Tag: George Steinbrenner

George Steinbrenner Dies: His 10 Best Managers as Yankees Owner

New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has died in Tampa, Florida at the age of 80.

Though one of the most despised, controversial, and notorious owners in the long history of Major League Baseball, Steinbrenner must also be remembered as one of the greats, a giant amongst men.

During Steinbrenner’s tenure, the Yankees captured 11 pennants and seven World Series championships. The Yanks also produced a cornucopia of All Stars, and more than a few Hall of Famers.

Amongst the Yankees many accomplishments during the Steinbrenner Era, the team also had a shocking number of managers.

Here are the Top Ten Yankees Managers of the Steinbrenner Era.

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R.I.P George Steinbrenner: The Most Influential Man in Yankees History

On January 3, 1973 George Michael Steinbrenner, and minority group of partners, purchased the New York Yankees.

From the time he took control of the team to the time of his death, Steinbrenner has never shied away from the spotlight. He brought the team back to the dominance the franchise prided themselves on.

Steinbrenner’s 30 years of ownership were dominating. It makes him not only the best owner in baseball history, but also the most influential man in Yankees history.

Many men have donned the Yankees pinstripes.

Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Derek Jeter and the list goes on with famous and Hall of Famers. None of them effected the team as George Steinbrenner did.

Steinbrenner won his first of seven World Series titles in 1977, beating the Los Angeles Dodgers.

“Winning is the most important thing in my life, after breathing. Breathing first, winning next,” Steinbrenner said.

It often showed as he put together some of the best teams in baseball history. From 1995-2007 the Yankees never missed the playoffs.

When he first took control of the Yankees, he knew the stadium needed renovation. He rebuilt the old stadium and eventually a brand new, billion dollar stadium in 2008.

What Steinbrenner has done has often infuriated people around baseball.

Whether it was his comments or his spending money on free agents and often having the highest salary cap in baseball. Steinbrenner is the reason many people want a salary cap.

Whether or not you liked “The Boss,” there is no denying what he did for baseball.

He is the most influential man in Yankees history and will be very dearly missed

 

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Don’t Lie: If You Had Money, You’d Do What George Steinbrenner Did, Too

If I win the lottery, I want to buy a sports team.

Be it the Orlando Titans, the Orlando Predators, an MLS franchise or, if I had the money, the Orlando Magic.

And I would invest all my money to make them the greatest team ever.

Just like George Steinbrenner.

In 1973, George Steinbrenner did what every die-hard sports fan wishes they could do. He used the fortune he made in his father’s shipping business and bought his favorite team. That team happened to be the New York Yankees.

Not by himself initially, but eventually, he would own it all.

He got to work on building a team that would live up to the then-20 championships it already owned.

He did it by spending money. He made it cool and exploited the new concept of free agency to hire the best players and staff money could buy.

Wouldn’t you do the same if you had the money?

37 years and seven World Series Championships later, the New York Yankees are at the top of the sporting universe yet again.

It certainly wasn’t foolproof. If it were, the Yankees would’ve won closer to 25 titles under George’s ownership. And not everybody liked the changes his way of doing business brought. But if he hadn’t have done it, somebody else would have.

Plenty of people hate the Yankees—and, by extension, hated George—because of their success. But no matter how they try to pass it off as something else, you have to be honest. The primary factor is jealousy.

You want your team to have what the Yankees have. You want what George had.

It’s the same reason why many people hate the Red Sox now as well, because they decided to try to beat George at his own game. It’s the same reason many people hate the biggest European soccer franchises.

George made winning at all monetary costs cool. That is his legacy.

Whether you love him or hate him, you can’t say he didn’t make things interesting.

And you can’t say you wouldn’t do the same thing if you had the ability.

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Breaking News: George Steinbrenner Passes Away

He spent big. He won big.

George Steinbrenner reshaped baseball and one of its most prized franchises when he took over the New York Yankees in 1973. The Yankees responded to his leadership by winning seven World Series titles during his reign.

Two days after the Yankees lost their long time friend and announcer Bob Sheppard, they have another loss to mourn. George Steinbrenner passed away this morning from a heart-attack, leaving years of success and an empire behind.

For over 30 years, Steinbrenner ran an organization that is now a model for what every baseball franchise wants to become. Like the Yankees or hate them, there is no denying their success.

Today, baseball lost a visionary. A leader. A model.

He will be missed by all.

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George Steinbrenner Dies: Yankees Owner Suffers Massive Heart Attack

News broke this morning that Yankees longtime owner and baseball icon George Steinbrenner has died. Steinbrenner, aptly nicknamed “The Boss,” reportedly suffered a massive heart attack this morning and died at 6:30 a.m. EST in a Tampa-area hospital.

