! ! BELIEVE, AGAIN?N H M A G A Z I N E . C O M
TOP DOCS
Finding The Funny: April Fools& Comedy Clubs
51 Best &
Brightest Doctors
in NH
107 Leading
Physicians for all that
ails you
In the most agnostic state in the countrynothing inspires a renewal of faith
quite like the start of baseball season.Say a prayer for Red Sox NHation.
B Y D A R R E N G A R N I C K
10 nhmagazine.com | April !013
When he was a child, writer and filmmaker Darren Garnick used to spend countless hours sorting base-ball cards on his bedroom rug — all the while cursing the dreaded Yankees. Now, after a father-son trip to Yankee Stadium, the diehard Sox fan has had a dramatic change of heart. Find out why in the feature story he wrote, “Believe Again?"
Photographer Jarrod McCabe, who shot the photographs on pages 46 and 47 of the Red Sox feature, is most widely known for his portraiture. In addition to his photographic work he also crafts super-premium single-barrel backwoods American slingshots and sends fake postcards. To receive a fake postcard, e-mail your name and address to [email protected] with the following subject line: I Love Fake Postcards.
Mark Corliss, who photographed this issue's featured Top Doctors, is a commercial photographer from Keene with more than 30 years experience providing high-quality publicity, product and portrait photography to New England businesses, colleges, publishers and health-care institutions. Specialties include custom photo and fine art printing. He's a graduate of The Doscher Country School of Photography. More info at markcorliss.com.
Jack Kenny, who wrote this month’s “Last Laugh,” is a freelance writer who lives sparingly by his wits in Manchester. He has, by his own account, been reporting and writing commentary about people and events in New Hampshire "since the Old Man of the Mountain was the new kid on a molehill."
Writer of the monthly “Slice” feature, Hillary Davis has also contributed business, lifestyle, food and travel articles to Connecticut Magazine, the former Home Living Connecticut and Connecticut Business Magazine. She is also a food and travel blogger with an engaged foodie social media following on Facebook and Twitter. Her blogs: MarcheDimanche.typepad.com, HillaryDavisTravels.type-pad.com, TheBestCookBooksList.typepad.com.
Courtney Hoppe, who writes the monthly “Eve-ning Out,” is a lifestyle writer, marketing professional, and a champion of modern New Hampshire living. She resides in swanky downtown Manchester and can often be spotted dining al fresco at one of the many hot spots on Elm Street, wheeling her Mobile Patio to various events around town, or taking her kitten (Roxie Hart) for walks in her pink pet stroller.
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THE EX!GM?Was it really Theo's idea (or maybe John Henry's?) to bring in all those overpriced stars?
THE OWNER?Did Mr. Henry's heart and soul (and wallet) wander o" to Liverpool, England?
Whodunit in Red Sox Are any of these usual suspects to blame for the dramatic 2012 collapse of the Red Sox season? Even after that dismal year, devoted NH fans dare to believe again.
April !013 | nhmagazine.com 43
THE EX! MANAGER?Bobby V . . . Do we really need to say more about Bobby V?
THE SAVIORNew Hampshire's favorite son, Ben Cherington ... The NHATION turns its lonely eyes to you.
Whodunit in Red Sox NHATION?Are any of these usual suspects to blame for the dramatic 2012 collapse of the Red Sox season? Even after that dismal year, devoted NH fans dare to believe again.
B Y DA R R E N G A R N I C K
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY SEQOUIA PORTER
44 nhmagazine.com | April !013
IS THE ROMANCE GONE?
NINE YEARS AGO, when no one could imagine that every Red Sox fan on the planet would soon get his or her
grubby fingerprints on not one, but two World Series trophies, Nashua firefighter Mark Wholey took his girlfriend Kelli on a tour of Fenway Park.
