On this day in Yankee history... 
 
 
1980: Chien-Ming Wang is born.  
 
1995: The longest strike action in
American professional sports history ends ~ in a courtroom. A U.S. District court order 
handed down by future SCOTUS justice Sonia Sotomayor forbids owners from
 implementing new financial working conditions in the wake of the 
impasse in negotiations. The court decides that conditions will revert 
to the old rules from
 the previous season. Because of the timing of the court order, 18 games
 will have to be trimmed from the major league schedule. 
 
2011: The Yankees have a successful opening, beating Detroit 6-3 at home. Curtis Granderson, whose
 health was a concern before the start of the game because of a strained
 right oblique muscle, makes a diving catch of a line drive hit by Will Rhymes in the 1st, then breaks a 3-3 tie with a solo homer off Phil Coke in the 7th. Mark Teixera had earlier hit a three-run blast to tie the score in the 3rd. New Yankee starting catcher Russell Martin scores twice in his debut in pinstripes as Joba Chamberlain picks up the win and Mariano Rivera the save. 
 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
1955: The Yankees 
 sell pitcher Ewell Blackwell to the Kansas City A's. Blackwell, who was
 injured in 1954, will pitch in only two games for the Athletics this 
season before retiring. 
2001: Dwight Gooden announces
 his retirement. A four-time All-Star and Cy Young Award winner, Gooden 
posted a 194-112 record with a 3.51 ERA and 2293 strikeouts over a 
16-season career. 
2013: 'Bullet' Bob Turley dies at the age of 82. 
                         https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Bob_Turley
 
 
 
On this day in Yankee history... 
1966: Former Yankee relief ace Wilcy Moore dies at the age of 65. 
                             https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Wilcy_Moore 
1975: The
 Yankees release Mel Stottlemyre, who is suffering from a torn rotator 
cuff. The pitcher compiled a 164-139 record and a 2.97 ERA as well as 40
 shutouts in an eleven-season major league career, all with New York. 
                         https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Mel_Stottlemyre 
1984: 
 The Yankees trade one of the key members of their '70s World 
Championship teams when they dispatch Graig Nettles to the San Diego 
Padres for pitcher Dennis Rasmussen and a player to be named later. 
Nettles, who angered George Steinbrenner by criticizing him in his book 
'Balls', will hit 20 home runs and help the Padres reach the 1984 World 
Series. 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
1919: Vic Raschi is born. 
                     https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/raschvi01.shtml 
1927: In
 a final exhibition game between the previous World Series' opponents, 
the Yankees score four runs in the 1st inning off Grover Cleveland 
Alexander and the Cardinals. Then, Alexander shuts down the Yankees 
until leaving in the 8th, and 
the Cardinals score two in the 9th to win 6-4. Both teams use their 
regular lineups ~ the only teams to make no starting changes from last 
year's teams. The four runs off Alexander are the first the 40-year-old 
veteran has allowed in 15 innings of spring training work. 
1961: 
 In their first meeting since Pittsburgh's dramatic World Series win 
over New York, the Bucs, behind would-be World Series goat Bob Friend, 
beat up the banged-up Bombers 9-2. The game's first run comes in the 
bottom of the 2nd on Roberto Clemente's bases-empty bomb over the 
left-field fence. Pittsburgh go up 3-0 in the 3rd on Dick Stuart's  
two-run shot, likewise to left field. By the 7th, the Bucs have built 
their lead to 8-0 before the Yankees can push across their initial 
tally. 
Today's win boosts the Bucs' Grapefruit League-leading record to 13-5, 
while miring New York ever more deeply in the pre-season cellar. 
1970: In this first (and last?) 'Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial All-Star Baseball Classic', with
 all proceeds going to the late Dr. King's Southern Christian Leadership
 Conference and a memorial center planned for Atlanta, the East, managed
 by Joe DiMaggio, scores a 5-1 victory over the West. The losers are skippered by ex-Dodger Roy Campanella, confined to a wheelchair since a 1958 auto accident,  A crowd of 31,694 watches the charity event at Dodger Stadium.  
1988: The Yankees waive knuckleballer Phil Niekro four days shy of his 47th birthday. 
2003:  Three days prior to Opening Day, the YES Network claims Cablevision has
 pulled out of a proposed deal signed 17 days ago which would have 
provided televised Yankees games to nearly three million cable 
subscribers in the New York City metropolitan area. According to a YES 
press release, the giant cable television company failed to sign a 
finalized version of the hand-written document that both parties 
exchanged on March 12th, but Cablevision president, James L. Dolan, said when YES sent him a revised typewritten draft on two days later, the document contained alterations that he found unacceptable. 
 
