2013 World Series: "Boston Strong": Difference between revisions

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The '''2013 World Series''', officially designated as '''Boston Strong''', represents a pivotal moment in Boston sports history and the city's broader recovery narrative following the April 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. The Boston Red Sox defeated the St. Louis Cardinals four games to two, capturing their third World Series championship in ten years and their first since 2007. Beyond the sporting achievement, the series became a symbol of community resilience and civic pride as Boston rallied around the team during a period of national mourning and municipal trauma. The phrase "Boston Strong" emerged organically from the city's response to the marathon attack and was subsequently adopted by the Red Sox organization and embraced by fans worldwide. The championship parade drew an estimated one million spectators to downtown Boston, making it one of the largest celebrations in the city's modern history.<ref>{{cite web |title=Red Sox World Series victory parade draws estimated 1 million fans |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/redsox/2013/11/06/red-sox-world-series-victory-parade-draws-estimated-million-fans/ |work=Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
The '''2013 World Series''' was played between the Boston Red Sox and the St. Louis Cardinals from October 23 to October 30, 2013, with Boston winning the series four games to two. It was the Red Sox's third World Series championship since 2004 and their first since 2007. The series took place against the backdrop of the April 15, 2013, Boston Marathon bombing, and the team's championship run became closely tied to the city's broader recovery. The phrase "Boston Strong" emerged in the immediate aftermath of the bombing, traced to social media posts and memorial signs at the Boylston Street finish line within hours of the attack, and was subsequently adopted by the Red Sox organization throughout the postseason.<ref>{{cite web |title=How Boston Strong became the city's rallying cry |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/11/01/how-boston-strong-became-citys-rallying-cry/ |work=Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> The championship parade drew an estimated one million spectators to downtown Boston, making it among the largest celebrations in the city's modern history.<ref>{{cite web |title=Red Sox World Series victory parade draws estimated 1 million fans |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/redsox/2013/11/06/red-sox-world-series-victory-parade-draws-estimated-million-fans/ |work=Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>


== History ==
== History ==


The 2013 season began with significant roster changes and elevated expectations for the Red Sox. General Manager Ben Cherington oversaw the acquisition of pitcher Jon Lester and infielder Jacoby Ellsbury, while also signing pitcher Ryan Dempster. Manager John Farrell, in his first year leading the club after previous tenures with the Toronto Blue Jays and Tampa Bay Rays, implemented a fresh approach to a franchise that had finished third in the American League East in 2012. The team demonstrated strong chemistry and consistency throughout the regular season, ultimately securing the AL East title with a 97–65 record and the second-best record in the American League. The season proved therapeutic for a fanbase that had endured emotional devastation on April 15, 2013, when two bombs detonated near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three spectators and injuring 264 others.
The 2013 season began with significant roster changes and elevated expectations. General Manager Ben Cherington overhauled the roster following a disappointing 2012 campaign, signing outfielder Shane Victorino, first baseman Mike Napoli, and outfielder Jonny Gomes, while also acquiring pitcher Ryan Dempster. Manager John Farrell, in his first year leading the club after a previous tenure managing the Toronto Blue Jays from 2011 to 2012 and serving as Red Sox pitching coach before that, implemented a fresh culture of accountability and team unity. The team's most visible symbol of that unity became an unlikely one: the players collectively grew beards as a show of solidarity, and the resulting "Beards of Boston" became one of the defining visual narratives of the season.<ref>{{cite web |title=Red Sox beards: The story behind the 2013 team's defining look |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/redsox/2013/10/30/red-sox-beards-story-behind-team-defining-look/ |work=Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> The team finished the regular season with a 97-65 record, best in the American League East and second-best in the entire league.


The playoff run gained symbolic weight as the Red Sox progressed through the postseason. After dispatching the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Division Series three games to one, Boston faced the Detroit Tigers in the American League Championship Series. The Red Sox dominated the series, winning four games to two and earning their fourth consecutive World Series appearance. Throughout the playoffs, the "Boston Strong" narrative intensified as players wore pins commemorating the marathon victims and the organization donated portions of playoff revenues to the One Fund Boston, a charitable foundation established to assist those affected by the bombing. Local media extensively covered the spiritual dimensions of the team's quest, positioning the championship as potential catharsis for a traumatized community.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boston Marathon bombing survivors inspire Red Sox playoff push |url=https://www.wbur.org/sports/2013/10/15/red-sox-marathon-bombing-survivors |work=WBUR |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
The season proved emotionally charged from the start. On April 15, 2013, two bombs detonated near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three spectators: Martin Richard, Krystle Campbell, and Lingzi Lu. A fourth person, MIT Police Officer Sean Collier, was killed during the subsequent manhunt. More than 260 others were injured, many suffering catastrophic limb loss. The city was placed under a virtual lockdown on April 19 as law enforcement pursued suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was captured that evening in Watertown. Two days before the lockdown, on April 20, designated hitter David Ortiz addressed Fenway Park before a game with a speech that would define the season. "This is our f--king city," Ortiz told the crowd, "and nobody's going to dictate our freedom." The moment was widely broadcast and immediately treated as a turning point in the city's public response to the attack.<ref>{{cite web |title=David Ortiz's 'This is our f---ing city' speech remains iconic a decade later |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/redsox/2023/04/20/david-ortiz-speech-boston-strong-anniversary/ |work=Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>


