The Impossible Dream Red Sox Nation Begins - 50th anniversary of 1967 Red Sox MLB Network

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • MLB Network Presents The Impossible Dream Red Sox Nation Begins
    This is a very well done 2017 tribute to the 1967 Red Sox on the 50th anniversary of them winning the American League pennant at 100-1 odds.
    Most Valuable Player Carl Yastrzemski, Cy Young Award winner Jim Lonborg, homer hitting heartthrobTony Conigliaro, Rico Petrocelli, Reggie Smith, manager Dick Williams ... they're all here in this hour-long look back at the team that thrilled a region and a nation as it brought baseball back in Boston.
    I had no idea Ron Darling was a Red Sox fan until watching this; his great stories are some of the many here that perfectly capture the love between the fans and the team as it battled in the torrid AL race. And yes kids, it's true. What they did was so captivating, not one person who experienced it was really crushed that they lost the World Series.
    I've posted three Impossible Dream tributes (WHDH, November 1967; NESN, The Sports Museum 2007), and they're all excellent. They each have different talking heads, and video clips, which is why I wanted them all up.
    Copyright, Major League Baseball, MLB Network, Boston Red Sox, or any other party. I didn't create, don't claim the rights to, and don't profit from, this video. I just didn't see it on RUclips and posted for historical and educational purposes, and for those who will enjoy it as much as I did.

Комментарии • 108

  • @rftulie
    @rftulie 10 месяцев назад +3

    My folks moved us to Boston from Long Beach, CA in 1966. I walked into Fenway and had my "Fever Pitch" moment that year. I was blissfully unaware of the Sox history of failure up to that point, and although I was really disappointed with that season, I stopped being a Dodger fan as soon as I came out of that tunnel and saw that gem of a park. I had no idea what I was in for the folllowing season! I still have that Impossible Dream vinyl. It's been great ever since, although these past 2 seasons are really forgettable. I continue to hang on through every season 2,000 miles away in New Mexico. 2004 did erase the demons of 1967, 1975, and 1986.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  10 месяцев назад

      That's fantastic! How many games did you go to in 1967?

    • @rftulie
      @rftulie 10 месяцев назад +1

      I’m going to say a couple. I was only 11 and it was hard to convince my parents of the paramount importance of the Red Sox. Once I got into high school my attendance went up to about 5 games a year. But in ‘67 I was the kid in class with my transistor radio in my desk, cord running up to my earplug, keeping my classmates up to date on World Series games (they were all day games then)

  • @rafaelramirez1507
    @rafaelramirez1507 Год назад +4

    It all began for this little 13 yr. old boy in 1975 , but remember my Pop telling me of the 1967 Boston Red Sox which propelled me into a true fan of the Bosox that at 60 years old now, still carries in his heart what his Pop inspired him in 1975 ,all due to that 1967 Impossible Dream

  • @williamwhalen29
    @williamwhalen29 2 года назад +9

    I was 2 during the '67 season. Always heard stories about this season. Really enjoy seeing this program. Fans today are spoiled by the success of recent Red Sox teams. They were an awful team before '67. I've always wondered if Tony C would have made a difference in '67. Same with Jim Rice in '75. The Red Sox pushed 2 generational teams to the limit in those 2 series. Awesome program!

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад

      Glad you enjoyed, and I think you have just the right read on things!

  • @stevenmccart5455
    @stevenmccart5455 2 года назад +3

    I was in the 5th grade and my mom let me stay home to watch the World Series when I told her my teacher wouldn't let us watch the game. She wrote me a note to give the school excusing my absence do to World Series.

  • @denniscole789
    @denniscole789 2 года назад +10

    Well done documentary. I was there on Sept 30 and Oct 1st when the Sox beat the Twins and won the pennant. Fenway was discovered that year. I was 18 and a freshman at Northeastern and it inaugurated my 2nd childhood. My book 'Journey Through The Narrow Gate' Dennis Stephan Cole a fiction novel has in it the story of The Impossible Dream. Thank God for that season..🙏♥️

  • @jakubwidlarz
    @jakubwidlarz 2 года назад +12

    In the same way that the 2016 Cubs would not have happened without the Sandberg game, the 2004 Sox would not have happened without Yaz in September '67.