 
 
On this day in Yankee history... 
 
 
1879: Miller Huggins is born. 
                      https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Miller_Huggins
1941: The Yankees sell pitcher Steve Sundra to the Wshington Senators. Sundra, who posted a 11-1 record in 1939, slipped  to 4-6 in 1940. 
 
2013: The Yankees place starting pitcher Phil Hughes on a crowded disabled list, where he joins teammates Mark Teixera, all of whom will miss Opening Day. 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
 
1936: Red Ruffing signs a one-year contract for $12,000. 
1937: On the advice of Ty Cobb, Joe DiMaggio reduces the weight of his bat from 40 ounces to 36 ounces. 
 
1951:  In an exhibition game at the University of Southern California, Mickey Mantle propels a home run estimated at 654 to 660 feet. The shot clears Bovard Field and
 then goes the width of a practice football field before landing. Mantle
 has two homers, a bases-loaded triple, and drives in seven runs as the 
Yankees flunk the Trojans 15-1. 
1968: José VizcaÃno is born. 
 
2005: Former Yankee pitcher Marius Russo dies at the age of 90. 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
1920: 
 In a spring training game between the Yankees and the Brooklyn Robins, 
 a sweeping inside curve thrown by Robins' pitcher Jeff Peffer hits 
Chick Fewster, striking the Yankees' shortstop behind the ear and 
flattening him. 
Fewster revives 10 minutes later but soon loses the ability to speak. 
Taken to the hospital with a skull fracture and a blood clot on his 
brain, Fewster will recover slowly and return to play in mid-season. 
1935: The Yankees purchase
 starting pitcher Pat Malone, who led the NL in wins in 1929 with 22, 
and in 1930 with 21 (115 in a seven-year span). But Malone will only 
post a 19-13 record with the Yankees over the next three seasons. 
1955: Lee Mazzilli is born. 
2010: 
 The Yankees release pitcher Chad Gaudin, who was competing for the 
team's fifth starter position, and, failing 
that, was expected to make the staff as a long reliever. Phil Hughes, 
who shone as a set-up man in 2009. is announced as the winner of the 
fifth starter competition, while Joba Chamberlain returns to the 
bullpen. Gaudin will sign a minor league deal with Oakland on March 
28th, but will be back in the Bronx before the end of the year. 
2011: The
 Yankees send pitcher Sergio Mitre to the Brewers in exchange for 
outfielder Chris Dickerson. Mitre is expected to take the place of the 
injured Zack Greinke in the Milwaukee rotation when the season begins. 
Dickerson serves as 
insurance for the Yanks, who are concerned over a rib injury to starting
 CF Curtis Granderson, but unfortunately, he will pull a muscle in his 
first game for his new 
team. Mitre's departure means that three pitchers are now competing for 
the last two spots in the Yanks' starting rotation: rookie Ivan Nova and
 veterans Bartolo Colon and Freddy Garcia. They also sign veteran hurler
 Kevin Millwood to a minor league contract as further insurance in case 
the trio fails
 to perform up to expectations, but his services will not be required as
 all three will pitch well. 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
1933: As a Great Depression austerity measure, Babe Ruth takes a $23,000 pay cut from his previous year's salary of $75,000. 
1990: Starlin Castro is born. 
  
 
                      https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/castrst01.shtml
1996: 
 Yankees infielder Tony Fernandez fractures his right elbow in an 
exhibition game against the Astros, and is placed on the 60-day DL. The 
injury opens a place in the Opening Day lineup for a highly touted 
rookie named Derek Jeter. 
2013: The
 Yankees acquire veteran OF Vernon Wells from the Angels, adding a 
much-needed major league bat to a line-up depleted by injuries and 
departures via free agency. However, Wells is still owed $42 million for
 the last two seasons on his huge multi-year contract, and has put up 
dismal OBPs since the Angels acquired him from Toronto
 two seasons ago; as part of the deal, the Angels will remain on the 
hook for the majority of the money owed him. The deal will officially be
 completed in two days, with the Yankees giving up two low-level minor 
league players in return for Wells. 
 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
1941: Joe DiMaggio,  a holdout and late arrival at spring training, plays his first exhibition game of the year.  
1952: Former Yankee pitcher Steve Sundra dies of cancer at the age of 42. 
1974: The Yankees purchase
 outfielder Elliott Maddox from the Texas Rangers for $60,000. Maddox 
will prove to be a great defensive outfielder as well as hitting .303 
this year. 
1988: Dellin Betances is born. 
1990: Gambler
 Howard Spira is arrested for extorting money from George Steinbrenner, 
 who paid Spira $40,000 in January. The Commissioner will suspend 
Steinbrenner because of his relationship with the unsavory character. 
2012: Joba Chamberlain dislocates
 his ankle while playing on a trampoline with his son. Already 
recovering from Tommy John surgery, he undergoes emergency surgery for 
an open dislocation. Doctors report 
that he lost so much blood that there was concern for his life and that 
he will need to stay hospitalized for several days. While the injury is 
thought to be season-ending, Joba will be back pitching for the Yankees 
on August 1st.  
 