Steinbrenner, 80, owned the Yankees from 1973 and re-energized the Yankees from a fallen franchise to the biggest sports entity in the world. It is a significant blow to Major League Baseball, which lost one of its giants.

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George Steinbrenner Dies at the Age of 80

Reports are now surfacing after early morning accounts that New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has died at the age of 80 years old.

According to reports, Steinbrenner was rushed to a Tampa hospital after emergency personnel had responded to a call at his home on Monday night.

Steinbrenner told the Associated Press in an interview last week that he was feeling fine even after just celebrating his eightieth birthday on July 4th.

Under his ownership of the Bronx Bombers, the Yankees and Steinbrenner have won seven American League pennants and seven World Series titles.

Steinbrenner had given his sons, Hal and Hank, day-to-day control of the Yankees in the later part of 2007.

No more reports are available at this time on the passing of New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner.

R.I.P.

George Steinbrenner 1930 – 2010

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N.Y. Yankees Owner George Steinbrenner Dies of Heart Attack

New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has died today of a heart attack.  He was 80.

Steinbrenner, who took ownership of the Yankees in 1973, saw his team win seven World Series and 11 American League Pennants.

The Yankees owner was well known for his ability to get big names to come play for his historic club and he often spent whatever amount of money was necessary to get the players he wanted. 

Steinbrenner’s sons, Hank and Hal having been running the team since George’s retirement in 2006.

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Breaking News: Yankees Owner George Steinbrenner Dies of Heart Attack

Update: (9:15pm CDT) According to Joel Sherman of The New York Post , via Twitter , Steinbrenner was admitted to the hospital late Monday night for a procedure and had a heart attack early this morning while already at the hospital.

Update: (8:53am CDT) According to sources close to the Steinbrenner family, George Steinbrenner passed away this morning due to a massive heart attack. He was 80-years old.

Long time Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has suffered what is being called a massive heart attack  and is in critical condition according to WABC television. A Fox News report  says Steinbrenner was rushed to St. Joseph’s Hospital in Florida late Monday night.

His health has been failing over the last few years and it forced him to hand over the day-to-day operations of the New York Yankees to his sons since 2006.

The thoughts and prayers are definitely with him and his family and you have to believe that this has taken the Yankee family by surprise especially since a lot of their players are either in Anaheim, California for the All-Star game or on a mini-vacation during the all star break.

More news to come as it breaks.


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A Prayer for The Boss: George Steinbrenner Dies From Massive Heart Attack

The New York Yankees owner, George Steinbrenner III, was rushed to the hospital in Florida. This is the latest from New York’s ABC affiliate, Eyewitness News, whom was the first to report that the Yankees owner was rushed to St. Joseph’s hospital. 

The Boss’ condition is still unknown and the entire Yankees Universe is praying that he is recovering well. The man is 80 years old, but he remains young in the hearts and minds of all Yankee fans that had a chance to see him run the team to several championships. 

There have been reports that he has stepped down from baseball operations a bit since 2006, but in recent interviews, Randy Levine and Brian Cashman have said that he is still active with the team. He may not be the same prominent, big, and imposing figure, but George Steinbrenner will forever be The Boss. 

People like Bald Vinny and Yankees beat writer, Bryan Hoch, have all expressed their concern for the Boss’ health. Prayers are being said everywhere for Steinbrenner as Yankee fans hope that this will not be the darkest month in Yankees history.

The family lost Bob Sheppard earlier in the week and the Yankee family does not want to lose yet another big member of the family.

There will never be another George Steinbrenner in baseball or any other sport. This man did everything with whatever he had. Steinbrenner was given a talent by God to build a great team and he did it in a matter of years with the Yankees. 

The Bleacher Report Community prays for George Steinbrenner and his health. Our prayers go out to the Steinbrenner family and the Yankees community. 

*Update: ESPN has listed Steinbrenner in “extremely critical condition.” Let us keep our hopes and prayers up for The Boss’ health. 

*Update: “Yankees owner George Steinbrenner in critical condition after suffering a heart attack, according to CNN affiliate WABC” – CNN.com

The Associated Press has announced that the Yankees have lost George Steinbrenner.

George Steinbrenner is dead according to a close source to the family. ESPN confirms this report. 

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“This One’s For You Boss.” George Steinbrenner, A Man All About Winning

From his head scratching organizational moves to a main character on Seinfeld, George Steinbrenner is a man who will do whatever it takes to win it all.  