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад

      The Sandberg game was on June 23, 1984

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад

      No I don't believe 2 things years apart have anything to do with the other

  • @beatlejim64
    @beatlejim64 2 года назад +7

    My all time favorite Red Sox team! What a GREAT pennant race!!! As a kid growing up in the 1960's in Massachusetts we were used to the Sox losing...but winning the flag on the last day of the season in 1967...WOW!

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад

      A special time of excitement never experienced before or since!

    • @RB01.10
      @RB01.10 2 года назад +2

      I get the sentiment, but wasn’t 2004 the best since they finally broke the curse ?

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +2

      @@RB01.10 Sure, for most people. I think they were pretty careful to make that point, with the early footage of 2004, and at the end when they didn't gloss over the fact that they didn't win it all in '67. But as they also point out, and I agree, it honestly really didn't matter. They'd been bad for so long; the Sox in the pennant race became a local, then national sensation; Yaz and Lonborg were so great; they beat 100-1 odds; they had to wait in the locker room at the end. It was an incredible time, and most of us old-timers say 2004 was great, but I feel sorry for you if you weren't there in 1967!

    • @stephenkammerling9479
      @stephenkammerling9479 Год назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 It used to be teams got a lot more credit for winning the pennant than they do now. Maybe that was because there were no divisions or interleague play. Now, if you don't win the World Series you're considered a loser. It's much harder to be successful over a 162 game season than it is to get hot over a seven game span. Weaker teams have frequently beaten superior teams in the World Series. It might happen again this year. The underdog Phillies beat the Astros tonight in game one of World Series after trailing 5-0.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      @@stephenkammerling9479 True! And I'm not sure they've yet come up with the best way to reward the best teams in the regular season in the current playoff setup.

  • @toddgoza3522
    @toddgoza3522 2 года назад +3

    John Wyatt was a relief pitcher for Boston Red Sox from 66-68, 4th African American to win a World Series game when he won game 6 in 1967 World Series!

  • @michaelleroy9281
    @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +2

    Dick Williams was right on his prediction, they did win more games then they lost

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      He knew that the Red Sox had young talent, and had played well the second half of 1966. But it still was a giant leap of faith, especially regarding the starting pitching. Thank goodness for Jim Lonborg!

  • @tylerdurden6901
    @tylerdurden6901 2 года назад +2

    funner times simpler times rally around baseball I love it

  • @michaelleroy9281
    @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +2

    1967 The Great American League Pennant Race!!!

  • @scottaznavourian3720
    @scottaznavourian3720 5 месяцев назад +1

    Eruzione beeing in this is fitting. The 67 sox are the 80 hockey team but with a silver medal

  • @aa697
    @aa697 Год назад +2

    The very sad part for me and my father as Yankees fans was what happened to Tony Conigliaro. My father who had seen Joe DiMaggio saw the next coming of Joe DiMaggio in Tony Conigliaro.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      I had not thought of that comparison before, but I definitely can see it! Your dad had a great eye!

  • @saylortusk8489
    @saylortusk8489 Год назад +2

    "There's pandemonium on the field!" ♥

  • @bwyou812
    @bwyou812 11 месяцев назад +2

    No way did they give Hawk 150,000 like he says. I have a scrapbook I collected as a kid and Cut out an article of Yaz signing the largest contract in baseball of 100,000 in 1969-70. I was 11 going on 12 in 1967 and I remember this team well.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  11 месяцев назад +1

      Now that you mention it! ... Well, Hawk *was* prone to exaggeration.

  • @patrickgray5633
    @patrickgray5633 2 года назад +2

    Yaz was awesome!!!!!

