The Boston Red Sox are reigning World Series champions and
have won three titles in just the past decade. In the more than 100 years of
their existence, they have won eight World Series and been one of the
best-known and popular teams in all of baseball. However, their 1967 squad, whose
improbable success was known as the “impossible dream” but fell short of
winning it all, has arguably endured as the most memorable of all their teams for
fans.
1967
Boston Red Sox: The Impossible Dream Season by Raymond Sinibaldi (Arcadia
Publishing) details the rise and run of the ’67 team through an impressive
collection of 200 black and white photographs. Although Sinibaldi largely lets
the pictures do the talking, his captioning provides valuable context, and his
introduction to each chapter frames the importance of the season against his own
experiences as a young fan dealing with dealing with his brother’s deployment
in the Vietnam War.
Red Sox fans had become accustomed to failure leading up to
the 1967 season. Boston had last won a World Series in 1918 and endured numerous
challenging seasons, occasionally interrupted by great teams that were never
able to find themselves as the last one standing at the end.
After going 72-90 in 1966, the Red Sox won 92 games and the
American League pennant in 1967 before losing to the heavily favored St. Louis
Cardinals in seven games in the World Series. The team may have come up just
short but their out-of-nowhere success and the often thrilling ways they won
games with a cast of likable and talented characters firmly stamped their place
in the history books and the hearts of Boston fans forever.
Sinibaldi’s work obviously has strong personal overtones.
However, many fans can claim a similar affinity to a particular sports team and
season because of how they were able to emotionally invest and connect; in many
cases helping fill whatever voids existed in their lives at the time. That
doesn’t make the importance of the 1967 Red Sox any less important. To the
contrary, the timeless sentiment and warm regard is indicative of the special
place the team occupies for so many.
The collection of photographs that comprises 1967 Red Sox is impressive and
comprehensive. Cumulatively, they form a cohesive and entertaining pictorial
essay that tells the story of the historic team. Instead of simply being action
shots of important moments during the season, careful attention is paid to
include pictures explaining how the ’67 team came to be and its composition,
right down to the players who had the briefest cups of coffee and sat at the
furthest ends of the bench.
With all the detail comes an ample spotlight on the most
important figures from the impossible dream team; with outfielder Carl
Yastrzemski, outfielder Tony Conigliaro, pitcher Jim Lonborg and manager Dick
Williams being among the most prominent.
The beauty of 1967 Red
Sox is the way it puts the magical season in the context of the topsy turvy
world that was swirling around at the same time. The war, the Civil Rights
movement and the particularly contentious racial issues happening in Boston
made for a difficult and uncertain existence. Calling a baseball team a respite
could be cliché, but it was never truer than in the case of this one season.
Boston was a hotbed of racial strife in the ‘60s and the Red
Sox were the last major league team to integrate (in 1959- 12 years after
Jackie Robinson debuted with the Brooklyn Dodgers). Sinibaldi does cover this
but doesn’t make it a focal point of the book. Providing a bit more detail on
this issue could have taken the narrative into even more interesting places. However,
he does a nice job of spotlighting the African American players who may have
been small in number but not in impact on the 1967 team, including Elston
Howard, George Scott and Reggie Smith.
1967 Red Sox isn’t
just a baseball book. It is also a book about community and finding ways to cope
in difficult times through the redemptive qualities of sport. It’s an excellent
look back at one of the more memorable times in Boston and baseball, and well
worth a look by fans and non-fans alike.
Disclaimer: I was provided with a free copy of the book being reviewed by the publisher, but received no payment or other consideration for this review.
Disclaimer: I was provided with a free copy of the book being reviewed by the publisher, but received no payment or other consideration for this review.
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