The World Series itself, contested between October 23 and October 30, 2013, pitted the Red Sox against the St. Louis Cardinals, a storied franchise seeking their eleventh championship. The series proved competitive throughout, with Boston ultimately prevailing through balanced offensive production and stellar pitching performances. David Ortiz, the club's designated hitter and spiritual leader, delivered crucial hits throughout the postseason and earned World Series Most Valuable Player honors. Fenway Park, the team's home stadium, became a gathering place for the community as fans experienced the games collectively, with the victory serving as a turning point in the city's psychological recovery. The championship represented vindication of Farrell's managerial approach and the front office's aggressive offseason acquisitions.
The playoff run gathered symbolic weight as the postseason progressed. Boston dispatched the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Division Series three games to one, then defeated the Detroit Tigers four games to two in the American League Championship Series. A key moment in that series came in Game 2, when Ortiz hit a grand slam off Tigers closer Torii Hunter in the eighth inning to tie the game, a swing widely credited with turning the series. Throughout the playoffs, Red Sox players wore pins commemorating the marathon victims, and the organization donated portions of playoff revenues to the One Fund Boston, a charitable foundation established to assist those affected by the bombing. The One Fund ultimately raised more than $60 million for survivors and victims' families.<ref>{{cite web |title=One Fund Boston raises more than $60 million |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/06/26/one-fund-boston-raises-more-than-million/ |work=Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
 
=== The World Series ===
 
The World Series opened in Boston on October 23, 2013. The St. Louis Cardinals, a storied franchise seeking their eleventh championship, provided a formidable opponent. Game 1 went to St. Louis, 8-1, behind a strong outing from Cardinals starter Adam Wainwright. Boston responded in Game 2, winning 4-2 behind pitcher John Lackey. The series returned to St. Louis for Games 3 through 5, with the Cardinals winning Games 3 and 4 before Boston took Game 5, 3-1. Back at Fenway Park for Game 6, Jon Lester delivered one of the postseason's dominant pitching performances, going 7 2/3 innings while allowing only one run. Boston won 6-1 to clinch the title. David Ortiz was named World Series Most Valuable Player after batting .688 in the series with a home run, two doubles, and six RBI, one of the highest batting averages in World Series MVP history.<ref>{{cite web |title=2013 World Series recap: Red Sox defeat Cardinals in six games |url=https://www.mlb.com/news/2013-world-series-boston-red-sox-st-louis-cardinals |work=MLB.com |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> Fenway Park, home to the Red Sox since 1912, became a gathering point for the city during those games, with the stadium functioning as much as a civic space as a sports venue.


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


The intersection between the 2013 World Series championship and the Boston Marathon bombing created a unique cultural phenomenon that transcended conventional sports narratives. The "Boston Strong" phrase, which gained prominence in the immediate aftermath of the April attack, became inextricably linked with the Red Sox's playoff success. Citizens displayed the phrase on t-shirts, window decals, and municipal infrastructure throughout the city, transforming a slogan of resilience into a unifying emblem. The Red Sox organization actively participated in this cultural moment, with players frequently visiting victims at Massachusetts General Hospital and other medical facilities, demonstrating genuine engagement with the affected community rather than performative gestures.
The intersection between the championship and the marathon bombing created a cultural moment that reached well beyond the sport. "Boston Strong" appeared on t-shirts, window decals, overpasses, and municipal infrastructure across the city, transforming a phrase of grief into a unifying civic identity. Red Sox players made repeated visits to marathon survivors at Massachusetts General Hospital and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital throughout the season, building personal relationships with victims that the team's front office didn't orchestrate as publicity. Those connections were real, and they showed.
 
