's (shameless segue: Scrapbook Memories will resume after this year's champion has been decided).

All told, the Yankees followed up the disappointment of 1926 by appearing in 16 of the next 27 Fall Classics- and losing only one of them (1942).  That came after an eight-Series win streak and before another run of seven straight championship rounds without a loss.

Maybe we should just go to bullet points the rest of the way:

  • New York has appeared in a World Series in every decade since the 1920's, and has won at least one title in every decade during that time except the 1980's.
  • The Yankees have 8 Series sweeps; only the A's (9) and Cardinals (10) have that many Series titles.
  • New York has won two straight (1927-28, 1961-62, 1977-78), three straight (1998-2000), four straight (1936-39), and five straight (1949-53) World Series'.
  • Their longest pennant-less drought (since their first in 1921) is 14 seasons (1982-95), and their longest title-less drought (since their first one in 1923) is 17 seasons (1979-95).
  • By comparison, the Phillies played 97 seasons (1883-1979) before their first World Championship.

Ah yes, the Phillies.  They are playing in this thing, too, aren't they?  The defending champions won 93 games this season, the fourth-best mark in club history.  Did you know that the Yankees have had 48 seasons of 94 wins or more?

Like I said, history has hardly been kind to the city with so much history.  Back to the bullet points:

  • While New York can boast of 57 90-win seasons (and 19 100-win campaigns), the Phillies would rather I didn't bring up their 37 seasons of 90 losses or more (or the 14 occasions they lost at least 100 games).
  • While the Yankees have just five last-place finishes in their existence (and only twice since 1912), Philadelphia has brought up the rear a whopping 30 times.
  • And the only time these two teams have met in a World Series, New York- shocker!- won in a sweep (but the games were close: 1-0, 2-3, 3-2, 5-2).

All of this means what exactly?  Well not much, other than I know more about the Yankees than I care to admit.

In fact, I am aware that New York is "only" 6-6 in its last dozen trips to the Series, and have lost the last two they've played (2001, 2003). That has happened only two other times: 1921-22, 1963-64-1976.

I also know that no team has ever started and finished a decade with a World Championship, though the Yankees have done one or the other five times, including this decade.

And I am keen to the fact that we live in a "What have you done for me lately?" society, and what the Phillies have done lately is create a little history of their own.  The good kind, that is.  They have won three consecutive division titles for only the second time (the other: 1976-78), they have won more games than any other National League team over that span, and currently have something the Yankees do not, but want dearly all the same.  And with four more wins, they will supplant the 1975-76 Reds as the last Senior Circuit club to claim consecutive championships.

What I don't know is how history will remember the 2009 World Series, but here's hoping it will be Phondly.

Trivia answer: Reggie Jackson (1977-78, ‘81), Don Baylor (1987), Mike Davis (1988), Bill Bathe (1989), Ed Sprague (1992), Luis Polonia (1995), Scott Brosius (1998, 2000-01), Scott Spiezio (2002), Jason Giambi (2003), Mark Bellhorn (2004), Johnny Damon (2004), Jermaine Dye (2005), Bobby Kielty (2007), and the aforementioned Joe Blanton (2008).

0 recs  |  Comment 0 comments

Story-email Email Printer Print

Comments

Display:

Comments For This Post Are Closed


User Tools

This is Inhistoric, the ultimate resource in what happened on this day in sports history. To find out all you need to know about the site, click here for the FAQ.

Start posting on Inhistoric »

Join SB Nation and dive into communities focused on all your favorite teams.

Connect_with_facebook

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recent FanPosts

Doc-octavio_small
The Members of the 2010 Pro Football Hall of Fame
08-_the_author_small
Reggie Jackson's Summer of '69
08-_the_author_small
Celebrating the 1910 Philadelphia Athletics
08-_the_author_small
Campy: More than Just a Bat Slinger
Small
Mark McGwire Starting to Use Steroids in 1989

+ New FanPost All FanPosts >

SBNation.com Recent Stories

PORTLAND, OR - NOVEMBER 25: Brook Lopez #11, Devin Harris #34 and Sean Williams #51 of the New Jersey Nets watch their team lag behind during a game against the Portland Trail Blazers on November 25, 2009 at the Rose Garden Arena in Portland, Oregon. (Photo by Sam Forencich/NBAE via Getty Images)

What's More Valuable: Owner's Money, Or A Money Player?

via mail.alaskadispatch.com +12 updates

2010 Iditarod: Race Is Now Lance Mackey's To Lose

Pittsburgh Penguins'  Hal Gill, center, holds his daughter Isabella as she pets a police horse following a parade celebrating the team's Stanley Cup win Monday, June 15, 2009, in downtown Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar) link

It's Never Too Early For The Derby: Handicapping The Early Field

More from SBNation.com >


Managers

Slam_small ZombieMonta