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Red Sox magazine PDF

88 Pages·2003·11.1 MB·English
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2003 SECOND EDITION * ^U:4T^ -n»».-*e«^ % WOji P JSfl ^ n |-’,/ 3 Wk — J| i "Hr^ HL ^Hju:"' , JBMKIIIP *1 W v i. ivJj Bring it on There’s nothing quite like coming out to see the Red Sox® play at Fenway Park. From the towering Monster to our Major League stars, it’s always a great time. At Fleet, we’re proud to support the team and a great American pastime. DIC. Fleet H a registered mark of FleetBoston Financial Corporation. ©2003 FleetBoston Financial Corporatioi .reserved -Awnic.M :um cwxwa w <Ks)^(s? I RED SOX DIRECTORY M John W. Henry Thomas C. Werner Larry Lucchino Theo Epstein Grady Little Principal Owner Chairman President/CEO Senior Vice-President/ Field Manager General Manager 2003 BOSTON RED SOX DIRECTORY Principal Owner.. .John W. Henry COMMUNITY RELATIONS Chairman. .Thomas C. Werner Manager of Community Athletic Programs.Ronald E. Burton, Jr. Vice Chairmen. David Ginsberg, Leslie B. Often Manager of Community Relations.Vanessa M. Leyvas President/Chief Executive Officer. .Larry Lucchino Community Relations Assistant.Sarah E. Stevenson Director. .George J. Mitchell Chief Legal Officer, New England Sports Ventures .Lucinda K. Treat FACILITIES MANAGEMENT Director of Facilities Management.Thomas L. Queenan, Jr. Manager of Property Maintenance.John M. Caron PARTNERS Facilities Maintenance .Donald E. Gardiner, Jr., Glen P. McGlinchey, Edward C. Pistorino Theodore Alfond Michael Egan New York Times Co. Frank Resnek FAN AND NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICES William Alfond Ed Eskandarian (Russ Lewis, Samuel A. Tamposi, Jr. Ben Cammarata Michael Gordon Jim Lessersohn) Martin Trust Director of Fan and Neighborhood Services Sarah M. McKenna David D'Alessandro John A. Kaneb Arthur E. Nicholas Jeffrey Vinik FENWAY AFFAIRS Thomas R. DiBenedetto Phillip H. Morse Senior Vice-President/Fenway Affairs. Lawrence C. Cancro FRONT OFFICE Manager of Fenway Affairs. .Daniel E. Lyons Executive Vice-President/Business Affairs.Michael Dee Executive Vice-President/Public Affairs.Dr. Charles A. Steinberg HUMAN RESOURCES AND OFFICE ADMINISTRATION Senior Vice-President/Corporate Relations and Special Projects.Meg Vaillancourt Director of Human Resources and Office Administration.Michele Julian Executive Assistant to the President/CEO.Fay Scheer Administrative Assistant.Adis M. Benitez Special Assistants to the President/CEO.Jonathan E. Gilula, Jeremy Kapstein Receptionist .Molly A. Walsh Assistant to the Executive Vice-President/Business Affairs.Christine M. Collins Mailroom Assistant.Gerald Cannon Assistant to the Executive Vice-President/Public Affairs.Kerri A. Moore Office Assistant.Jared Pinkos Executive Assistants.Barbara A. Bianucci, Jeanne A. Bill INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS BASEBALL OPERATIONS Director of Information Technology.Stephen P. Conley Senior Vice-President/General Manager..Theo N. Epstein Manager of Information Technology.Clay N. Rendon Vice-President/Baseball Operations.Michael D. Port Senior Systems Analyst.Randy W. George Assistant General Manager.Joshua H. Byrnes Special Assistant to the General Manager/Scouting.William Lajoie LEGAL DEPARTMENT Special Assistant to the General Manager/Player Development.Craig Shipley Vice-President and Club Counsel.Elaine W. Steward Special Assistant to the General Manager.Lee Thomas Staff Counsel.Jennifer A. Flynn Director of Baseball Operations/Assistant Director of Player Development.Peter Woodfork Law Clerk.Judy Liu Baseball Operations Assistant.Jed D. Hoyer Traveling Secretary.John F. McCormick MEDIA RELATIONS Instructors.Jim Rice, Carl Yastrzemski Director of Media Relations.Kevin J. Shea Administrative Assistant.Jean M. MacDougall Director of Communications.Glenn Geffner Medical Director.William J. Morgan, M.D. Media Relations Coordinator..Peter A. Chase Head Trainer.James W. Rowe, Jr. Media Relations Assistant/Credentials.Meghan J. McClure Assistant Trainer/Rehabilitation Coordinator.Christopher T. Correnti Media Relations Assistant.Christopher K. Mearn Assistant Trainer.Chang-Ho