< Back to front page Text size +

In enemy territory, local Yankees fans share their Bronx cheer

November 4, 2009 02:45 PM

yankees.jpg

(Peter DeMarco for The Boston Globe)


Yankees Meet-up group founder Nikki Fein (left), assistant organizer Laura Levis, and organizer Phil Brown at the Sports Grille on Monday night.

With the Red Sox no longer in the playoffs, this week's World Series is but an afterthought for many Boston fans. So why was the Sports Grille on Canal Street packed with more than 100 people Monday night, screaming crazily after base hits and chanting players' names?

And why, on earth, were they dressed in blue and white baseball caps, pinstriped jerseys, and Derek Jeter T-shirts?

The diehard baseball fans in Boston this week are, yes, Yankees fans. They may live in Cambridge, Quincy, or Brighton, but most once called the New York area home. Transplants in an unfriendly baseball land, they remain true to their team, flooding a chosen bar -- it's the Sports Grille again tonight -- each game of the Series.

Other nights, they have gathered at Champions at Boston Marriott Copley Place, and Game On! near Fenway Park.

On Monday, with bar-rattling chants of "Let's Go Yankees!" and "Hor-Hey! Hor-Hey!" for catcher Jorge Posada, the Sports Grille could have been on Manhattan's Canal Street instead of Boston's.

"It was ridiculous walking in and seeing nothing but Yankees fans. It was awesome," said Kim Elson, 26, a Cambridge school psychologist originally from Westchester County, N.Y. "I'm used to being in the minority -- when I cheer, everybody gives me dirty looks. But walking in the bar, where everyone had the common bond of loving the Yankees, well, it was just a little surreal."

Local Yankee fans have been able to find each other through an on-line group started three years ago by Nikki Fein, a Back Bay physician’s assistant who grew up in New Jersey rooting for the Yanks. The "Boston-Area New York Yankee Fan Meet-Up” group, which can be found on the meetup.com website, now boasts nearly 400 registered members, their numbers swelling each day during the Yankees' post-season march.

"I look around and I think back to the beginning, when there were four or five of us watching the game together," said Fein, who originally hosted meet-ups in her apartment. "I didn't think there were that many Yankees fans here."

Fein's co-organizer, Phil Brown, a West Hartford native who has lived in the Boston area for 10 years, said the group's popularity has soared because Yankee fans can finally smell another championship title, and because word of mouth has spread about the group.

"I think everybody has the same reaction: Where has this been for my entire time living in Boston? Why am I only discovering this now?" Brown said. "Boston can be a pretty lonely place for a Yankees fan. I heard a lot people the other night actually say, 'I'd be sitting in my living room right now if I weren't here.'"

While the group's fans have cheered wildly during the playoffs, they're still wary of being in enemy baseball territory. Brown said the group meets at bars they know will be quiet or empty on a particular night, or, as they’ve done at Champions, will simply move to a back room by themselves.

Gloating about the Yankees' success this year -- and Red Sox' lack thereof -- has also been held in check, at least so far (with a victory tonight, the Yankees will win the World Series.) But certainly, the group has found safety in numbers.

"You can actually not worry about someone hitting you over the head with a beer bottle when you cheer," said member Thom Haskell, 39, of Beacon Hill. "Instead of getting hostility from other people, it's just everybody rooting for the same team."

Brown said his favorite moment of the postseason so far was during the Game 2 meet-up at Champions.

"At the end of the game, after the last out, one guy said, 'Yankees Win!' And on cue, 75 people did [Yankee announcer] John Sterling's call, 'Theeeee Yaaaaaankees Wiiiiiiiiin!' '' he said.

How have Sox fans reacted to seeing throngs of Yankees fans reveling in the heart of Red Sox Nation? For local Yankee fans accustomed to cheering in silence, that may be the best part of all.

"I've seen people come in the doorway, ask, 'Why are there so many Yankees fans?', then turn around and go to another place," said Yankee diehard Tom Hecpor, 35, of Andover. "It's kind of funny to see people so surprised."

E-mail this article

Invalid email address
Invalid email address

Sending your article

Your article has been sent.

On The Beat

Columnist Yvonne Abraham profiles Bobcat Smith, who gives back to the community by delivering meals to poor, gravely ill people. Read more
TALK TO US
breakingnews@globe.com | Twitter | 617-929-3100

Editor's Choice

On this rock, a myth was built

On this rock, a myth was built

Provincetown, where Pilgrims made landfall first, chips away at Plymouth's preeminence.
From trash to treasure

From trash to treasure

Dozens of local science students at several colleges collect used lab equipment and ship it to Latin America and Africa.
MORE

From Today's Globe

MORE BLOGS

White Coat notes
Overweight men with prostate cancer have a higher risk of dying Men who are overweight when they have locally advanced prostate...
Articles of Faith
Questions on Communion and swine flu The big news of the week on the Boston religious...
A report on people from Boston who are making an impact in the world, and on people from abroad doing noteworthy things here.
Mapendo (and Dukakis) draw crowd for refugee event Rose Mapendo, the Congolese refugee for whom Mapendo International draws...
Mass., N.H. dams slated for removal American Rivers, the national advocacy group, released a list of...
archives

LOCAL BLOGS

BOSTON AREA

Universal Hub

A collection of writing from hundreds of Boston-area bloggers.

The Chinatown Blog

Stories and events related to Boston's Chinatown and the Asian American community in Massachusetts

CommonWealth Magazine

Politics, ideas, and civic life in Massachusetts

Red Mass Group

News and commentary about Massachusetts and beyond

Blue Mass Group

Politics in Massachusetts and around the nation

Boston 1775

History, analysis, and unabashed gossip about the start of the American Revolution.
COLLEGE NEWSPAPER SITES

The Berkeley Beacon

The weekly student newspaper at Emerson College

The Daily Collegian

The student newspaper of UMass-Amherst.

The Daily Free Press

The independent student newspaper at Boston University

The Harvard Crimson

The nation's oldest continuously published daily college newspaper.

The Heights

The independent student newspaper of Boston College

The Huntington News

The independent student newspaper of Northeastern University

The Suffolk Voice

Suffolk University's student-run 24-hour online news resource

The Tech

MIT's oldest and largest newspaper

The Tufts Daily

The independent student newspaper of Tufts University