Its time to make the calls: Herewith my all-time best of the Boys of Fenway

With the season-long celebration of the grand centennial of our lyric little bandbox of a ballyard upcoming, we are about to be bombarded, inundated, suffocated (pick the verb you deem most appropriate) with all things Fenway.

This is a colossal public relations moment with humongous profit potential, so the ever-enterprising boys now running the local show promise not to miss a beat. Alas, we can take them at their word. What you won’t know about the House that Tris Speaker and Joe Wood Built when this torrential bath in sentimental excess finally runs its course in October won’t be worth knowing.

But there will be some fun along the way, with only one of the more fetching exercises being the picking of the all-time Fenway all-stars. That process is about to begin, and all card-carrying members of the cult lovingly dubbed Red Sox Nation have been invited to weigh in. We don’t need to be asked twice.

We choose, however, to stretch the premise. Picking the all-time team—the starters—is no challenge. But shaping an all-time roster—a precious few of the best at every position—is another matter. The goal was to come up with the ultimate 40-man roster, but that proved near impossible; just too many close calls. One hundred years is a long time. A lot of chaps have come and gone. So I’m picking a 60-man roster. It’s arbitrary, perhaps, but what the heck!

A brief word on guidelines: Player must have played at Fenway. Sorry, Cy Young. Contemporaries must have at least five full seasons in MLB (sorry, Jacoby Ellsbury), and three seasons with the team (sorry, Adrian Gonzalez).

Catcher: Easiest slot of all. Carlton Fisk clearly bestrides the field. Jason Varitek finishes a distant but worthy second, mainly for all the intangibles he brought to the arduous task. Toughest left-outs are Rick Ferrell, who is in the Hall of Fame, and Wally Schang, who should be. But neither played here long. Sammy White gets honorable mention.

First: Though he was past his prime here and fading too soon, Jimmie Foxx is uncontested at a position where the Red Sox have often featured transients and stumble-bums. Pete Runnels with his two batting-crowns finishes second with Mo Vaughn third. Want to include George Scott but can’t quite justify the Boomer. Stray votes for Bill Buckner and Dick Stuart are rejected.

Second: Great contest! Brutally hard to choose between Bobby Doerr and Dustin Pedroia, but if the highly admirable little guy now at the post stays the course he’s on, he’ll eclipse the august Doerr. Runnels and the even more versatile Billy Goodman also logged distinguished time here.

Third: He was mocked and derided and denied the respect he deserved, but Wade Boggs was little less a pure artist with a baseball bat than Teddie Ballgame, who was every bit as eccentric but could do no wrong. The estimable Frank Malzone and ancient Larry Gardner follow, as does old friend Rico Petrocelli. Rico was an even better shortstop, but that position is crowded and Rico has to be on this roster. Tough omits include Carney Lansford, Mike Lowell, and Hall-of- Famer George Kell.

Shortstop: Unquestionably, the Red Sox shortstop who far and away had the greatest single seasons was Nomar Garciaparra, whose works in 1999 and 2000 near alone qualify him for Cooperstown. The enigma of Nomar need not be belabored here. So Joe Cronin leads the pack, though suspicion persists he was over-rated, especially in the field. Consider how stunning the stats of beloved Sox lifer Johnny Pesky might be had he not lost three seasons to WWII. Rick ‘Rooster’ Burleson was the ultimate ‘gamer.” All four belong. Tough cuts include ancient Everett Scott and Luis Aparacio.

Left: It’s mossy turf with Himself, T.S. Williams, in charge, although he was the classic DH before there was a DH. Carl Yastrzemski respectfully plays back-up with poor Jim Rice, another classic DH, lagging. Duffy Lewis deserves a roster spot if the mythology of the WWI era is to be believed, and you should appreciate, in retrospect, the achievements of Mike Greenwell.

Center: Another deep and rich post. Tris Speaker obviously leads this pack, followed by Dom DiMaggio, who wasn’t better than his brother Joe yet very fine, and star-crossed Jimmy Piersall. A half century later we can still wonder how great Piersall might have been. For a shining moment, Freddie Lynn seemed potentially Speaker’s equal. Lastly, I choose Johnny Damon, a much under-rated contemporary player without whom I believe the Red Sox would never have ended their alleged ‘curse’ in ’04.

Right: Top pick here is Dwight Evans. Bill James recently went to much trouble touting “Dewey” as Hall of Fame-worthy. I heartily second the motion. Harry Hooper, already deservedly enshrined, ranks second, followed by the man who could have been the best of the lot had fate been kinder, Tony Conigliaro. Reggie Smith and Jackie Jensen had wonderful talent but troubled tenures here. Smith excelled elsewhere while Jensen faded much too soon.

Designated Hitter: A great place to dump chaps who must be on this roster but ultimately don’t cut it in the field. Winners are David Ortiz, Manny Ramirez, and Vern ‘Junior’ Stephens. Their collective offensive punch is awesome.

Utility players: Two lads from different eras who excelled at playing wherever they were asked: Billy Goodman and Kevin Youkilis.

Lefties: That Babe Ruth once graced the premises in local colors is all you need know. If but a shadow of his former self here, Lefty Grove was nonetheless still Lefty Grove. Classy Mel Parnell might have made Cooperstown had he pitched for the Yankees. Dutch Leonard was the mainstay of the WWI era champs. Jon Lester has time left to become as good as any of them. Bruce Hurst, a fine fellow, edges out Bill lee. They were equal in talent, but Hurst was much more sincere. Sorry, Spaceman.

Righties: The choices are Pedro Martinez, Curt Schilling, Roger Clemens, Luis Tiant, Jim Lonborg, Smokey Joe Wood, Carl Mays, Red Ruffing, Wes Ferrrell, Tim Wakefield, Billy Monbouquette, Dennis Eckersley, Josh Beckett and Tex Hughson.

If you study the list you’ll find no surprises. Yes, Lonborg only had that one divine season but it was arguably the most important in the team’s history. Wood was his precursor, an equally near-mythic character. Martinez had the greatest talent, I think, although if I had one game I had to win I’d choose Tiant over Clemens or the even scarier Mays. Ruffing got pummeled here but everyone knew when he got to the Yanks he’d be great. Eck also should never have been traded. Ferrell and Monbo were gallant work-horses bearing the burden of bad teams. Beckett has time to get even better. Tex Hughson edges out Boo Ferris. Apologies to characters not making the cut including Joe Bush and Joe Dobson, but not Oil Can Boyd.

Relief Pitcher: Out of the bullpen, Dick Radatz was in a class by himself. No reliever in baseball history did what the Monster did three straight seasons for an absolutely crummy team. Following him distantly are Jonathan Papelbon, Ellie Kinder, Steamer Stanley, and Albert Lyle. The delightful Sparky had his best years in the Bronx, but we need a lefty.

So that’s my roster; 60 warriors tried and true.

The first team, if you will, reads like this: Fisk at catcher, Foxx at first, Pedroia at second, Cronin at short, Boggs at third, Yaz in left, Speaker in center, Evans in right, Williams at DH, with Ruth as the starting lefty and Martinez as the starting righty and Radatz first out of the pen. Not bad, eh? Only, maybe, New York might snicker.

This mythic team’s manager is Dick Williams. No other ever had a better year than Dick. The GM is Dick O’Connell, who impacted team history more heavily than any other. And the owner is Tom Yawkey. For all their flaws, the Yawkeys were with us seven highly entertaining if frequently raucous decades. I might suggest that Harry Frazee finishes second in the balloting in this last category. But that would be nasty.


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