The home team was 2,000 miles away at Coors Field, where they pounded the Colorado Rockies 11-0. Mark and Kelli got to watch the grounds crew instead. Unexpectedly, the tour guide pulled the couple aside and asked them if they were interested in walking out onto the field. Once on the dirt, they were told that the pitcher’s mound was fair game too.
Mark then dropped to one knee and pulled out a ring while the score-board flashed “Kelli, Will You Marry Me?” The rest of the tourists cheered like Manny and Big Papi had just clubbed back-to-back dingers. The proposal was later immortalized in the book “Faithful,” Stephen King and Stewart O’Nan’s
chronicle of the 2004 season.“I was so happy that the
park was empty and that we had those few minutes to ourselves,” reflects Kelli. “I’ve seen so many people get engaged during a game and it’s much more of a high-pressure situation. Not that I would have ever said ‘No’ if Mark had done it the other way.”
Fast forward to 2013. Mark and Kelli just celebrated their eighth wedding anniversary in February and as parents of a 6-year-old boy and 3-year-old girl, they now need a babysitter so they can attend this year’s Opening Day. Their beloved Red Sox need their passion now more than ever.
How horrendous was 2012’s nosedive into the AL East cellar? It can’t only be measured by their
pathetic 69-93 record, .426 winning percentage (worst performance since 1965 when the team was 62-100) or laughable 26 game defi-cit behind the hated New York Yankees. It’s become a matter of trust.
Perception is reality and the image of Bobby
1890
Amherst’s Frank Selee starts his 16-year manag-ing career with the Boston Beaneaters, winning "ve National League titles for Boston. He and Carlton Fisk are the only New Hampshire natives in the Baseball Hall of Fame. (Selee wasn’t a Red Sock, but close enough. The Beaneaters became the Boston Braves.)
1912
Future Sox catcher Birdie Tebbetts is born in Burlington, Vt., but his fam-ily immediately moves to Nashua, NH, to raise him.
1916
Babe Ruth and his victori-ous World Series Boston teammates played an exhibition game against a team of locals — and lost. NH newspapers trumpet the Laconians as the new Champions of the World.
!NH"RED SOX CONNECTIONS#
RED SOXNHATIONTIMELINE
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
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April !013 | nhmagazine.com 45
Valentine’s Red Sox was a team that stopped trying and even stopped caring. That’s not a dis-gruntled fan’s view. It’s the current perspective of the Red Sox marketing department. Print and web ads for 2013 season tickets feature the deter-mined faces of Dustin Pedroia and David Ortiz with the slogans “162 Chances to Restore the Faith” and “What’s Broken Can Be Fixed.” Given that contrition campaigns are rare — maybe even nonexistent — in professional sports, the ballclub is sending the message that it is not tak-ing its die-hard fans for granted.
RAISING TOMORROW’S FAN BASE
FOR LIFELONG ENTHUSIASTS like the Wholeys, loyalty runs deeper than the disappointment, ecstasy or apathy over
any one season. Beyond the surreal nostalgia
of being on that mound, they cherish Fenway Park as an annual pilgrimage. “Win or lose,” Kelli says, “there’s just something magical about be-ing there. Yes, last year was annoying, but we’re never giving up on them.”
At the Ernest P. Barka Elementary School in Derry, there isn’t a student who doesn’t know where Principal Dan LaFleur stands in this base-ball crisis. An entire wall in his o!ce is covered with a photo mural of Game 1 of the 2004 World Series with Curt Schilling pitching against Edgar Renteria. As an added touch, he installed base-ball stadium seats that he bought during a trip to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY.
All of these props set the stage for his weekly “Student of the Week” ceremonies. One nominee from each of his grade K-5 classrooms is cel-ebrated for good grades or positive attitudes by being photographed in front of Faux Fenway.
“Naturally, no one is forced to pose,” LaFleur says. “We have some Yankees fans among us and we always teach tolerance here and respect for a di"er-ence in opinion. Last year’s losing season also was a teaching opportunity. To be a Red Sox fan, you have to have perseverance. You can’t win all the time.”