 
 
On this day in Yankee history... 
1962: At spring training, Roger Maris declines to pose with Mets coach Roger Hornsby because the Hall of Famer criticized him in his book My Wars with Baseball. 
1972: In
 one of the best trades in franchise history, the Yankees acquire 
reliever Sparky Lyle from the Red Sox in exchange for 1B/OF Danny Cater.
 In seven seasons with the Yankees, Lyle will post a 57-40 record with 
141 saves and a 2.41 ERA, win a Cy Young award, and help the team to 
three pennants and two championships. 
Also on this day, Cory Lidle (d. 2006) is born.  
1991: 
 At Sotheby's in New York, a 1952 Topps card of Mickey Mantle goes for 
$49,500, tripling the pre-auction estimate, while a baseball signed by 
Babe Ruth and 11 other players at the 1939 Hall of Fame induction 
ceremony, sells for $20,900. 
2012: New
 Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine gets an early introduction to the 
fierce rivalry with the Yankees. After the Sox tie a Grapefruit game at 
4-4 on a squeeze bunt by Jason Repko in the bottom of the 9th inning, 
Valentine has reliever Clayton Mortenson on the mound ready to pitch the
 10th when Joe Girardi announces that his team is leaving Fort Myers 
immediately to take a bus back to their base in Tampa. Girardi later 
justifies his last-minute decision by the fact that he 
has used all of the pitchers he had planned to bring into the game, but 
Valentine is still irked. 
2015: Yankee
 prospect Jose Pirela runs into the center field fence at full speed in 
trying to chase down a drive off the bat of the Met's Juan Lagares. He 
suffers a concussion and has to be taken to hospital, but escapes 
more serious injury. Meanwhile, Lagares circles the bases with an 
inside-the-park home run. 
2017: Former Yankee manager Dallas Green dies at the age of 82. 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
 
1936: Joe DiMaggio 
 runs his spring training record to 12 for 20, in an 11-2 Yankees 
victory over the newly-named Boston Bees. Before the next game is 
played, the prize rookie is left unattended with his foot in a diathermy
 machine. The resulting burn ends his spring training and delays his 
major league debut until May.
 
1986: The Yankees announce
 that their most celebrated off-season acquisition, 26-year-old pitcher 
Britt Burns, will not play at all this season because of a chronic 
deteriorating 
hip condition. He will never pitch again in the major leagues. 
 
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
On this day in Yankee history... 
 
1961: The Yankees announce
 that the team will oppose any plan enabling the new National League 
expansion franchise in New York to use Yankee Stadium. This decision 
leaves the old Polo Grounds as the only viable option for the NL's new 
team, the New York Mets, who will begin play in a year's time. 
 
1984: Hall of Fame pitcher Stan Coveleski, who finished his career with the 1928 Yankees championship team, dies at age 94. 
                    https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/covelst01.shtml
 
 
 
On this day in Yankee history... 
 
1974: In
 a five-player, three-team deal involving the Indians, the Tigers and 
the Yankees. pitcher Jim Perry joins his pitching brother Gaylord in 
Cleveland. Detroit send Perry to the Indians and Ed Farmer to the 
Yankees, who send Jerry Moses to Detroit, while Cleveland ship Rock 
Sawyer and Walt Williams to the the Bronx. This season will mark the 
Perrys' first as teammates during their major league careers. 
 
1989: With
 Dave Winfield sidelined, the Yankees trade catcher Joel Skinner and a 
minor leaguer to the Indians for Mel Hall. Winfield will miss all of the
 season after undergoing back surgery next week for central disc 
herniation.