I
cannot remember a time I was not a baseball fan – and as a kid growing up in a
small town in the ‘60s that meant I was a Yankee fan. No other team was on television as much or
got as much national press coverage. Those were the days of Mickey Mantle, Roger
Maris, Yogi Berra, Tony Kubek, Whitey Ford, Clete Boyer, Bobby Richardson, etc.
– a classic Yankee lineup. Although my
keenest interest in the team would only last another decade or so, I could
never resist keeping up with all the drama associated with a George
Steinbrenner team.
As it
turns out, a guy I never heard of, Ray Negron, had a front row seat to all that
drama all his own – right in the dugout.
Negron’s story is an inspirational one, one that he shares with the rest
of us in a book he has co-written with Sally Cook called Yankee Miracles (Life with the Boss and the Bronx Bombers). His story can be characterized as a fairy
tale with a very unexpected “fairy godmother” by the name of George Steinbrenner. Who would have thought Steinbrenner had a
heart? Not me, I confess, but something
was going on here.
Steinbrenner
and one of his security people caught the then 17-year-old Negron
spray-painting graffiti on Yankee Stadium one day. Abandoned by his quicker cousins, all of whom
managed to escape, Ray Negron had no idea that the man holding tightly to his
arm was about to change his life forever.
But, after throwing a real scare into the teen by letting him stew for a
while in a holding cell inside the stadium, that is exactly what Steinbrenner
did.
Instead
of immediately filing charges against him, Steinbrenner offered Ray the chance
to work in the Yankee clubhouse until he had worked off the damages he owed the
team. Ray jumped at the job for two
reasons: one, to stay out of jail and, two, because he was an avid Yankee fan
(something Steinbrenner didn’t know).
The next time Ray saw his quickstepping cousins, they would be in the
stands (after sneaking inside the stadium again) and he would be walking the
field among his heroes.
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Ray Negron |
Yankee Miracles is about the “Yankee miracle”
that Ray Negron personally experienced; it is the story of his chance encounter
with a notoriously egocentric man who stepped out of character long enough to
save a boy’s future. Ray Negron would go
on to make baseball his career, most of it as a member of the New York Yankee
organization, a life that a young boy headed toward big trouble the way he was could
have never otherwise achieved.
Along
the way, Negron and Cook tell of the close friendships between Ray and some of
the most famous, and infamous,
players ever to call the Yankee clubhouse home: Reggie Jackson, Billy Martin,
Thurman Munson, Catfish Hunter, Dwight Gooden, Mickey Mantle, and Derek Jeter,
among them. Do keep in mind that Ray
Negron is a Yankee-lifer and that he tends to see the Yankees a bit through
rose-colored glasses. However, despite
the feeling that much of what he reveals about his years with the Yankees is
sugarcoated, Yankee Miracles will
definitely appeal to readers who miss the likes of Mantle, Munson, Maris, and
Martin. They don’t make them like those
guys anymore.