  • @michaelleroy9281
    @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +2

    Imagine that before 1967 the Red Sox thinking of leaving Boston

  • @100chuckjones
    @100chuckjones Год назад +2

    My mother and father were at that game when Tony C was drilled in the face. So was I, in my mothers stomach. I've never seen this video before, but my parents said the same thing, they will never forget the noise it made when the ball hit him in the face. It was like a thud noise. Haunting.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      Truly. I often wonder if things would have been different if some kid hadn't thrown a smoke bomb on the field, causing a delay.

    • @100chuckjones
      @100chuckjones Год назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 Lived in New England my whole life (Groton). Some of my favorite Red Sox teams were from the 1970's. Especially the 75 and 78 teams. Yes the 1978 team will always be remembered for it's one game play off loss at the hands of Bucky Dent and the second half slide (letting the Yanks back into the pennant race) but what a great team it was. I was lucky enough to meet some of the 78 team.
      My father was a car salesmen at Hallisey Chevrolet in Lowell. I spent time their as a kid with my dad (I wash used cars), he sold new cars. And he sold some cars the Red Sox players.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      @@100chuckjones The '78 team was up so big at the All-Star break, I said, "There's no way they can lose it!" Oopsies!

    • @100chuckjones
      @100chuckjones Год назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 Yeah, tough pill to swallow even now.
      That and the 86 series. But I think the pat's losing the 16-0 season might be my worst toothache.

    • @100chuckjones
      @100chuckjones Год назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 I'm also a huge Patriots fan. But love my Sox. Especially those old Sox teams.

  • @dietpepsivanilla3095
    @dietpepsivanilla3095 Месяц назад +2

    If only the Red Sox had Bob Gibson. They didn't.

  • @ram3621
    @ram3621 9 месяцев назад +1

    Our family was living on an Army Post in Stuttgart Germany, I was in the 6th grade. I listened on Armed Forces Radio to Lonborg's one-hitter. I was a Yankees fan but disliked the Cardinals even more.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  9 месяцев назад

      How awesome that you got to hear the game! And thank you for your family member(s) service.

  • @B.S...
    @B.S... 2 года назад +3

    I’m gonna take a wild ass guess and say Dalton Jones won a half dozen games pinch hitting in the 8th and 9th innings. Yaz had it all… bat, glove, rifle arm, watching Yaz swing a bat was pure aggression , but Jones was proof that god is a baseball fan.

  • @Mpshfromlowell64
    @Mpshfromlowell64 2 года назад +2

    I love how Yastrzemski pronounces Lonborg as "Lonberg"....

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +1

      A buddy and I both noticed that when the video came out. We both decided that Yaz is too big for somebody to sidle up to him and say, "Hey Carl, do you know it's pronounced Lon-borg, not Lon-berg?" LOL!

  • @aa697
    @aa697 Год назад +2

    RIP Tony C.

  • @RB01.10
    @RB01.10 2 года назад +2

    *Cries*
    Would’ve meant so much more had they actually won.
    Yes I know there weren’t really any playoff games like today but still 😢

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +1

      If you find anybody who lived it who cares about that, LMK, cause he or she will be the first! They were *so* bad, and did *so* well, nobody minded that they lost the WS (which they rallied from 3-1 down to force a G7!). You'll have to trust me on that!

  • @mariocisneros911
    @mariocisneros911 2 года назад +2

    Wrong. I think it was in 1946 or 49. When it started . Than 67, 75 , 86.. but they're still spoiled because they GOT to the World Series. Tell that to the majority of every other team.

  • @scottaznavourian3720
    @scottaznavourian3720 2 года назад +5

    That yankee brawl is one of the best ever. But no one ever talks about it.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +1

      You are spot-on about that!

    • @MsSmitty9
      @MsSmitty9 2 года назад

      Joe Pepitone Was a trouble making AH.

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +1

      ​@@petegoodwinboston4825 The one from 1976 with Lou Pinella, Carlton Fisk and Bill Lee is more talked about

  • @marcyfan
    @marcyfan 2 года назад +1

    yaz after having ted williams try to mentor him turned into ted in 1967!