Wally the Green Monster, the cuddly Red Sox
1936
Future Sox pitcher Stan Williams (1972) is born in En"eld.
1947 Future Sox catcher Carlton Fisk is born in Bellows Falls, Vt., but his family soon moves to Charlestown, NH, to raise him.
1948Nashua’s Birdie Tebbetts, the feisty Red Sox All-Star catcher, headlines a base-ball barnstorming tour that stops in Laconia.
1950
Tebbetts gets sold to Cleveland after calling his teammates “juvenile delinquents and moronic malcontents.”
1954
Future Sox pitcher Rich Gale (1984) is born in Littleton.
!NH"RED SOX CONNECTIONS#
RED SOXNHATIONTIMELINE
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
Left: Mark Wholey proposing to his then-girlfriend (and now wife of nine years) Kelli back in 2004 on the pitcher's mound at their beloved Fenway Park.
Above: Ten-year-old Nick Norris isn't hopeful about the team's chances this year (he predicts a third or fourth place "nish for the 2013 season), but he loves the Sox all the same.
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mascot, visited the Derry school two years ago to promote literacy programs. LaFleur ex-perienced his own “Field of Dreams” moment this January, participating in Red Sox open auditions for a new PA announcer to replace the late Carl Beane. The principal’s recorded tryout was later shared on his school’s PA system during morning announcements.
“I have not come down o! Cloud 9 yet,” LaFleur says. “I could see the lit-up Citgo sign and the field was dark. My eyes were closed and I was picturing the ballpark as full and that this was a playo! game in October.”
Over in Portsmouth, the principal has a kindred spirit in 10-year-old Nick Norris, who has a Green Monster wall in his bedroom with a changeable scoreboard. Over the past few seasons, the fourth grader has created his own “sports sections,” live stat sheets of games in progress. Unfortunately for his readers, night games seldom get covered because of an 8:15 p.m. bedtime.
Norris is a fan of Dustin Pedroia and Jacoby Ellsbury for the same reason: “They make diving catches and I like seeing diving catches.” He has dressed as both players over the past two Halloweens.
The 10-year-old has mixed reviews about last year’s high-profile front o"ce moves. Thumbs up for getting rid of pitcher Josh Beckett, who “was not being a good teammate,” and thumbs down for trading firstbaseman Adrian Gonzales, “prob-ably the best hitter on the team.” His sobering 2013 prediction: third or fourth place.
1961
Future Sox out!elder Kevin Romine (1985-91) is born in Exeter.
1962 Future Sox pitcher Rob Woodward (1985-88) is born in Hanover.
1969
Future Sox out!elder Phil Plantier (1990-92) is born in Manchester.
1975
Carlton Fisk does his dramatic home run dance to win Game 6 of the 1975 World Series.
1981 Fisk is exiled (willingly, as a free agent) to the Chicago White Sox.
!NH"RED SOX CONNECTIONS#
RED SOXNHATIONTIMELINE
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46 nhmagazine.com | April "013
Above and right: Principal Dan LaFleur has a Fenway Park mural and ballpark seats in his school o#ce. To keep the Sox close to heart, he sometimes wears a jersey beneath his suit.
Far right: President and CEO of the Red Sox, Larry Lucchino, wrote LaFleur a lighthearted rejection letter for the manager's job, which eventually went to Terry Francona.
( continued on page 49)
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April !013 | nhmagazine.com 47
48 nhmagazine.com | April !013
S THE FORMER VOLUNTEER BODYGUARD of Ted Williams, retired NH State Police veteran Dave McCarthy loves to tell stories about how the Red Sox legend could instantly turn anyone into an 8-year-old kid.
