Fans throughout NYC celebrate Yankees’ title
NEW YORK (AP)—Hundreds of Yankees fans poured into the streets of New York early Thursday to celebrate the team’s 27th World Series championship, a party that extended uptown and began building hours earlier when the crowd at Yankee Stadium danced and sang to the music even before the first pitch.
Fans in Yankees jerseys and hats who watched the 7-3 victory over Philadelphia at sports bar Stout spilled out onto 33rd Street between Sixth and Seventh avenues early Thursday in Manhattan. Greeted by an NYPD van, several patrol cars with lights flashing and officers standing on street corners, they remained well-behaved.
New York City police said there were no early reports of disturbances related to the Yankees victory.
A ticker-tape parade and ceremony to honor the team has been scheduled for Friday, the mayor’s office said.
Outside the team’s $1.5 billion ballpark in the Bronx, 16-year-old Ryan Wessel of Somers, N.Y., bought two Yankees hat right after the game. He reveled in the team’s win, underscored by Hideki Matsui’s(notes) record-tying six RBIs. Matsui was named World Series MVP.
“He definitely should have gotten it,” Wessel said. “He’s my favorite player.”
The Yankees “have a great attitude, a lot of hard work, really superb performances by clutch players at the right time,” said fan Bob Matsuok of New York, who wore a Matsui jersey as he watched the game in northern Manhattan.
Fans at Stout yelled, “MVP! MVP! MVP!” every time Matsui came to bat.
The three-level bar was packed most of Wednesday evening with fans from as far away as San Diego hanging on every pitch as they watched Game 6 on flat-screen televisions.
“It’s phenomenal,” said Robert Christiansen, 41, of Malverne, N.Y. “It’s all you can ask for.”
When Yankees left-hander Damaso Marte(notes) struck out Phillies second baseman Chase Utley(notes) on three pitches with two runners on to end the top of the seventh inning, a sense of relief overcame the packed house at Stout.
The crowd responded to the strikeout by chanting: “Yankees! Yankees! Yankees!”
Gabriel Ortega, 28, a credit card executive from San Diego, called it “an extraordinary game; it’s keeping us on our toes.”
“We love Matsui,” said Ortega.
In Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood, a whoop went out from bars and restaurants every time the Yankees recorded an out in the late innings.
Fans high-fived each other at the Westside Tavern on 23rd Street when the game ended.
“Matsui should be the MVP,” said Tom Murphy, an investor.
Cynthia Lang finished work on a party cruise boat and watched the last two innings at a Mexican restaurant next door.
“The season started off kind of slow,” she said, adding that the Yankees performed best when it counted—in the playoffs.
Fans had waited nine years since the team’s last World Series win, a Subway Series against their crosstown rivals, the Mets, in 2000.
Some were quick to note that before the series began, Phillies shortstop Jimmy Rollins(notes) had predicted a Philadelphia victory in five games.
But it was a quiet night on Broad Street in Philadelphia, where thousands of fans partied when the Phillies won the National League championship.
There were no postgame troubles in the city early Thursday, Philadelphia police spokesman Officer Stephen Malen said.
At Yankee Stadium, the stands trembled after each key hit.
A television blimp circled above the stadium during the entire game, and at one point the electronic lettering on the side beamed “Lisa, will you marry me? Love John.”
The blimp circled the stadium again, and on the next round it brought the answer: She said “yes.”
Associated Press writers Verena Dobnik, Karen Matthews and Adam Pemble in New York City and JoAnn Loviglio in Philadelphia contributed to this report.


Pinstripe Alley
86 Comments
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@ Steven - Nice use of the Raiders and Rams to completely illustrate my point - they have both played in (or won) a Super Bowl this decade. A cap does not guarantee parity, but it does represent balance. And ratings? Great, a single GAME gets a 15 rating on a Wednesday night (when there is NOTHING on TV). The average for the Series is going to be around 11. Contrast that with 1978, when the Yanks played the Dodgers - almost a 33 rating (and 56 share - that's more than half the TVs in the nation!) for the SERIES. Okay, so cable has diluted the market since then. Fair enough. But compare it to 1992, when the Braves played a foreign market (Toronto) - that's basically a Series with one hand tied behind its back for ratings purposes - and they managed a 20 rating for that Series. In my market, the local regular season NBA game (on cable) for a team that might not even make the playoffs this year had better ratings last night than Game 6 (on a major network). Hell, in 2004 the Sox-Cards Series managed amost a 16 rating. So yeah, the ratings are down. Maybe not when you consider last year (the worst in history), but a Series with the largest media market vs. a Top 5 media market in the nation should do better than a measly 11.
