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George Steinbrenner….visionary and iconic for sure….will the Yankees ever be the same?

July 13th, 2010

Move over LeBron. Your moment is over.

Today, the sudden and shocking death of Yankee owner George Steinbrenner has spawned a plethora of commentary, tribute films and interviews with the some of the greatest sports legends of our time.

I grew up in a little town in NJ that was the home of the Yankees in the 70s. Thurman Munson and Catfish Hunter lived in my town, ate in our pizzeria and came to our school plays. Don Gullet and Graig Nettles came to our little league games.

Everyone in Norwood had an opinion about Steinbrenner. He was controversial, to say the least.

George was the man that everyone loved to hate….he fired Billy Martin, repeatedly. He dished out tough love. And he took a struggling baseball franchise and with determination and force of will created what is perhaps the most iconic team of our times.

George Steinbrenner was a game changer, in the truest sense of the word. He transformed a team, a city, a sport and some would argue an entire industry. He wasn’t always popular. His critics were many. They accused him of buying championships. Micromanaging talent. And in general, bullying everyone around him.

Just hours after we learned of his death, the conversation about his legacy became the topic of the day.

But what about the legacy of the Yankees, who lost both their face and with the passing of Bob Sheppard, their voice this week?

I’ve often mused about the relationship between an organization’s reputation and that of its leaders. Can a leader be so iconic that his or her own “brand” overtakes that of the organization they represent? Did that happen to the Yankees…is the Steinbrenner brand so iconic that the Yankees will never be the same?

Only time will tell.

cwinters General Corporate , ,

  • Sue Kaufmann
    You raise an interesting question, and I believe that it comes down to the matter of how deeply ingrained George's ethics have become in the Yankee organization.

    Thinking back to the 70s and 80s, it was hard to open the sports pages without finding some Steinbrenner controversy. At that point, it seemed to be more about the owner than his team, but there was no mistaking what his vision was and what he expected of the people he hired. In later years, his antics became much more muted, but his standards remained, and it became more about the team than the owner. Granted, he'd aged and retired from active leadership, but one would also like to think that he felt that the people he hired had become good stewards of the brand.

    With careful tending, George's standards of excellence and leadership will persist for decades to come.

  • Cwinters
    But what will the Sports writers in the NY tabloids write about? We didn't get LeBron....
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