Emperors and Idiots: The Hundred Year Rivalry Between the Yankees and Red Sox, From the Very Beginnin g to the End of the Curse

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Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, Dec 18, 2007 - Sports & Recreation - 416 pages
The New York Yankees. The Boston Red Sox. For a hundred years, no two teams have locked horns as fiercely or as frequently – and no two seasons frame the colossal battle more perfectly than 2003 and 2004. Now, with incredible energy and access, leading sports columnist Mike Vaccaro chronicles the history of the greatest rivalry in sports, and the two stunning American League Championship Series that define a century of baseball.


October 17, 2003: A night no Yankees or Red Sox fan will ever forget. At 12:15 am, bottom of the eleventh inning of game seven of the ALCS, New York third-baseman Aaron Boone launches a ball over Yankee Stadium’s left-field fence. The Yankees win their 39th pennant – and send the perennially vexed Boston Red Sox home . . . again . . . suffering another devastating loss to their longtime nemesis.

October 20, 2004: A year later, an eerie reprise – but this time things are different. After losing three straight to the Yankees, Boston has charged back to win the next three, forcing a decisive game seven. From the start of the game Boston is in control, and by winning this game they march toward their first World Series victory since 1918.

These two explosive years define an extraordinary, epic rivalry – from Mariano Rivera and Roger Clemens to Pedro Martinez and Curt Schilling, Derek Jeter and Aaron Boone to David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez, from nearly a century of Yankee domination to the undisputed breaking of “The Curse.” With the razor-sharp instincts that have made him a top sports journalist, Mike Vaccaro delves into the history of the rollicking rivalry: a vicious collision in 1903 (between the New York Highlanders and Boston Pilgrims) that draws first blood; the era of Babe Ruth and his legendary trade from the Red Sox to the Yankees, ushering in the notorious Curse; the golden age of DiMaggio and Williams; the unstoppable power of Mantle and Maris; the heart and soul of Fisk and Yazstremski versus Pinella and Munson; and the modern era of dueling owners, skyrocketing payrolls, and a renewed rivalry that attracts sell-out crowds even to Yankees-Red Sox spring training games.

EMPERORS AND IDIOTS is as lively, fascinating, and raucous as the teams themselves – a must-have volume for any Yankees or Red Sox fan.
 

Contents

CHAPTER
1
STRIKING BACK AT THE EMPIRE
15
ITS SECOND TO BREATHING
37
THE WORST POSSIBLE THING
65
DOES HE LOOK LIKE HE WAS HIT WITH A PURSE?
91
THIS IS WHAT THE BASEBALL GODS DEMANDED
125
JUST ADD ONE MORE GHOST TO THE LIST
159
WE DONT THROW AT 260 HITTERS
191
WERE A BUNCH OF IDIOTS CHAPTER 10
227
AS BIG A HOLE AS YOU COULD DIG YOURSELF IN
255
HERE WE GO AGAIN
283
ALL EMPIRES FALL
311
Epilogue 47
347
Afterword
353
Index
375
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About the author (2007)

MIKE VACCARO is a senior sports columnist for the New York Post. He has won more than fifty major journalism awards since 1989 and has been cited for distinguished writing by the Associated Press Sports Editors, the New York State Publishers Association, and the Poynter Institute. He lives in New Jersey.

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