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The 1927 New York
Yankees
"When we got to the ball park we
knew we were going to win. That's all there was to
it. We weren't cocky. I wouldn't call it confidence
either. We just knew. Like when you go to sleep you
know the sun is going to come up in the morning."
- 1927 Yankees' Pitcher George
Pipgras
With an all-star lineup known as
"Murderer's Row," New York outscored its opponents
by nearly 400 runs and hit .307 as a team. Babe
Ruth, perhaps the greatest player ever, set the
original single season mark with 60 homeruns, which
was more than any other American League team had
combined. The "Sultan of Swat" also had plenty of
help from his fellow sluggers in pinstripes.
Outfield counterparts Earle Combs in center and Bob
Meusel in left field hit .356 and .337
respectively. Lou Gehrig had his first big season,
batting .373 with 47 homers and a league leading
175 RBIs. Second year man Tony Lazzeri ranked third
in the loop with 18 homers.
The pitching staff boasted four men
who won 18 or more games, led by Waite Hoyt at
22-7. Herb Pennock and Wilcy Moore gained 19
victories apiece, while Urban Shocker added 18.
This lethal trio complemented the dominant offense
by claiming the league's three best ERAs. Moore,
who pitched primarily in relief, led the way with a
2.28 mark. With a 110-44 record, the "Bronx
Bombers" ran away with the American League pennant,
winning by a staggering 19 games. For an encore,
they swept the Pittsburgh Pirates in the World
Series and went on to win another championship the
following year.
What made this group so exceptional
was the sheer quantity of individual record setting
performances and accomplishments which, when
combined, formed a group so far ahead of its
competition that it was almost unfair to any team
not wearing the NY on their caps. The Yankees led
the American League in nearly every offensive
category. They set major league records with 975
runs scored, 158 home runs, 908 runs-batted-in, and
a .489 slugging average.
Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig combined
to form the most devastating 1-2 batting
combination in baseball history. They finished
one-two, respectively (Ruth-Gehrig), in the league
in home runs, runs scored, batting, strikeouts and
walks. They also finished one-two, respectively
(Gehrig-Ruth), in the league in runs-batted-in,
total bases and extra base hits. The 32 year old
Ruth batted .356 and set a major league record with
60 home runs, topping by one the mark he had set
six years earlier. He had 164 RBIs, and scored a
league leading 158 runs. Gehrig, only 24 and in his
third season as the regular first baseman, batted
.373, hit 47 home runs, and set a MLB record with
175 RBIs, breaking Ruth's mark of 171.
The best lead-off hitter in
baseball, Earle Combs, batted .356 and led the
league with 231 hits and 23 triples. Bob Meusel
batted .337 with eight home runs and 103 RBIs, and
finished second with 24 stolen bases. Tony Lazzeri
batted .309, finished third in the league with 18
HRs, had 102 RBIs, and tied for third with 22
stolen bases. The switch-hitting Mark Koenig batted
.285 and scored 99 runs from the number two spot in
the order. Joe Dugan, one of the best fielding
third basemen in baseball, finished strong despite
his .269 average. And the average, but underrated,
catching trio of Pat Collins, John Grabowski and
Benny Bengough combined to hit .271 with 7 home
runs and 71 RBIs. This lethal rotation at the plate
became known as "Murderer's Row" and this group,
usually called the "Bronx Bombers," earned their
new nickname after killing pitchers' statistical
earnings throughout the league.
Yankee pitchers, grateful to be in
pinstripes, also dominated the league, posting a
leading 3.20 ERA and 11 shutouts. Waite Hoyt, the
ace of the staff, turned in his best campaign yet,
posting a 22-7 record and leading the league in
winning percentage, tying for the league lead in
wins, and finishing second with a 2.64 ERA.
Thirty-year-old rookie Wilcy Moore burst into the
majors as the best relief pitcher in baseball,
posting a 19-7 record and leading the league with a
2.28 ERA, while tying for the league lead with 13
saves. Herb Pennock, one of the best southpaws in
the game, finished 19-8 with a 3.00 ERA. Urban
Shocker, one of the few pitchers still legally
allowed to throw a spitball, finished 18-6 and was
third in the league with a 2.84 ERA. Dutch Ruether,
in his final season in the major leagues, and the
hard-throwing George Pipgras, who was eased into
the starting rotation in mid-season, combined for a
23-9 record, with a 3.73 ERA.
The Yankees grand finale for the
'27 season, the World Series, was the quickest ever
played and lasted only 74 hours and 15 minutes.
They became the first American League team to sweep
a World Series, and it was only the 2nd four-game
sweep in World Series history (the Braves over the
Athletics in 1914). The Yankee pitchers had a
combined ERA of only 2.00. Making only three
errors, they had a .981 FA. The Yankees trailed a
total of only two innings during the entire Series,
out-scoring the Pirates 23-10. Pittsburgh, only
once, managed to score more than one run in an
inning (during Game 4). What made this feat even
more spectacular was the fact that the Yankees used
only four pitchers, and a total of 15 different
players during the entire Series.
The Yankees 1-4 hitters (Combs,
Koenig, Ruth and Gehrig) combined to hit .387 with
2 home runs, 16 RBIs and 17 RS, while the rest of
the hitters batted just .189 with only 3 RBIs and 6
RS. Together, Ruth and Gehrig batted .357 and had a
slugging average of .786. With homers in both Games
3 and 4, Ruth became the fifth player in Series
history to hit a home run in back to back games.
They were only his second and third home runs at
Yankee Stadium and there would be many more to
come. Koenig led all batters by hitting .500 (9 for
18), and was the only Yankee to hit safely in each
game.
The 1927 Yankees represented TEAM
in every sense of the word. The company they shared
in the dugout made these great players even
greater. In today's game, it would be virtually
impossible to put together such an elite group of
talent (at the same time) in a single clubhouse and
their accomplishments together will never be
duplicated.
Players today seem more concerned
with individual achievements and if more players
played for the team instead of for the player, they
would complement each other's strengths, compensate
for each other's weaknesses and push each other to
be even more successful. In other words, they could
all take a lesson from the 1927 Yankees, the
greatest team of all-time.
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