And to others who care to argue re: the cap and competitive balance: You're exactly right, money does not guarantee success. All it does is give you chance after chance after chance to screw up. But what that also means is that those who do not have access to same resources don't get those same chances. Most of the owners in the NBA and NFL are pretty darn close to their respective caps. Why? Because they know that if they spend the money right and run a competent organization, they have a fair chance. The whole point of sports in general is that each team, at the beginning of any given season, is supposed to start off equal and then to do everything they can to become unequal. It's like if you and I play 50 games of Monopoly in a row, but I get to start every game with hotels on the oranges. Sure, you might win a few games, but what the hell is fair about that?
So go ahead, big payroll baseball fans, continue to revel in your myopic world where everything revolves around you. A Series title today for a big-payroll team does not carry nearly the same weight as one won 20 years ago, and in the meantime the owners and players fiddle while baseball burns. And continue to enjoy your status as champs of a sport that is quickly becoming as relevant as soccer. It doesn't have to be that way, but it's not likely to change any time soon.
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2) Right field is the same for anyone at the plate. It's not the Yankees problem if another team doesn't take advantage. If you want to complain, then push for a boring rule that makes all fields take on the same dimensions and wall heights. No green monster in Boston either. In reality, the green monster is a bigger obstacle than Yankees short right field. Boston knows how to play the hit off the wall after all of those home games where visiting teams only get to test it out during games. Right field, a home run is a home run, there's no playing it any other way.
3) The whole math issue about how well Yankees have done considering their payroll is simply crap. It has no bearing on anything other than an interesting statistic. I'm sure I could figure out equations that make any team sit in last place.
4) Other than Utley, the big names on Philly just weren't hitting. We had the same thing happen with Swisher and others. It happens. We just happened to have other players picking up the slack.
5) What a great series. Any fan of baseball should be able to recognize a great series. If the Yanks weren't a competitive ball club, it wouldn't have gone 6. Seriously, how can you make a case for salary caps when all of these games were that good? Even the Twins series had close games.
6) I'll be on Broadway tomorrow if anyone needs me.
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And in the end, it isn't money that wins baseball games, the past 8 years have shown that with the Yankees. It is heart that wins. And when a team believes it will go all the way as a TEAM and not just one player, whether it is the Yankees, or the Phillies, or even, yes, the Red Sox, that is what carries them to victory. And awesome games.
So never go home before the game is over, you never know what great things you may witness!
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I know they can do it!
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Yankees fan (or Red/White Sox fan, or anyone else with a top 5 or 6 payroll) defending their purchase is just pathetic. Admit it, own it, and enjoy it, but don't expect the rest of the world not to see it for what it really is. Until there is competitive balance in the game, baseball has about as much credibility as soccer.
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So what? The objective in major league baseball is NOT to have the lowest ratio of dollars per win or dollars per championship. The objective is to win the World Series. The Yankees have 27. How many does your pathetic team have? The "analysis" you quoted was certainly done by just another masterhater trying to find something, anything, that mitigates the naseau all of you masterhaters feel every time the Yankees win.
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NY Yankees 2009 World Series Champs..deal with it.
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Tomorrow: Major renovations to move the right field wall back a good 20 feet at least.
I mean, seriously. Little league players could hit a HR to right at Yankee stadium. I guess they had to do something to offset the lack of steroids.
Even as a Red Sox fan, i will cheer for small market teams like KC and Baltimore to topple the $100 (and in the Yankees' case $200) million dollar country club that the MLB playoffs have become, even if they beat Boston. Man, I miss last year's Rays.
Go small markets, and GO SALARY CAP!!!!"
Move the wall back 20 feet? If your beloved Red Sox couldn't hit the ball over the wall when they played at Yankee stadium how is moving it back going to help them? Maybe you should replace your @#$%y lineup with "Little league players." The wall is the same distance for every hitter on every team dumbass, they don't suddenly change it when the Red Sox come to play.
Wow I'm confused about wanting small market teams to "topple the $100 (and in the Yankees' case $200) million dollar country club that the MLB playoffs have become"...so you want KC and Baltimore to sweep the Red Sox in every series huh? Oh wait, you DIDN'T know that Boston has a payroll that FAR EXCEEDS $100 million?!?!?
you're an uninformed retard, and i know this because you show a clear lack of logic and reasoning.
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Now, for the Yankee haters filling up on Haterade...get over it. The Yankees won.
Way to go NY Yankees!!! World Series champs!!!
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who cares what the article says. we won this year and that's what counts. "relative" to the other teams in the league we are #1 in 2009.
the Phillies were a talented bunch and played well, hats off to them for a good season and I really enjoyed hearing Charlie Manuel after the game. he showed there's still a way to be classy even in defeat.
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