The Name of the Game

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The Name of the Game

Recently the Red Sox celebrated the return of Carlton Fisk to the organization by naming the left field foul pole �Fisk�s Pole�. Who�s going to quibble about another Hallmark Holiday? While this brings some symmetry to �America�s Greatest Ballpark� alongside Pesky Pole, why stop here?

Scores of people made Fenway and the Red Sox great, tragic, and triumphant over the years. Many deserve recognition even if they didn�t necessarily have their greatest moment at Fenway.

Should the Monster seats be the Dick Radatz Monster Seats in memory of the Sox great closer? Radatz pitched over 120 innings of relief four times for the Sox, including the 1964 season, pitching 157 relief innings, yielding only 103 hits and fanning 181.

The tarpaulin-covered centerfield bleacher area was informally named �Conig�s Corner� after Tony C�s eye injury led him to complain about fans� white jerseys interfering with his view. Not far from there resides the Al Luplow Bullpen, where the Indian right fielder robbed Dick Williams of a home run, June 27, 1963 in one of the greatest catches ever in Boston.

Below and to the right of Conig�s Corner was the Reggie Smith Flagpole, where the eponymous center fielder gunned down Dave McNally from the 379 foot sign as McNally tried to score on a sacrifice fly. Naturally, many of Reggie�s best years came after he left the Sox, but he eclipsed .300 in six full seasons and slugged 314 homers.

Bill �Spaceman� Lee Grass covers the entire outfield. Lee is quoted, �It�s hard to be mean when you�re stoned.� Everyone calls George Toma the �Guru of Grass�, but maybe Lee deserves the title.

Moving in from the outfield, we have the Tris Speaker Second Base Bag. Sure, he�s long gone, but holds career records for outfield assists and twice completed unassisted double plays from centerfield in 1918, snagging line drives and beating the runner back to second. Take that Paul Blair.

Naturally, we have the Bill Buckner First Base Bag. Buckner hit .300 five times, missed by a point with the Sox, is 53rd in all-time hits, and yet we will always remember him best (worst) for missing Mookie Wilson�s roller in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series. Those ghosts are exorcised, but history remains.

Luis Aparicio third base line. Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio, in the strike shortened 1972 season, fell down rounding third in the next to last game of the season costing the Sox a chance at victory. His slip caused the Sox to miss the playoffs by half a game. Aparicio�s 9 Gold Gloves and 9 stolen base titles couldn�t protect him from Red Sox demons.

In the center of Fenway�s diamond is the John Wyatt Pitching Mound. Why Wyatt? Not content with the Magnus Effect of increased force on the faster side of a spinning ball to create baseball magic, Wyatt brought the Vaseline Ball to Fenway Park. Wyatt was thought to keep a syringe of Vaseline in the thumb of his glove. Wyatt had twenty saves and a 2.60 ERA for the Impossible Dream Red Sox of 1967. Runnerup was the Luis Tiant Whirling Dervish Mound.

Can we forget about the Carl Yastrzemski Home Plate? Although we remember Yaz for 452 homers, over 3000 hits, and stellar left field play, we all remember the game in 1976 where he got so frustrated at the umpiring that after striking out he covered home plate with dirt and tossed his helmet on it.

I can�t do justice to the Billy Martin Visitor�s Dugout, the Vin Orlando Clubhouse, the Tim Naehring Whirlpool, the Jason Varitek Fungo Circle, and too numerous nooks and crannies that make Fenway so notorious. We can only dream that the future creates as many great memories for our children and us.

-- Ron Sen, Boston Dirt Dogs contributor (Check out Ron's blog, Red Sox Reality Check)

20/20 Archives

BDD is a feature of Boston.com. All posts are by Steve Silva unless otherwise indicated.

Boston Globe:

Rodriguez looks like the steal deal > Despite effort by Rodriguez, Red So fall > Tazawa has come a long way, on and off field

Boston Herald:

Lauber: Eduardo Rodriguez showing Red Sox he's special > PawSox start looms large for Masterson

ProJo:

Rodriguez gem wasted > Chili Davis doesn't want to turn Red Sox into free-swingers > Red Sox draft catcher in third round

NY Post:

How Mariano Rivera has influenced Yankees' top pick > Why starting rotation could be a big Yankees' strength

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