The Story Behind the Curse of the Bambino—And How It Was Broken

Published Dec 4, 2024, 8:02 AM

On this episode of Our American Stories, generations of Red Sox fans came and went before any modicum of success came to the team—some blamed it on a curse cast upon them by Babe Ruth himself. Here's the story of how the curse was broken.

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And we returned to our American stories. Many sports teams are cursed, or at least so it feels to the fans of those sports teams. We know these curses by name. In some cases, you are to tell the story of the Curse of the Bambino is Boston Red Sox beat writer for mass Live and the co host of the Fenway Rundown podcast, Sean mccattam. Let's get into the story.

You had this group of fans throughout the six state region of New England who grew up knowing only disappointment and expecting that the Red Sox were going to find a way to lose again. And truthfully, that's what happened. Often in two thousand and four to fans went to the gravestones and grave sites of parents and grandparents and people who had not lived to see the Red Sox win at any point in their life. My father was born in nineteen twenty seven and took me to my first game in nineteen sixty seven. So there's somebody who lived almost three quarters of a century and never saw them win. The story of the Curse of the Bambino dates back better than one hundred years. At this point, The Red Sox won the World Series in nineteen eighteen, but soon after ended up selling Babe Ruth to their arch rival New York Yankees. There have been all sorts of stories as to why the Red Sox decided to do this. Much of it centers around finance. The owner of the Red Sox at the time was in need of an infusion of cash and thought that selling Ruth would saw some of those problems. There's kind of been a debunct theory that he did it to help finance the production of a play on Broadway No No. Ninette. That has proven to be faults over the years, but nonetheless it was economically motivated. While the Red Sox had been one of the more dominant teams in the American League in all of Major League Baseball in the first twenty or so years of the twentieth century, winning five World Championships, they then went on a run of futility that saw them not win another Pennant until nineteen forty six. In nineteen sixty seven, nineteen seventy five, and nineteen eighty six, but each time they got to the World Series they ended up losing every time in seven games, and twice to the Saint Louis Cardinals, and during the nineteen eighties and nineties, a Boston Globe sports columnist by the name of Dan Shawness came up with a book idea and advanced this notion that the reason the Red Sox had gone so long in between championships was that they were cursed by the ghost of bay Ruth, who was getting back at them for selling him and had put a curse on the franchise to doom them for decades. And while that's obviously not true, it was a clever book selling device. With every failure on the part of the Red Sox in the postseason, people began referring to the Curse of the Bambino as though it were a real thing. The worst loss of all for the Red Sox was in the nineteen eighty six World Series, where they lost in seven games to the New York Mets. Despite leading in extra innings in Game six. It seemed as if a championship was finally within reach. Major League Baseball had rolled in the champagne into the Red Sox clubhouse in extra innings and anticipate patient of them finally winning. They lost that game too, and then lost Game seven as well, and that World Series, as much as anything, sort of provided additional ammunition, if you will, that the Red Sox were cursed by this and would never win. The Red Sox were pretty competitive in the early part of the twenty first century. They won ninety plus games in two thousand and two under manager Grady Little, and in two thousand and three, though the Yankees won the American League East, the Red Sox qualified for the postseason as the American League Wildcard team, and that eventually led to a showdown between the Red Sox and Yankees in the American League Championship to decide the winner of the American League tenant and the American League representative in the World Series. It was a fantastic postseason and a thrilling alcs. The Red Sox actually were leading late in the game in the deciding w take all Game seven of the Yankee Stadium, Pedro Martinez, who was their ace pitcher at the time and one of the two or three greatest pitchers in Red Sox history, alongside Cy Young and Roger Clemens, late in the game, began to falter. People wanted Grady Little, the manager, to lift Pedro Martinez he tired as the pitch count increased, but Little decided that if he was going to go down, he was going to go down with one of the best pitchers in franchise history on the mound, And ultimately that's what happened, and the Red Sox had another October heartbreak. That year was the first year in which the Red Sox were led by a twenty eight year old general manager named theo Epstein, who had cut his teeth as an intern with the Orioles and was a very bright young man, having graduated from Yale and then got a law degree. And he too, befitting his age, was someone who was more analytically driven, was not somebody who did things the old fashioned way. He was looking for new ways to judge talent and put rosters together.

You took a lot of grief after you told us that what was the primitive stab was at RBI or Harmy Home Run. We're just trying to learn.

We're trying to learn. I don't think RBIs is a primitive I don't think it's extraordinarily relevant. And though it was a huge risk to turn the keys over to a franchise with such history to someone with so little experience. Both John Henry and Larry Lukeno determined that Epstein was up for the job. When they put the team together, they put a special emphasis on finding players who could remain loose, who weren't bothered by outside pressure, who could deal with questions about the curse of the Bambino and having failed so many times. And they had this kind of band of brothers mentality, led by people like Kevin Malar, who was a cast off from the Florida Marlins, not an All star caliber player really, but someone who could keep the mood light in the clubhouse. After a while, that group started calling themselves the idiots and looking back. That was particularly important in the two thousand and four postseason when they fell behind three nothing. Not many teams would have expected to come back from that, but Kevin Malar famously said before Game four, don't let us win tonight. He was sending a message to the Yankees that if we win one, you're in trouble. The Red Sox went into two thousand and four seen as the equal to the Yankees as the season began. As the season wore on, the Yankees continued to exhibit their dominance over the Red Sox. There were a number of memorable confrontations on the field during the year, including some bench clearing brawls, and when both teams won their first round playoff games and arrived at the two thousand and four ALCS, the rivalry was at its high point. There was no time during the twentieth or twenty first century where it was so intense between the teams. Again, the series was viewed as pretty much a toss up, but the Yankees dominated early in the series and won Game three nineteen to eight, and it looked for all the world as Game four began that the Yankees were going to once again exert their dominance and come out on top, but the Red Sox stattled back and in the ninth inning tied the game, sent it to extra innings, and later the Red Sox won. They also won Game five later that night because the previous Game four had finished after midnight, so the two teams actually technically played two games in one day, and in Game six, Kurt Chilling, who had pitched poorly in his first start in the series, was dealing with a pretty serious ankle injury, and out of desperation, the Red Sox and their medical staff did a very rudimentary and ad hoc surgical procedure on Shilling's ankle the day before to temporarily reattach attendant in the ankle and allow Shilling to be able to compete and pitch in Game six, a game the Red Sox had to win. Chilling comes out for Game six. You can see on his white sanitary sock blood seeping through evidence of the procedure that was done the day before. And Chilling is absolutely masterful in this game and beats the Yankees to force a Game seven. And the Yankees are absolutely stunned as the Red Sox make baseball history by becoming the first team to rally from being down three to nothing in a best of seven. As happy as Red Sox fans were with that result, there was more work to be done. The Red Sox had merely won the pennant, they had not won the World Series, and they were facing a very good Saint Louis Cardinals scheme that ended up having the best record of any National League champion in the two thousands. But the Red Sox were riding an incredible wave of momentum and made quick work of the Saint Louis Cardinals. They won the first two games at Fenway, and with the series shifting to Saint Louis, the Red Sox never left let up on the gas, won the next two games in Bush Stadium in Saint Louis, and celebrated their first World Series since nineteen eighteen.

The story of the Curse of the Bambino. Here on our American Stories.

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