date published:
April 7, 2008
 
Red Sox first baseman Kevin Youkilis is a
hit on the field and in the community
by Josh B. Wardrop
They say you can’t go home again, but
don’t tell that to a baseball player. After
all, going home is their ultimate
objective—circling the bases until they find
themselves safe at home plate, and doing it
as often as possible. And for first baseman
Kevin Youkilis (pictured) and his Old
Towne Teammates—Beantown’s beloved Boston
Red Sox—April 8 is a day they’ve
had circled on their calendars all winter.
That’s the day of the team’s 2008 home
opener, and the day they all get to come
home to where the love of Red Sox Nation is
in greatest abundance—Fenway Park.
“It’s one of the best parks in
baseball—filled with so much amazing
history,” said Youkilis, in a March
interview conducted just days before he and
the Sox headed half a world away to open
their 2008 season against the Oakland A’s
in, of all places, Japan. “You’ve got 81
sold-out home games every year, and you know
that people are going to be excited about
every one. It’s really like Opening Day
every day.”

Since breaking into the big leagues in
2004—the year the Sox broke their 86-year
World Series title drought—Cincinnati native
Youkilis has become familiar with the
excitement his hardball team generates in
these parts. This year he expects more of
the same, coming off a hugely successful
2007 season capped off by a second World
Series title in four years, as well as an
individual honor for Youkilis—the Gold Glove
Award for being the American League’s top
defensive first baseman.
“Winning the Series last year, I felt I
had more of an impact—getting to play more
and contributing more to the team winning,”
said Youkilis, who was a bench player in
2004. “It’s hard to put into words what that
means, but it’s as though every bit of sweat
and effort you put in, from spring training
to the last game, pays off. It’s amazing.
And the Gold Glove was just icing on the
cake,” he added. “It was huge, and nothing I
ever set out to achieve. I always want to be
the best every day that I go out on the
field, but I didn’t think [the Gold Glove]
was really attainable.”
What Youkilis does consider attainable is
a World Series repeat for the Sox in 2008,
contingent, of course, on the usual required
ingredients. “I think we have a great chance
if we stay healthy and pitch well,” he said,
“We just need to get to the postseason and
then it’s anybody’s game.”

His confidence is largely rooted in the
fact that, unlike the post-World Series 2005
Red Sox roster, the 2008 team is loaded with
familiar faces. “After 2004, we lost a lot
of players—Derek Lowe, Pedro Martinez,
Orlando Cabrera. This year, almost everyone
is back, and we already have that
chemistry—we know when to joke around with
each other, but everybody still respects
everyone else. We have our fun off the
field, and when that first pitch comes,
we’ve got professionals who know how to
focus on the game.”
As he enters his third season as an
everyday member of the Sox starting lineup,
Youkilis has established himself as one of
the team’s most popular players with the
fans—evidenced by the communal chant of “Yoooooouuuuuk!”
that rises out of the stands when he comes
up to bat. Now he’s making the best possible
use of that popularity with Hits