He was with the Splendid Splinter at Pease Air Force Base in 1992, when President George H. W. Bush almost tripped down the stairs of Air Force One in excitement. He escorted Williams when he was the Grand Marshall at the New Hampshire Inter-national Speedway in 1999, when NASCAR drivers giddily lined up for his autograph — and a few days later when he was the celebrated guest at Fenway Park for the All-Star Game and was mobbed by the MLB’s biggest stars in a scene that made them all seem like Little Leaguers.
“That was Ted,” says McCarthy, who ironically drove State Police car #9 (Williams’ uniform number) when he was on active duty. “He had that e"ect on people. And my friendship with him has allowed me to live a dream. I don’t believe in be-ing an old cop. By the time I hit 50, it was time to do some-thing di"erent.”
The former Tilton resident is now the executive director of the Ted Williams Foundation and the Ted Williams Museum and Hitters Hall of Fame in St. Petersburg, Florida. Since 2002, it has been a role that has allowed him to become a professional fan 24/7 — arranging Spring Training and regular season charity events with the Boston Red Sox, Tampa Bay Rays, Philadelphia Phillies, Minnesota Twins and Baltimore Orioles.
McCarthy also teams up with the Fisher Cats every year to put on the New Hampshire Baseball Dinner to bene#t Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth (CHaD).
Founded by Nashua developers Sam Tamposi and Gerry Nash, the Ted Williams Museum originally sat on land in their Citrus Hills retirement community, which used Ted himself as celebrity pitchman. However, unlike the rural lure of the Baseball Hall
of Fame in Cooperstown, NY, the destination proved to be too isolated to draw large crowds. In 2006 the museum moved to Tropicana Field, home of the Tampa Bay Rays.
“The Red Sox were trying to #nd a spot for me, but there’s just not enough room for a museum at Fenway,” McCarthy says. “The Rays had a ton of room and made us an o"er we couldn’t refuse.”
The museum honors all facets of Williams’ life, including his service in World War II and the Korean War and his love for #sh-ing and the outdoors. The Hitters Hall of Fame recognizes the obvious legends but also strives to include “players who don’t get the credit they deserve.”
Although he was banned from Major League Baseball and Cooperstown enshrinement for gambling, Pete Rose was in-ducted here. Boston’s unsung heroes Dom DiMaggio, Fred Lynn and Dwight Evans are honored here too, along with Sox Hall of Famers Wade Boggs, Jim Rice, Carl Yastrzemski, Carlton Fisk and Andre Dawson.
McCarthy #rst became involved with the Williams family when he attended the 1986 World Series as New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu’s driver and bodyguard. Williams’ son, John Henry, was interested in law enforcement and struck up a conversation in the Sox owners’ box.
After witnessing the aging and frail Williams being mobbed at an autograph show, McCarthy o"ered to provide his hero personal security for free — and arranged for fellow troopers to join him.
“It’s not like there was ever a threat made on his life,” recalls McCarthy. “We were afraid of him getting crushed by the people who adored him.” – Darren Garnick
FOR MORE INFORMATION about the Ted Williams Museum and Hitters Hall of Fame, visit tedwilliamsmuseum.com.
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
Guarding Ted’s Legacy
Why a NH state trooper keeps cheering for the “Greatest Hitter Who Ever Lived”
A Dave McCarthy and Red Sox legend Ted Williams at the New Hampshire International Speedway in 1999. The retired NH trooper now runs the Ted Williams Museum in Florida.
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April !013 | nhmagazine.com 49
NH SOX PRIDE
REBUILDING THE RED SOX DYNASTY — or at least a perennial contender — now rests squarely on the shoulders of New
Hampshire native Ben Cherington, the team’s new general manager. The collapse began under GM Theo Epstein’s watch in the fall of 2011, but avalanched during his rookie year at the helm.
Cherington, who grew up in Meriden and was a standout pitcher for Lebanon High School (Class of ’92), isn’t trying to pass the buck.
