"And if I have my choice between a pennant and a triple crown, I'll take the pennant every time"
About this Quote
Yastrzemski is doing something rarer than a clubhouse platitude: he’s demoting the most intoxicating kind of individual glory in baseball. The “triple crown” is the sport’s monogrammed robe - batting average, home runs, RBIs - a neat, narratable proof of dominance. A “pennant,” by contrast, is communal and messy. It’s travel days and slumps covered by someone else’s hot streak, bullpen chaos survived, a season’s worth of small rescues that never fit cleanly on a plaque. By choosing the pennant “every time,” he’s not just endorsing teamwork; he’s rejecting the idea that the game’s highest meaning is personal arithmetic.
The subtext is also a quiet rebuke to the way fans and media carve players into solvable storylines. Individual awards are legible and marketable; they turn an athlete into a brand with a single, repeatable headline. A pennant resists that simplification because it belongs to a whole roster, a whole city, an entire year of shared anxiety. Yastrzemski, who actually won the Triple Crown in 1967 while dragging the “Impossible Dream” Red Sox to the World Series, isn’t speaking hypothetically. He’s telling you that even the best private season is still, emotionally, a second-best outcome if it doesn’t end in October stakes.
It lands because it sounds like competitiveness, not sainthood: the pennant is framed as the ultimate scoreboard, the only one that matters when the noise dies down.
The subtext is also a quiet rebuke to the way fans and media carve players into solvable storylines. Individual awards are legible and marketable; they turn an athlete into a brand with a single, repeatable headline. A pennant resists that simplification because it belongs to a whole roster, a whole city, an entire year of shared anxiety. Yastrzemski, who actually won the Triple Crown in 1967 while dragging the “Impossible Dream” Red Sox to the World Series, isn’t speaking hypothetically. He’s telling you that even the best private season is still, emotionally, a second-best outcome if it doesn’t end in October stakes.
It lands because it sounds like competitiveness, not sainthood: the pennant is framed as the ultimate scoreboard, the only one that matters when the noise dies down.
Quote Details
| Topic | Teamwork |
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