Lee Equipment Manager and Clubhouse Operations.J. Joseph Cochran PUBLICATIONS AND ARCHIVES Visiting Clubhouse Manager.Thomas McLaughlin Vice-President/Publications and Archives.Richard L. Bresciani Video/Advance Scouting Coordinator.William Broadbent Executive Consultant/Public Affairs.James "Lou” Gorman Director of Publications.Debra A. Matson MINOR LEAGUE OPERATIONS Manager of Special Writing Projects.Ann Marie C. Starzyk Director of Player Development.Benjamin P. Cherington Manager of Publications and Archives.Roderick S. Oreste Director of Minor League Administration.Raquel S. Ferreira Coordinator of Alumni and Archives.Pamela J. Ganley Special Assignment Instructors:.Dwight Evans, Tommy Harper, Johnny Pesky, Charlie Wagner Coordinator of Florida Operations.M. Todd Stephenson SALES AND CORPORATE PARTNERSHIPS Minor League Equipment Manager.Mike Stelmach Vice-President/Sales and Corporate Partnerships.Samuel H. Kennedy Director of Corporate Partnerships.Joseph Januszewski SCOUTING Manager of Sponsor Services.A. Troup Parkinson Director of Amateur Scouting.David Chadd Coordinator of Sponsor Services.Laura J. Reff Director of International Scouting.Louie Eljaua Senior Manager of Season and Group Sales.Corey O. Bowdre Assistant Director of Amateur Scouting.James Orr Senior Manager of Premium Sales.Sean P. Curtin Assistant Director of Professional and International Scouting.Thomas L. Moore Premium Seating Sales Assistant.Mark A. Rogoff Advance Scouting Coordinator.Galen L. Carr Account Executives.Kimberly Cameron, Tyler Fairchild, Jordan Kogler Administrative Assistant/Scouting & Player Development.Victor Cruz Assistant to the Vice-President/Sales and Corporate Partnerships.Gillian R. Lewis ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE STADIUM OPERATIONS Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer. .Robert C. Furbush Vice-President /Stadium Operations. .Joseph F. McDermott Vice-President and Controller.. .Steve Fitch Superintendent of Park and Maintenance. .Joseph P. Mooney Central Purchasing Administrator. .Eileen M. Murphy-Tagrin Director of Grounds. .David R. Mellor Payroll Administrator. .Diane L. Sutty Assistant Director of Grounds.. .Charles Brunetti Assistant Controller. .Robin R. Willis Stadium Operations Staff: . Albert J. Forester, Bob Levin Staff Accountant. .Catherine A. Fahy Accounting Staff:. Louis C. Stathis, Tina K. Yong TICKET SERVICES AND OPERATIONS Senior Director of Business Services.Charles H. Steedman ADVERTISING AND BALLPARK ENTERTAINMENT Director of Ticket Services and Information.Michael D. Schetzel Director of Advertising and Ballpark Entertainment.Jeffrey E. Goldenberg Director of Ticket Operations.Richard J. Beaton, Jr. Manager of Ballpark Events.Marcita E. Thompson Manager of Season Ticket Services.Joseph L. Matthews Manager of Scoreboard and Video Production.Daniel B. Kischel Manager of Group and Premium Services.Carole A. Alkins Manager of Ballpark Entertainment.Richard A. Subrizio Manager of Ticket Services.Marcell M. Saporita Advertising Assistant.Jon Mancini Manager of Ticket Accounting Administration.Sean P. Carragher Ticket Office Receptionist.Marilyn M. DiBenedetto BALLPARK PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT Ticket Services:.Naomi A. Calder, Erica L. Giunta, Frank P. Marion, Sheri B. Rosenberg Vice-President/Planning and Development.Janet Marie Smith Ticket Operations: .Barbara L. Cuddy, Peter H. Fahey, Gary A. Goldberg, Lisa Lindsay Planning and Development Coordinator.Paul Hanlon 2003 RED SOX MAGAZINE 1 v^OHUTS W 'll ■ 1 Ml hi l i m 2003 Red Sox Directory 2003 Red Sox Broadcasters 2003 Red Sox Schedule Kids’ Puzzles 2003 Giveaways and Events Fenway Facilities Code of Conduct Ticket & Seating Information Published by The Boston Red Sox 4Yawkey Way, Boston, MA 02215-3496 Editor-in-Chief: Dick Bresciani Editor: Debbie Matson Editorial Assistant: Rod Oreste Contributing Writers: Herb Crehan, John Grabowski, Alan Greenwood, Beth Krudys, Debbie Matson, Bill Nowlin, Debra Ruder, Ann Marie Starzyk. Ed Walton, Saul Wisnia Photographers: Jack Maley, Cindy Loo, Brita Meng Outzen, Julie Cordeiro, Steve Babineau, Brian Babineau Cover Photo: Brita Meng Outzen Graphic