“I’ve said it before, it’s a collective failure, but I take more responsibility than anyone for it,” he
told MLB.com. “Last year, we were a long way from living up to what we should be on the field and o! the field. It’s up to us to make the Red Sox what they should be again.”
When reminiscing about the most exciting highlights of Red Sox history, New Hampshire fans quickly point to Hall of Fame catcher Carlton “Pudge” Fisk’s upbringing in tiny Charlestown. The man most famous for his home run theatrics waving the ball fair in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series actually had teenage ambitions of playing for the Boston Celtics. Fisk led the 1963 Charlestown High School Forts to a 25-0 championship basketball season.
Three decades earlier, Nashua’s George “Birdie” Tebbetts was a two-time All-Star catcher for Bos-ton from 1947-1950. Despite hitting .310 in his last Sox season, he was sold to the Cleveland Indians after publicly calling two teammates “juvenile delinquents and moronic malcontents.” Appar-ently, peace in the clubhouse was valued higher than stats that year.
Rounding out our state’s magnetism for Red Sox backstops is Gary Allenson, a California na-tive who was just named the new manager of the New Hampshire Fisher Cats, the minor league AA a"liate of the Toronto Blue Jays. Nicknamed “Muggsy” from his college days, Allenson was the
1998
Former Sox 1B/DH Mike Easler takes over as man-ager of the Nashua Pride.
1999 Just before the MLB All-Star Game at Fenway Park, Ted Williams is the Grand Marshall of the NASCAR races at the NH Internation-al Speedway in Loudon.
2000
Fisk is inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, choosing the Red Sox hat over the White Sox one for his HOF plaque.
2000 Former Sox 3B Butch Hobson begins his eight year reign as manager of the Nashua Pride.
2001
Steroid King and former Sox slugger Jose Canseco begins his comeback attempt with the Newark Bears, opening the season in Nashua.
!NH"RED SOX CONNECTIONS#
RED SOXNHATIONTIMELINE
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
Above left: High school photo of Hall of Fame catcher Carlton “Pudge” Fisk after the Charlestown Forts won the 1963 Interscholastic Basketball Tournament
Above right: Two-time All-Star catcher George “Birdie” Tebbetts of Nashua
Left: Fisk's number 27 is retired at Fenway Park.
( continued from page 46)
( continued on page 51)
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50 nhmagazine.com | April !013
IT’S A DREAM SCENARIO FOR ANY ACTOR/RED SOX FAN. Derry’s Scott Severance shares an Internet Movie Database (IMDb) page with Jason Varitek, Johnny Damon, Trot Nixon, Jim Rice and Dennis Eckersley.
The "lm, of course, is 2005’s “Fever Pitch,” starring Jimmy Fallon as an obsessed Red Sox fan whose sanity #uctuates with the highs and lows of the team. While much of the romantic comedy revolves around Fal-
lon’s crush on Drew Barrymore, Severance’s character puts baseball ahead of love.He plays Artie, a divorced man who watches every game with his ex-wife be-
cause both parties refused to give up their shared season tickets. Severance gets a lot of screen time because he sits one row in front of Fallon and Barrymore.
A lifelong Sox fan who grew up in Manchester and Pitts"eld, the actor thinks he won over the casting director when his eyes got watery reading a monologue of Boston’s most heartbreaking moments (Bucky Dent’s homer, the ball going through Bill Buckner’s legs, etc.) He wasn’t acting.
“The Red Sox winning the World Series almost ruined the movie. It was sup-posed to be about lovable losers. The Sox lose again, but boy gets girl and lives happily ever after,” Severance recalls. “On the morning of the fourth game against the Cardinals, the Farrelly brothers #ew out to St. Louis for that "nal scene of Jimmy and Drew kissing on the pitcher’s mound.”
Severance, who idolized the funky pitching motion and cigar-smoking swagger of pitcher Luis Tiant as a kid, remains optimistic that the Sox can compete for a Wild Card playo$ spot this year.
