E18: The Legacy of Thurman Munson & Billy Joel Baseball Trivia
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You can learn a lot about a team by the player it chooses to follow when things get loud. For my birthday special, I bring on my son Griffin Dynes (calling in from Denver) to talk about the toughest kind of baseball greatness: the quiet, gruff, unglamorous leadership of Yankees catcher and captain Thurman Munson.
We start with a quick New York detour through Billy Joel and a trivia question from “We Didn’t Start The Fire,” then we get to the heart of the story. Munson is the spine of the 1970s New York Yankees, a catcher who wins AL Rookie of the Year, takes home the 1976 AL MVP, earns Gold Gloves, and delivers huge postseason numbers on the way to the 1977 and 1978 World Series titles. We dig into what made him different from the flashier stars of the era, and why his style still feels like the definition of “captain.”
Griffin and Jerry also get into the rivalries that shaped Munson’s reputation: the Johnny Bench comparisons, the brutal Carlton Fisk clashes from an era when collisions at home plate were part of the sport’s identity, and the famous Reggie Jackson “straw that stirs the drink” quote that sparked real clubhouse tension. Then we tackle the question Yankees fans keep asking: with his accolades and impact, why is Thurman Munson still not in the Baseball Hall of Fame, and what do modern comps like Buster Posey mean for that debate?
We close with the hardest part of his story, the 1979 tragedy, and the powerful ways the Yankees honored him, from retiring number 15 to preserving his locker. If you care about baseball history, Yankees legends, and what real leadership looks like behind the plate, this one is for you. Subscribe, share the episode with a baseball fan, and leave us a review telling us where you land on Munson’s Hall of Fame case.
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