Revisionist history abounds today in the wake of the news
of Bill Buckner’s passing.
Exhibit A: Shank himself. Eulogizing the former Red Sox star, he writes: “But for the final 33 years of his life, Buckner was best
known as the guy who missed the ground ball. For many fans and media members,
it defined him. And it was unfair.”
It was unfair alright, but there's a shell game going on and The CHB is behind the table. Let's start with the fake plaudits: “Bill Buckner had more big
league hits than either Joe DiMaggio or Ted Williams. He was an All-Star and
won a batting title. Playing on ankles that had to be iced almost round the
clock, he knocked in 102 runs for the pennant-winning Red Sox in 1986.”
Now it’s true The CHB has said this before. Indeed, it’s
almost a word for word repeat of his ESPN interview with Bob Ley in 2016, when
the Cubs and Indians were battling for their first respective World Series championship in decades. (Note that he credits Buckner with 103 RBI in the clip.)
But a trip through the Globe archives shows that, much like Shaughnessy’s soul, the actual record is much
darker. It ranges from the trite (after the Sox won the 2004 World
Series, their first in 86 years) … “The suffering souls of Bill Buckner,
Grady Little, Mike Torrez, Johnny Pesky, and Denny Galehouse are released from
Boston Baseball's Hall of Pain.”
… to the random (at the Hall of Fame ceremonies
last summer): “Hall of Famer Wade Boggs is here. He can talk about 1986
when the Sox took over first place in May, never looked back, pulled off one of
the great comebacks in playoff history against the Angels, then broke New
England’s heart in the Bill Buckner World Series against the Mets.”
The CHB coverup continues The flashbacks were in full force each time the Sox made it to October:
- “But if they somehow lose the 2018 World Series, Game 3 will stand forever as Boston’s baseball’s Buckner moment of the 21st century…”
- “The Cardinals had won 13 of their last 14 postseason homegames, and Saturday's stunner was the first Series game to end on an errorsince Mookie Wilson's grounder went through Bill Buckner's legs in 1986.”
Indeed, almost any time he wrote about the Red Sox and the World Series
in the same column, Buckner’s error was cited. “Game 6 also gave us a little dribbler by Mookie Wilson,
Vin Scully exclaiming, ‘Behind the bag . . . !’’ and Bill Buckner
riding a Train They Call Infamy all the way to a featured role in an episode of
“Curb Your Enthusiasm.’’ “
He even found ways to insert gratuitous references into writeups that
had nothing to do with the Red Sox or Buckner, like this from the Royals-Mets World Series in 2015: “It featured the first series late-inning go-ahead run due
to a first baseman's error (Eric Hosmer) since Bill Buckner's
gaffe-for-the-ages in 1986.”
Shanughnessy himself spent column after column writing about it. (Not to mention using the episode to frame an entire book.)
He even took shots on his Twitter account.
Hang on! Here’s one, from 2012, where he plays
it straight (mostly). “[Tom House] caught Hank Aaron’s 715th homer in 1974 (only because Dodgers left fielder Bill Buckner couldn’t scale the fence — thank goodness Doug Mientkiewicz wasn’t there).” Surprised he didn’t sneak in a bit about the
Hammer’s record-breaking blast being too high to go through Buckner’s legs? Me too.
On the bright side, it kept The CHB away from the Garden and the Stanley Cup finals, where the Bruins were thumping
the Blues.
Billy Buck, Bruins Nation thanks you for your service.
CHB will be back to stomping on Billy Buck's grave before the latter's body goes cold.
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