“Our movie helped them break the curse in 2004. Maybe we need to make a 'Fever Pitch 2,'” he jokes. – Darren Garnick
YOU CAN SEE SCOTT NEXT as a disgruntled motorist in Larry David’s upcoming HBO movie, “Clear History,” starring John Hamm, Kate Hudson and Michael Keaton.
2007
The Nashua Pride make marketing history with the world’s "rst “Bobble Belly” doll. It honors chubby ex-Sox reliever Rich Garces, trying to make a comeback at Holman Stadium.
2007
Former Sox pitcher Oil Can Boyd headlines a baseball barnstorming tour that stops in Nashua. Ex-Sox Bill Lee, Sam Horn and Ken Ryan join him.
2008
Sox World Series icon Curt Schilling campaigns for John McCain in NH during the Primary and general election. It’s not enough. Obama wins the state by a 54-45 percent margin.
2008
Former Sox OF Rick Miller takes over as manager of the Pride.
!NH"RED SOX CONNECTIONS#
RED SOXNHATIONTIMELINE
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
Time to Make Another Red Sox Movie?
Is a “Fever Pitch” sequel the key to ending the new Sox slump?
Local actor Scott Severance played one of
Jimmy Fallon's loyal seatmates in the 2005
!lm "Fever Pitch." Below: To get the part,
Severance didn't need to act depressed when he
thought of Bill Buckner. He really was.
April !013 | nhmagazine.com 51
Sox backup catcher from 1979-1984, playing behind Carlton Fisk and Rich Gedman.
“This year is going to be a reunion of sorts,” he says. “I hope to have a bunch of Red Sox fantasy camp players come bug me while I’m managing in Manchester. Year after year, you get to know some of these campers pretty well. I consider them friends.”
Although they are the farm team for the rival Blue Jays, Fisher Cats games also provide one of the more convenient venues for fans to get a sneak preview of future Red Sox whenever the Portland Sea Dogs come to town. Over the past few years, Manchester has hosted soon-to-be Sox stars such as Jon Lester, Dustin Pedroia, Jona-than Papelbon, Jacoby Ellsbury, Clay Buchholz, Jed Lowrie, Josh Reddick, Felix Doubront and Will Middlebrooks.
In 2007 Manchester fans got a rise out of Fisher Cats manager Bob Masse for giving Buch-holz a standing ovation. Masse called the cheers “absolutely disgraceful.”
“We’re not playing the Boston Red Sox. It’s Manchester against Portland,” he told the Union
Leader. “There’s not a park in the world that would have given him a standing ovation for throwing six innings for one run and 11 strikeouts. I guess I will never understand how you can root for the Fisher Cats when we don’t play Portland
and root for them when we do play them.”For Fisher Cats general manager Rick Brenner,
the occasional dual allegiances aren’t so troubling.“People may come here as a Red Sox fan, but
hopefully they leave here a Red Sox fan and a Fisher Cats fan,” he says. “You can be the biggest Boston fan in the world but still be happy when some of these young players make it big on the Blue Jays or another team. I liken it to rooting for someone you went to high school with. Even if they’re not your best friend, you’re still happy to see them do well.”
COURTING THE SOX VOTE
THE REGIONAL OBSESSION with the Red Sox is powerful enough to impact the state’s true o!cial sport — politics.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani took a lot of gu" before the 2008 New Hampshire Primary for saying he was rooting for the Red Sox in the 2007 World Series.
Among the first critics to pounce on the Yankee-loving Giuliani was Barack Obama.
“Congratulations, by the way, Red Sox
2009
Former Sox GM Dan Duquette is co-owner of the American Defenders of New Hampshire, a military-themed baseball team with camou"age uniforms and a mascot named “Ground Zero.” Former Sox 1B Brian Daubach is manager, but patriotism fails to win over fans and the team folds after a year.