Since taking over the Yankees in 1973, the team has won 11 pennants and seven World Series titles.  That might not seem like much, but Steinbrenner has done everything in his power to try and win as many championships as possible.

He has made some very good decisions throughout his tenure as owner of the Yankees.

After losing the 1976 World Series to the Reds, Steinbrenner realized the Yankees needed just a little more to push them over the top, and he went out and got the biggest free agent out there—Reggie Jackson.

With Jackson, “the straw that stirs the drink”, the Yankees won the fall classic in ’77 and ’78, bringing big George his first two rings in back-to-back fashion.

While Mr. October’s stint in the Bronx ended in 1981, after several disagreements with Steinbrenner , the Yankees had found a new star in Dave Winfield who began his nine year tenure with the Yankees in Jackson’s final year.

Despite having both Jackson and Winfield together, the Yankees failed to win the 1981 World Series, finally falling to the Dodgers after beating them in both ’77 and ’78.

With Jackson gone, the Yankees struggled after that ’81 World Series defeat, never seeing the light of day in the playoffs for the rest of the decade.

Yet, Winfield continued to prosper and build upon his Hall of Fame career, even while on a very bad team for nearly 10 years. In pinstripes, Winfield hit 205 home runs, had 818 RBI, and collected 1,300 of his 3,110 career hits.

He also won five Gold Gloves, appeared in eight All Star games, and got five Silver Slugger awards.

He was clearly the best player on the Yankees for that miserable decade, but another young star emerged from within the Yankee organization, Don Mattingly .

Mattingly would be one of the few Yankees developed form their own farm system for the better part of the next 15 years.

Making his debut in 1982 and taking over full time first base duties by 1984, Mattingly turned into a very good hitter, to go along wi th his slick fielding.

Throughout the mid ’80s Mattingly was among the best hitters in baseball, winning the MVP in 1985 and three consecutive Silver Slugger awards, he also led the league in hits twice.

Meanwhile, the controversies continued to go back and forth between Winfield and Steinbrenner .

After paying a small time gambler, Howie Spira , to get some dirt on Winfield, who sued Steinbrenner for not owning up to a clause in his contract, MLB commissioner Fay Vincent banned Steinbrenner for life.

Gene Michael took over every day operations of the club from there on out, which allowed the Yankees to develop some of their young talent, such as Bernie Williams, who would have probably been traded away for veteran players had Steinbrenner still been in charge.

With Winfield being traded in the middle of the 1990 season, and a back injury limiting Mattingly’s production, the 90’s looked as if they were going to be just as bad as the 80’s.

Steinbrenner was reinstated in 1993, but was less inclined to run the Yankees every day operation, leaving Gene Michael in charge.

The Yankees were leading the AL East in 1994 when the players strike wiped out the rest of the season, and they returned to the playoffs in 1995 for the first time since ’81, also making this Mattingly’s first and only playoff appearance.

In ’96, under new manager Joe Torre, the young Yankees won the World Series for the first time since ’81 and got Steinbrenner his third ring as owner.

Torre, alongside his new core four players; Derek Jeter , Andy Pettitte , Jorge Posada , and Mariano Rivera would go on to win three straight titles from 1998 to 2000, proving that the talent from within the organization can be enough to win titles.

The Yankees would win the AL Championship series in 2001 and 2003 but failed to win either of those years, putting an end to the dynasty years. 

After 2003 the Yankees started signing more and more free agents, and their team payroll has never been less than $185 million since, needles to say, but they have led the MLB with the highest payroll since as well, but never missed the playoffs for 12 years until 2008.

After dumping several of those monster salaries after 2007 and 2008, like Jason Giambi , the Yankees went out and invested in three very good players; CC Sabathia , A.J. Burnett, and Mark Teixeira .

Withthe new three players, along wi th the same core four from the dynasty years and Alex Rrodriguez , the Yankees had the best record in baseball and eventually won their first World Series since 2000, bringing Steinbrenner’s championship total to seven.

Upon winning the 2009 World Series, that team had a message for Steinbrenner , “This one’s for you boss.”

Many people criticize Steinbrenner for all the money he has shelled out to free agents over the past decade or so, and for all the terrible trades he made in 80’s, but in his mind, he was just trying to do what was best for the team and lead them a World Series title every year.

As a fan of the Yankees, I know that as long as the Steinbrenner’s own the Yankees they will try to put the best team in baseball on the field, and if that takes $200+ million every year I’m fine wi th that, because I obviously want to see the Yankees win, and that’s what George Michael Steinbrenner is all about.

Happy 80th Birthday to the Boss.

 

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