The Yankees won the game, 5-4. Dent’s homer inspired Red Sox Manager Don Zimmer to coin an unprintable nickname for Dent, giving him a new middle name for baseball fans in New England. All these years removed, Dent still considers the obscene moniker a “badge of honor.”
But he was not the only Yankee central to their foes’ downfall. Reggie Jackson provided insurance with a homer, and Ron Guidry dealt six and a third innings of two-run ball after demanding to start on three days’ rest. Rich “Goose” Gossage allowed two earned runs over two and two-thirds innings of relief, but he held the line and induced a Carl Yastrzemski pop fly to end the game and complete Boston’s epic collapse.
Fast forward to 2021, and the Yankees are about to play another win-or-go-home game at Fenway. The situation is not exactly the same as it was in 1978, but Dent sees the similarities and knows what the modern Yankees are in for.
Dent remembers the seriousness of Game 163. Players tried to stay loose during batting practice, but a heightened intensity level could be felt as the game progressed. “It was one of the greatest games I ever played. It’s the most pressure game that I’ve ever been in in my entire athletic career,” Dent said. And yet, he insisted he felt no jitters during his most famous at-bat.