2011
Meriden’s Ben Cherington takes over as Red Sox general manager, #lling the giant shoes of Theo Epstein, who bolted to the Cubs.
2012
Along with new manager Bobby Valentine, Cher-ington gets o$ to a rocky start — presiding over the worst Red Sox season in #ve decades.
2013 Former Sox catcher Gary Allenson, who once backed up Carlton Fisk, takes over as manager of the NH Fisher Cats. –Compiled by Darren Garnick
!NH"RED SOX CONNECTIONS#
RED SOXNHATIONTIMELINE
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
From left clockwise: New York mayor Rudy Giuliani took heat before the 2008 NH primary for saying he rooted for the Sox in the 2007 World Series. Then-senator Barack Obama took Giuliani's weak fan loyalty to task. Former Sox pitcher Curt Schilling stumped for the Republicans in the ’04 and ’08 presidential elections. Ted Williamscam-paigned for president George H.W. Bush (and later did the same for George W. Bush).
GIANTSHOES! "
( continued from page 49)
( continued on page 53)
52 nhmagazine.com | April !013
DURING OUR FIRST FATHER"SON GAME at Fenway two years ago, my boy blurted out a disturb-ing question as we enjoyed a no-show season ticket holder’s box seats. Ari, who is now 11, is by no means a spoiled kid, but I felt like I was at Canobie Lake Park being asked why we
weren’t at Disney World.“Dad,” he said, gazing at the then-lackluster Baltimore
Orioles in the opposite dugout, “When do you think we can see the Red Sox play the Yankees?”
Never,” I bluntly replied, softening the blow with a lecture on the microeconomics of baseball tickets. Until I scored some in#uential friends or won the lottery, our destiny was to watch only the boring teams. Also, the Red Sox were still bragging about their 10 zillionth consecutive sellout record and I was philosophically opposed to negotiating with terrorists/scalpers.
Even though I couldn’t deliver on the goods, I was thrilled that Ari had expressed even a moderate interest in the Sox-Yanks rivalry. He’s not a die-hard fan who memorizes baseball cards like his dad, but he enjoys the ballpark atmo-sphere and any story line involving good vs. evil.
I get an adrenaline rush whenever I see that classic photo of Jason Varitek punching A-Rod in the face. I don’t even remember what their $ght was about, but it still makes me giddy. While most 10-year-olds were doodling Darth
Vader back in 1978, I sketched a poster of cartoonish owner George Steinbrenner and branded myself as an “O%cial Yankees Hater.” That copycat drawing remained on my bedroom closet until my teen years, when it was replaced with another New Yorker, swimsuit model Christie Brinkley.
I have no idea if the “Uptown Girl” was or is a Yankees fan, but I have since recoiled over photos of New England “traitors” Tom
Brady and Adam Sandler in Yankees hats. Like many New Hampshirites, I brainwashed my two children to be Sox lov-ers before they could walk. My daughter Dahlia has a David Ortiz jack-in-the-box.
My lifelong addiction was sparked by my Grandpa Bob, a passionate but misguided fan who believed that Carl
Yastrzemski was the Messiah, while Jim Rice and Fred Lynn were overpaid “prima donnas.” He once proudly spearheaded a fundraising drive for the Jimmy Fund
and formally presented the donation to Mike Andrews, the second baseman on the 1967 “Impossible Dream” team. That photo now hangs in my o%ce, reminding me of when
I would fall asleep on Grandpa’s couch and be woken up when Butch Hobson or George “Boomer” Scott
would go deep.But back to those despised Bronx Bombers.Last summer, I discovered that it was possible
to buy a&ordable Sox-Yankees tickets — but only if we were willing to venture into enemy territory. Without telling Ari our ultimate destination, I
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
Embracing The Enemy
How I Learned to Stop Hating the Yankees
Though author Darren Garnick (pictured) was
brought up (brainwashed?) to love the Sox and revile the Yankees, he has since
learned to stop hating the Bronx Bombers. He's even come to terms with
"traitors," like Patriots Quarterback Tom Brady,
who appear publicly in Yankees caps.