Design: Accent Design, Carlisle, MA Printing: Mass Printing and Forms, Inc. Executive Vice President/Business Affairs: Mike Dee Vice President/Corporate Partnerships: Sam Kennedy Director of Corporate Partnerships: Joseph Januszewski Manager of Sponsor Services: Troup Parkinson Editorial & Advertising Offices: Fenway Advertising Associates Pedro & Nomar BY Alan Greenwood 4Yawkey Way, Boston, MA 02215-3496 The Best Medicine BY Debra Ruder and Saul Wisnia Advertising: 617-236-6650 A Suite Fit for a Red Sox Legend...and You! by Ann Marie Starzyk RED SOX MAGAZINE ” is published and copyrighted ©2003 by the Boston Red Sox. All rights reserved. RED Boston’s First American League Champions by Ed Walton SOX MAGAZINE™ is a trademark of the Boston Red Sox. Reproduction in whole or in part without prior Boston Has Something for Everyone Beginning in Our Own Front Yard by Beth Krudys written permission is prohibited. RED SOX MAGAZINE™ A Game-by-Game Timeline of the Boston Americans’ 1903 Season: May assumes no responsibility to return unsolicited editorial materials. Letters become the property of the Boston By Bill Nowlin Red Sox. All rights in letters will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyright Red Sox Opening Day/Week Festivities purposes, and subject to RED SOX MAGAZINE™ Don Zimmer, Adopted Son of New England’s Team unrestricted right to edit and comment editorially. The By herb crehan Boston Red Sox is an Equal Opportunity Employer. RED SOX MAGAZINE ■ NOMAR & PEDRO P by Alan Greenwood, Nashua Telegraph reat Red Sox teams, regardless of generation, typical¬ include at least one more legitimate MVP contender, Manny ly are recognized by one great pitcher and one great Ramirez, another starting pitcher, Derek Lowe, who finished third position player. in the 2002 Cy Young voting, returning all- stars at third base (Shea For instance, think 1967; if Jim Lonborg and Hillenbrand) and center field (Johnny Damon) and one of the Carl Yastrzemski don’t immediately come to mind, strongest benches Boston has had for years. cchhaanncceess In 1999, Martinez ■ you weren’t ■■■■■ was a unanimous choice around for the Impossible for the American League Dream season that forever Cy Young Award, going changed Red Sox history'. 23-4 with a league-leading Or 1975, when Luis 2.07 earned run average Tiant reigned as baseball’s and a league-leading 313 premier money pitcher, strikeouts (against just 37 and centerfielder Fred walks). Garciaparra batted Lynn made history by .357 to win the A.L. bat¬ winning American ting crown, hit 27 homers, League Rookie of the drove in 104 runs, scored Year and Most Valuable 103 and was the starting Player honors. A.L. shortstop in the All- Or 1986, when rookie Star Game. And both have Roger Clemens first estab¬ incredible tales from indi¬ lished himself among vidual games to serve as baseball’s elite pitchers, their signatures for that and old pro Jim Rice led summer. the Red Sox to within one pitch of a World Series Smokey Joe Wood compiled an impressive 34-5 record and a 1.91 ERA while teammate Tris Speaker Garciaparra’s came championship. hit .383 with a league-leading 53 doubles in the 1912 World Championship season for Boston. on May 10 at Fenway Now think of the last against the Seattle Red Sox playoff team, Mariners. 1999. There are vivid At its end, with a memories that season - the crowd of 21,660 refusing astounding comeback to yield, Garciaparra against the Cleveland decided to bask in the Indians in the Division glow, if ever briefly, of one Series and the All-Star of his more glorious major Game at Fenway Park per¬ league evenings by taking haps leading the list. And a curtain call, not some¬ most of those memories thing he particularly involve either (or both) enjoys. Pedro Martinez and “The adrenaline was Nomar Garciaparra. flowing,” he said. Martinez joined It should have been. Garciaparra to form the Garciaparra had just Red Sox core in 1998. In jumped on the first pitch their six seasons together, he saw from Seattle’s Eric except for their injury- Weaver with the bases abbreviated 2001 cam¬ loaded in the bottom of paign, they’ve given New The Red Sox won the A.L. pennant in 1946 thanks in