RETIRED
NUMBERS
NEWS
ITEM: The Boston Red Sox announced that they will retire Wade Boggs’ number 26.
Congratulations to Monsieur Boggs on a well-deserved
honor. The third baseman won five batting titles during his 11 years with the
Red Sox. That he later played with the New York Yankees and the Tampa Bay Devil
Rays shouldn’t be held against him. Boggs is also bound for baseball’s
Hall-of-Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., which happens to be a criterion to have the BoSox
retire one’s number—Johnny
Pesky (#7) being the lone exception, understandably.
Number retirements by sports teams are a relatively
recent phenomenon. Consider that George Selkirk and Cliff Mapes wore number 3
for the Yankees long after Babe Ruth had left the team.
Some teams are more promiscuous with their number
retirements than others. The Boston Celtics are a prime example of a team with
a generous retirement policy, having retired 21 numbers. Yes, TWENTY-ONE! Plus
Johnny Most’s microphone and the nickname (Loscy) for the late Jim Loscutoff.
Paul Pierce’s number 34 will certainly be the 22nd
number to be retired. But does Kevin Garnett’s number 5 deserve the royal
treatment, as some propose? Garnett only played for Boston for six seasons, one
less than Dennis Johnson, who had his number 3 retired by the team.
Of course there was special Celtic sentiment for the
likes of Reggie Lewis (#35) and Easy Ed Macauley (#22) but do those numbers
deserve to be displayed alongside Bill Russell’s number 6 or Larry Bird’s
number 33? Teams can dilute the honor by making it too routine. Yes, I’m talking
about Cedric Maxwell’s number 31. As Red Auerbach said, “He wasn’t that good!”
College teams retire numbers as well. The University
of North Carolina Tar Heel men’s team has such a storied tradition that they
developed strict requirements for uniform retirements. To be so-honored a Tar
Heel must be more than special. He must be MVP of a national title team, an ACC
“Player-of-the-Year,” a first-team All-American, and/or a member of a Gold
Medal Winning Olympic team.
Which brings us to Plymouth State University and Joe
Dudek, its All-America running back back in the early 80’s. Dudek scored more
touchdowns than any college player in history, set numerous rushing records for
several championship teams, finished in the top-ten of the Heisman Trophy
voting, and then spent two years with the Denver Broncos. His number 22 was
informally retired by Plymouth State, and in 1989 the college decided to make
it official by having a Joe Dudek Day at Currier Field. Unfortunately, several
faculty members chose to make a public issue over the fact that Dudek had not yet
satisfied graduation requirements. (He has since earned his diploma.) A local
paper ran a story about the faculty concerns and a wire service account made it
a national story. The undesired attention created a regrettable distraction
which perhaps diminished the recognition. To his credit, Plymouth State
President William Farrell made it a point to be on the field with Dudek for the
ceremony.
The attention given to Dudek’s graduation status was
almost certainly he reason that some college teams chose to retire player
numbers after their final season ended, but before graduation, or
non-graduation. For example, Indiana University’s superstar running back
Anthony Thompson had his number retired right after his last 1989 home game
with the Hoosiers. IU apparently knew he wasn’t going to graduate and learned
from the Dudek experience not to mess with faculty who might be jealous of the
attention given to football players.
Anyway, congrats again to Wade Boggs. And upon further
review, let’s keep Cornbread Maxwell’s number 31 retired. I’ll never forget his
Game 7 heroics against the Lakers in 1984, and I think Auerbach was kidding
when he said Max wasn’t that good.
Happy
New Year!