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April !013 | nhmagazine.com 53
surprised him with a trip to the Roman Coliseum, aka Yankee Stadium. Wanting to avoid being targeted by obnoxious New Yorkers, we entered incognito without a trace of Red Sox gear. I never imagined the scenes that unfolded next.
We watched dozens of out-of-the-closet Red Sox fans boldly strut through the ballpark without the slightest bit of harassment. Perhaps it was because “they” now felt sorry for us. Oh, there were plenty of nasty anti-Boston shirts for sale by street vendors and a few anti-Sox slurs muttered here and there. But contrary to my talk radio indoctrination, I discov-ered most Yankee fans were not the o"spring of Satan.
As Ari and I posed with the World’s Largest Yankees Hat on the concourse and goofed around with regular-sized NY hats in my iPhone photo booth, I suddenly realized that I didn’t hate them anymore. After three generations of resentment, it was time to #nally let go.
In the spirit of reconciliation, I recently tried friending Bucky Dent on Facebook. I still breathlessly await a$rma-tion, but the mere act of reaching out to my childhood’s #1 Dreamkiller (if you have to ask why, you should move on to the next article) is the ultimate regressive therapy.
Hating the Yankees is so 2004. It won’t make the Red Sox any better. Never did. Never will. – Darren Garnick
Nation. I am a White Sox fan,” he said, addressing a fundraiser in Boston. “You don’t want someone who pretends to be a Red Sox fan as president of the United States, you want somebody who is a principled sports fan, even when his team is losing he still stands up for them.”
Other key events in Baseball Primary history include Ted Williams campaigning for both George Bushes, Carlton Fisk endorsing George W. Bush and Curt Schilling stumping for John McCain — even shar-ing the spotlight on a baseball card-style political brochure.
In 2008 Mont Vernon voter Zoe Fimbel, a McCain supporter, was thrilled to meet the Man Behind the Bloody Sock at the Peddler’s Daughter restaurant in downtown Nashua — but she insists she also would have been in line for an autograph if Schil-ling were campaigning for Obama.
“I’m not sure if the players — or any famous celebrity — chang-es anybody’s vote,” she says. “But I think an athlete’s endorsement could work both ways. It could backfire and alienate a lot of fans. They have to be careful.”
Baseball fans do vote with their wallets, however. Nowhere is that more evident than at Collector’s Heaven, the state’s largest baseball card store and memorabilia shop in downtown Manchester.
“It’s been a depressing year,” says owner Mike Grady, who’s been in business since 1979 and depends on baseball for 70 per-cent of revenue. “When people are not happy with the Red Sox, they are going to stay away.”
“But I think things will turn around this season,” he adds. “The ownership realizes they’ve made mistakes. And if you look at the teams position by position, I’m confident that the Red Sox can compete with anyone in the AL East. I really think the Sox are going to surprise us.” NH
Belie!e "gain?R E D S O X N H A T I O N
Above: Will the Sox add another World Series win in the near future?
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A Baseball Family TreeHow Darren Garnick learned to love the Red Sox
(1) Darren's Grandpa Bob rallied his fellow Boston Herald drivers and presented a check to the Jimmy Fund to second baseman Mike An-drew's of the ’67 impossible dream team.(2) Grandpa Bob holds his newborn grandson, Darren, in his arms and gently whis-pered the words: "Williams, Pesky, Fox, DiMaggio (Dom, of course!).
(3) Toddler Darren watches the Red Sox games on TV at Grandpa Bob's. It is here that he sees his #rst Narragansett beer ad.(4) Darren's 11-year-old son Ari is the next generation of fan. Father and son donned Yankees caps to blend in with the enemy at a Sox-Yankees game in New York. It was then that Darren began to let go of his Yankees hatred.
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