Not Quite Fenway, but...
Came up empty
on tickets? Well, even David Ortiz
and Jason Varitek strike out
sometimes. If you get shut out of
Fenway, here’s some nearby hotspots
where you can get your Sox on.
GAME ON!, 82 Lansdowne St.,
617-351-7001 (pictured above).
You can’t get much closer to seeing
a game at Fenway then at Game On!,
which is actually in Fenway Park.
Opened in 2005, Game On features a
light and airy upstairs dining room
and a sleek, dark downstairs
nightclub/sports bar. Game On!
boasts yummy upscale ballpark food
(hot dogs, sandwiches, brick oven
pizzas) and pretty much unlimited
views of the game on enormous TVs.
THE BASEBALL TAVERN, 1270
Boylston St., 617-867-6526.
Inside Fenway Park, the seats atop
the famed Green Monster are the most
coveted vantage points. Outside
Fenway, the Baseball Tavern’s
roofdeck (complete with Fenway
scoreboard replica) has to take the
prize. Atop the Baseball Tavern, you
can’t quite see into Fenway Park,
but it’s the best way we know to
feel close to the game while you sip
a cocktail and cheer on the team.
CASK N’ FLAGON, 62 Brookline
Ave., 617-536-4840. A popular
Fenway hangout since 1969, the Cask
got a big-time facelift in
2006—including raised ceilings,
massive top-to-bottom bay windows
overlooking Fenway Park, more tables
and a lot more TVs (more than 50,
including 12-foot projection TVs, 42
and 50-inch plasmas, and even TVs in
the bathrooms). After the final
pitch, Sox fans can do a victory
dance at Oliver’s, the back room
dance club. |
for Kids, the charitable foundation he
recently founded with his fiancée, Enza
Sambataro. The organization is dedicated to
raising funds and awareness for three
Boston-area charities focused on the health
and well-being of children: The Italian Home
for Children, diabetes clinicians Joslin
Pediatric Health Services and Christopher’s
Haven, a
residence for young cancer patients and
their family. (On April 13, Youkilis hosts a
shower/brunch for Christopher’s Haven at
Great Bay restaurant in the Hotel
Commonwealth. Refer to
restaurant listing.)
“I
spent time in the hospital with a ruptured
appendix when I was young,” Youkilis
explained. “I saw a lot of wonderful care
given, and I always knew that if I had the
chance, I’d like to give back someday. Once
I made it to the major leagues, I knew I had
that opportunity.”
The constant media spotlight and
round-the-clock diehard intensity of Red Sox
fans isn’t for all players, and more than a
few have cited it as a negative element of
their time in a Boston uniform. But Youkilis
seems to have embraced the passion of Red
Sox Nation and knows it’s all part and
parcel of playing ball in the
baseball-hungry Hub. “The greatest time to
be a Red Sox player is during the game—all
the games are like playoff games, and I have
a great time playing in that kind of
atmosphere.”
Surely, though, two World Series wins in
four years must have done something to calm
the notorious nervous Nellies down a bit.
Right, Youk?
“I wouldn’t say folks have loosened up at
all—you can’t teach an old dog new tricks,”
the first baseman chuckled. “The fans are
always expecting more. But, hey, we’re used
to the hype. I always remind myself I could
be playing somewhere else where nobody is
asking for my autograph.”

back to homepage
The Boston Red Sox begin their 2008
home schedule with games against the Detroit
Tigers April 8–10, the New York
Yankees April 11–13 and the Texas
Rangers April 18–20. Refer to
sports listing. For more information on
Kevin Youkilis’ Hits for Kids, visit
www.youkskids.org.

Ticketing Tips
The
Red Sox sell out every game at
Fenway Park, and have done so for
the last few seasons. To avoid
having to negotiate with shady
scalpers, here’s a few possible ways
to track down the hottest ticket in
town—legally.
Visit the
Ticket Office:
Obvious, right? Yet some people skip
right over this accessible resource
located at the corner of Brookline
Avenue and Yawkey Way. If you hit
the office the day before a game,
there are always limited tickets
(key word being “limited”)
available.
Gate E: This
ticket window, located on Lansdowne
Street underneath the Green Monster,
is another point where last-minute
game-day tickets (usually standing
room and scattered single seats) go
on sale, two hours prior to the
game. Tickets are first-come,
first-served, and you’re allowed to
line up five hours prior to the
game.
Scalp-Free
Zone:
At Gate B (behind
the centerfield bleachers, beside
the statue of Ted Williams) is a
designated “Scalp-Free Zone”
(pictured above), where season
ticket holders who, for whatever
reason, can’t attend that night’s
game are encouraged to come and sell
their seats at face value. Buyers
must then enter the park
immediately. One tip if you go this
route: behave yourself inside the
park, because you don’t want the
folks who did you a solid to get
their tickets yanked.
Come
Fashionably Late:
The Sox don’t want leftover tickets,
so there’s no harm in taking in the
first couple innings from the
comfort of a local watering hole
(see sidebar, above), then casually
inquiring of the ticket office if
there’s anything left. It’s said
that if there are spare tickets, you
can get them for quite a tasty
discount as the night rolls on. |
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