part to Boo Ferriss’ 25-6 season and Ted the eighth and slammed it England hope each spring, Williams’ all-star stats (.342,38 HR, 123 RBI). into the screen down the the sort of hope inspired by left-field line. The third a perennial Cy Young Award candidate and one of the most talent¬ grand slam of Garciaparra’s career also was his second grand slam ed shortstops of his generation. and third homer of the night. This season Martinez and Garciaparra are joined by more tal¬ Final score: Garciaparra 10 (Red Sox 12), Mariners 4. ent than in any of their previous years together. The 2003 Red Sox It took Garciaparra 78 at-bats to hit his first home run of 1999, 2003 RED SOX MAGAZINE The jobs you want. Imm And how to get them. If you’re serious about finding a great job, you’ve got to check out BostonWorks. We have thousands of Greater Boston’s best jobs, and all the resources you need to get them. You’ll find career advice, networking events, industry news, and more. You can even research employers, compare salaries, and post your resume. So find a job you really want. Vistit BostonWorks — every Sunday in The Boston Globe and online at www.BostonWorks.com BostonWorks NOMAR& PEDRO In the “Impossible Dream” pennant-winning 1967 season, Jim Lonborg led the league with 22 wins and 246 strikeouts while Triple Crown winner Carl Yastrzemski led with 44 HR, 121 RBI and a .326 avg. Sometimes they go first three-home run game by a Red Sox hit¬ out. “I never had a ter since Mo Vaughn did it against the day like this before. Yankees on May 30, 1997 at Fenway. I’ve had some good Garciaparra’s 10 RBI were the most by a days but this one big leaguer since St. Louis outfielder Mark ranks right up there. Whiten drove in 12 in a four-homer game This was something on September 7, 1993. special.” “He’s just a flat-out good hitter,” then- Garciaparra was Red Sox manager Jimy Williams said. “He less than a week earlier off Texas’ Mike the third Red Sox hitter ever (Rudy York and hits the ball hard a lot of times and some of Venafro. In his ensuing 20 at-bats he hit four. Jim Tabor were the others) to hit two grand those times he elevates the ball. I can’t recall “It’s not like I’m looking for home runs,” slams in the same game. He was the fourth a game I’ve seen that somebody drove in 10 he said after his 10-RBI performance. “I’m Red Sox hitter (York, Norm Zauchin and runs. I’ve seen three home runs before but just focusing on swinging the bat. Fred Lynn) with 10 runs batted in. It was the not 10 RBI. Later that night, a representative from the Hall of Fame called Garciaparra seeking MARTINEZ’/GARCIAPARRA’S STATS 1998-2000,2002 something to commemorate his spectacular Pedro Martinez evening. Unfortunately, they had to call back tire ERA W L IP H K Opp. Avg next day. Garciaparra, having tired of taking 1998 2.89 19 7 233.2 88 251 .217 congratulations over the phone, ignored the 1999 2.07 23 4 213.1 60 313 .205 call and went to sleep. 2000 1.74 18 6 217.0 28 284 .167 Garciaparra enjoyed 13-, 16- and 17- 2002 2.26 20 4 199.1 44 239 .198 game hitting streaks that summer. In the Division Series against the Indians he hit Totals 2.25 80 21 863.1 620 1087 .198 .417, then hit .400 in the American League Championship Series against the Yankees. Nomar Garciaparra But that game against Seattle at Fenway Avg G AB R H HR RBI stands alone. 1998 .323 143 604 111 195 35 122 “This was a special night. They don’t 1999 .357 135 532 103 190 27 104 come very often,” Garciaparra said. “But it’s not like I can take a week off to enjoy it. I got 2000 .372 140 529 104 197 21 96 to come back out tomorrow.” 2002 .310 156 635 101 197 24 120 Totals .339 574 2300 419 779 107 442 Pedro Martinez’s most unforgettable day, perhaps even surpassing his brilliant All- 2003 RED SOX MAGAZINE 7 y Begins at Home Strikeouts, double plays and home runs mean money for Children's Hospitals throughout New England. Hood Watch the White Monster during Red Sox home games for a running total dollar amount of contributions. Milk Hood Visit www.hphood.com The Hood Home Team Advantage"' Program benefits Children’s Hospitals throughout New England ninuL -i—_

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