  • @freddyfurrah3789
    @freddyfurrah3789 Год назад +1

    The 67 Red Sox is my team. 😮 I didn't know that, Freddy. 😅

  • @harrymann5523
    @harrymann5523 Месяц назад +1

    7:41, 25:47, 29:01

  • @ragintrajan8637
    @ragintrajan8637 Год назад +1

    Forty-five-minute documentary and zero mention of Lee Stange, who tied Gary Bell for second-most starts and had the lowest ERA of all starting Red Sox pitchers? What's a guy gotta do?

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      You're right, the Stinger doesn't get enough credit. Maybe because he was in and out, starter and reliever? He was gonna pitch the playoff game against Detroit! And when Lonborg had nothing in the bullpen before Game 7, I thought Williams should have coinsidered Stange.

    • @ragintrajan8637
      @ragintrajan8637 Год назад +1

      @Pete Goodwin / Boston As a knowledgeable Red Sox fan, I'm sure you'll be able to confirm. My dad says the proper way to pronounce his last name is stāng, not stānj. Is he correct?

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      @@ragintrajan8637 Always listen to your dad! STANG.

    • @ragintrajan8637
      @ragintrajan8637 Год назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 That's good advice. I appreciate it. And thanks for your tremendous work.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      @@ragintrajan8637 Glad you enjoy the vids!

  • @alexandrebertrand-lafleur3114
    @alexandrebertrand-lafleur3114 2 года назад +2

    The 60's bring alcoolic-loosers managers to Boston: Billy Jurges (1959-1960), Pinky Higgins (1960-62), Billy Herman (1964-66). Johnny Pesky isn't bad as manager but it's started when Bucky Harris was fired as GM, in September 1960, Tom Yawkey want Ted Williams as GM. Williams refused and Dick O'Connell have the job as acting GM. Pinky Higgins become GM in 1962 and do the work until he is fired in September 1965.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад

      Yes. In O'Connell they finally had an open-minded, shall we say, GM.

  • @bluejaysmedicmike6831
    @bluejaysmedicmike6831 2 года назад +2

    BoSox 2004 and My White Sox Didn’t in 2005

  • @mariocisneros911
    @mariocisneros911 2 года назад +2

    25:47. Ken Berry was safe. .

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад

      You're entitled to your opinion, but ... No way! Elston Howard got his foot down and blocked the plate! In fact, I think he had a tougher play than Jose Tartabull jumping, catching the throw, coming down. and putting the tag on!

    • @larry930legend
      @larry930legend Месяц назад

      You must've been watching Ken Berry the actor

    • @mariocisneros911
      @mariocisneros911 Месяц назад

      @@larry930legend nope "The Bandit" White Sox centerfielder

    • @nikita-dh5je
      @nikita-dh5je 11 дней назад

      @@larry930legendF Troop

  • @zachmalone428
    @zachmalone428 2 года назад +1

    Confused about the hitting of the batters. Why are both pitchers having to hit?

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +1

      That's the way it used to be!

    • @zachmalone428
      @zachmalone428 2 года назад +2

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 Had to look that up! I thought the DH was an AL mainstay since the inception! Learn new stuff everyday! Thanks!

    • @americangiant1003
      @americangiant1003 Год назад

      @@zachmalone428 The DH started in the AL in 1973. It took almost 50 years later before the NL permanently also adopted as well for all of their Intra-League regular season & playoff games as well in 2022.

  • @michaelleroy9281
    @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +1

    Back in 1967 how could they plck up the Angels Tigers game from the locker room in Boston on the radio? that's easy to do now because of satellite radio

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад +1

      Must have been an AM powerhouse out of Motown!

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 If WJR had the Tigers games at the time they could probably pick that up, that's a strong station

    • @americangiant1003
      @americangiant1003 Год назад +1

      Micheal & Pete more likely the regular season double header Angels/Tigers finale was broadcast nationally on I assume NBC/Mutual Broadcasting or W/e had the countrywide radio rights for MLB in 1967. Plus (correct me if wrong)NBC cut off the 4pm(ET) AFL games to show the 2nd game of the Angels/Tigers doubleheader coast to coast as well.

