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Quotable!
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| "The reason baseball has no black managers or general managers is that I truly believe that they may not have some of the necessities to be, let's say, a field manager. Why are black men, or black people, not good swimmers? Because they don't have the buoyancy." |
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--Al Campanis, soon-to-be-fired Dodgers executive on ABC's Nightline | | |
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| Record |
92-70 .568 |
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| Standings |
Won the AL |
| Pythagorean |
93-69, 93-69, 93-69 |
| Runs
(S/A) |
722 /
614 |
| Postseason | Lost World Series 4-3 to St. Louis Cardinals | | Ballpark | Fenway Park | | Park Factors | Batting: 108 / Pitching: 108 | | Attendance | 1,727,832 (1st) (2nd) | | Spring Training | Winter Haven, Florida (Chain O’Lakes Park) | | Manager | Dick Williams | | Coaches | Al Lakeman, Bobby Doerr, Eddie Popowski, Sal Maglie | | Executives | President: Thomas Yawkey, General Manager: Richard O'Connell | | Minor Leagues | (AAA) Toronto Maple Leafs, (AA) Pittsfield Red Sox, (A) Greenville Red Sox, (A) Waterloo Hawks, (A) Winston-Salem Red Sox | | Radio | (WHDH) Ken Coleman, Mel Parnell, Ned Martin | | TV | (WHDH) Ken Coleman, Mel Parnell, Ned Martin |
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The 1967 Boston Red Sox
went 92-70
and finished 1st
in the
American League. The Red Sox
drew 1,727,832
to Fenway Park.
Tony Conigliaro, Jim Lonborg, Rico Petrocelli and Carl Yastrzemski made the All-Star team. Jim Lonborg was honored with the Cy Young award. Carl Yastrzemski won the American League Most Valuable Player award. Gold Glove winners for 1967 included George Scott and Carl Yastrzemski.
(Our baseball section is new. A more comprehensive summary of this team will
appear here as time allows. If you can help with some summaries or can fill out
any missing information from this page, please use the Contact link at the top
right of this page. You will receive full credit for any work you do.)
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Share Your Memories!
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Our sites have always been by you and about you. If
you check
our TV Forums or our Technology & Science forums, you'll find literally thousands of messages from fans
of 1970s TV shows, survivors of hurricanes or aircraft accidents, etc. from all over the world sharing their memories, asking
questions, making comments. Our baseball section is new, but don't let
that stop you from sharing
your memories of the first game you went to, your favorite player, a
now-forgotten stadium, etc. Of course you can also ask questions, post
trivia, tell the world what you think of Barry Bonds, or just read what
others are saying.
--Patrick Mondout
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