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  Год назад

      @@americangiant1003 I don't know what happened, but what you say is interesting.

  • @DonQwantsyou
    @DonQwantsyou 2 года назад +1

    why is mike eruzione everywhere?

  • @johntoomey357
    @johntoomey357 2 года назад +1

    Amazing Dick Williams Was Clean Cut And Clean Shaving In 1967 He Went To The A's And Within A Couple Of Years He Looked Like A Bum Shaggy Hair Mustash Sideburns Whiskers He Looked Like He Was A Mechanic Not A Manager Well It Was The 1970s I Guess It Was Cool To Look Dirty And Williams Used To Get On Players About Getting Haircuts In Boston It Didn't Take Him Long To Change His Grooming Habits After Being Fired In Boston he 1969 As soon As He Got To The As His Hair Was Still Short But He Started Growing Sideburns Within Two Yrs After Finley Was Paying Players To Grow Mustaches For A 100 Dollars Dick Went On A Roll Grew A Stash Grew His Hair out Looked Scruffy Like A Guy Who Changes The Oil In Your Car He Also Liked His Drinks In The 1980s Williams Was Still Scruffy Looking And He Was Drunk At A Hotel Good And Decided To Get Nude And Piss Off The Balcony He Was Arrested He Was Manager Of The Mariners By Then Good Manager But A Total Prick To Players And A Hypocrite As Well As Fake Yaz And Many Of The Redsox Notably Ken The Hawk Harrelson Who Was Into The 1960s Hippie Styles Hated Williams Because He Was Pestering Him About His Longer Hair And Sideburns Alot Of Others On The Team Tolerated Williams Because He Helped Get The Redsox and To Win A Penant But By 1969 That Drill SGT Guy Was Fired Because The Players Were Tired Of Him And So To The A's He Went Turning Into A Auto mechanic Look And Mr Clean Cut Turned Into Mr Scum I Mention This Because The Man Was A Prick Drunk And Hypocrite

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  2 года назад +1

      He was the perfect manager for that team, that year, but as you detailed, things quickly deteriorated. And I do recall the unfortunate balcony incident!

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 Because the Red Sox didn't repeat the AL Championship and World Series in 1968 and 1969 he had to go, you can't fire 25 players so it's easier to fire the manager

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 6 месяцев назад

      Finley gave out 300 dollars 💸 for the players to grow mustaches which started in 1972

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 6 месяцев назад

      But he wound up being the manager for 2 of the 3 A's World Series Championship teams

  • @rosario508
    @rosario508 8 месяцев назад +1

    Why do we celebrate a team that lost the WS?

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  8 месяцев назад

      I'm sure it's somewhere down below in the comments, but people don't read them ... they had finished ninth the season before, and were 100-1 shots. Yastrzemski had one of the best seasons in baseball history and Lonborg blossomed. They won games late, and won their final two games dramatically to win the American League pennant. For most of us lucky to be following along, those thrills were quite enough. And oh, by the way, they almost beat the Cardinals. But all of this is spelled out better ... in the documentary.

    • @rosario508
      @rosario508 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@petegoodwinboston4825 I'm a Red Sox fan. I know all of that. But the fact of the matter is they were part of the curse of the bambino and a team that came tantalizingly close to the promise land but found a way to lose. I think this team was put on a pedestal because we sox fans desperately clung to any post season glory we could we could find during that painfully long drought. I feel the exact same way about Fisk's home run. Now that they've won four World Series in the last 19 years we no longer need to hold this team to such lofty heights

    • @petegoodwinboston4825
      @petegoodwinboston4825  8 месяцев назад

      @@rosario508 That's your opinion; you're entitled to it. I disagree.

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 6 месяцев назад +1

      They didn't win the World Series but 1967 showed they could at least get there something that previously didn't happen since 1946

  • @jadengallagher2870
    @jadengallagher2870 2 года назад

    Yolo

  • @freddyfurrah3789
    @freddyfurrah3789 Год назад +1

    WHY S.....KING?😅