Local institutions, from the Boston Public Library to neighborhood civic organizations, incorporated the championship into broader community healing efforts. Museums and cultural centers documented the 2013 season as a significant moment in the city's identity, recognizing how athletic success and shared grief can merge into something that outlasts both. The victory parade in November 2013 acquired an almost ceremonial quality, distinct from the celebrations of 2004 and 2007. Residents lined the streets with signs honoring marathon victims alongside expressions of sports joy. Scholars of urban identity and sports sociology noted the season as a case study in how a franchise can function as a vehicle for collective emotional recovery. The championship didn't erase what happened in April. But it gave the city something to hold onto.


Local institutions, from the Boston Public Library to neighborhood organizations, incorporated the championship celebration into broader healing initiatives. Museums and cultural centers documented the 2013 season as a significant chapter in Boston's identity, recognizing the ways sports can facilitate collective emotional processing. The victory parade in November 2013 differed from previous championship celebrations, acquiring an almost ceremonial quality as residents lined streets with signs honoring marathon victims alongside expressions of sports jubilation. Academic observers noted the season as a case study in how athletic success can intersect with tragedy to create meaningful community bonds. The victory represented not merely championship glory but a collectively experienced moment of restoration during a period when Boston's reputation had been temporarily overshadowed by an act of violence.<ref>{{cite web |title=How Boston Strong became the city's rallying cry |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/11/01/how-boston-strong-became-citys-rallying-cry/ |work=Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
The Red Sox's annual Patriots' Day game at Fenway Park has since become a formal occasion to honor the marathon and its survivors, a tradition that continues to connect the 2013 championship to the city's ongoing commemorations of the bombing.<ref>{{cite web |title=Red Sox still celebrate Patriots' Day with special 'Boston' uniforms |url=https://thescore.com/mlb/news/3526996 |work=theScore |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>


== Notable People ==
== Notable People ==


The 2013 World Series featured several players whose performances and personalities became central to the season's cultural significance. '''David Ortiz''', the veteran designated hitter known as "Big Papi," emerged as the emotional and offensive leader of the team. His clutch hitting throughout the postseason and his visible compassion for marathon victims made him a symbol of the "Boston Strong" narrative. Ortiz would later author a memoir addressing his connection to the city and the 2013 season's meaning.
The 2013 World Series featured several players whose performances became central to the season's meaning. '''David Ortiz''', the veteran designated hitter known as "Big Papi," served as the emotional and offensive leader of the team from April through October. His April 20 speech at Fenway Park set the tone for the entire season, and his .688 batting average in the World Series, with six RBI, produced one of the most statistically dominant performances by a designated hitter in Series history. Ortiz's connection to the city's bombing recovery was not incidental. He made personal visits to injured survivors, spoke about the attacks repeatedly in interviews, and wore his "Boston Strong" identity with evident sincerity throughout the year.<ref>{{cite web |title=David Ortiz's legacy, Boston Marathon, and the 2013 World Series |url=https://www.wbur.org/sports/2013/10/15/red-sox-marathon-bombing-survivors |work=WBUR |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>


'''Manager John Farrell''' directed the team with a calm demeanor that complemented the turbulent spring and summer. Farrell's appointment marked the beginning of a new era for the franchise, and his steady leadership proved crucial during a season when external circumstances threatened to overwhelm the team's focus. His previous experience managing in high-pressure environments positioned him well to navigate the emotional complexities the Red Sox faced.
'''Manager John Farrell''' directed the team with a measured demeanor that helped steady a roster navigating an emotionally turbulent spring and summer. His decision to embrace the team's beard-growing tradition as a cultural statement, rather than enforce a more conventional dress code, signaled a willingness to let the players define their own chemistry. That approach worked. Farrell's steady leadership through a season when external circumstances constantly threatened to overwhelm the team's focus proved as important as any tactical decision he made.


'''Pitcher Jon Lester''', acquired in a midseason trade from the Oakland Athletics, provided stability to the pitching rotation and delivered key performances in the postseason. His dominant Game 6 World Series performance demonstrated the impact of the offseason acquisitions. Other notable contributors included catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who provided offensive punch from the catching position, and pitcher Jake Peavy, acquired at the trade deadline to strengthen the rotation.
'''Pitcher Jon Lester''' was one of the team's most important contributors throughout the year. Lester had been with the Red Sox organization for years prior, developed through Boston's farm system, and his Game 6 World Series performance against St. Louis stood as the series' defining pitching effort. Other key contributors included catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who provided offensive production from a position not typically known for it, and pitcher Jake Peavy, acquired at the trade deadline to strengthen a rotation that needed depth heading into October. Outfielder Shane Victorino delivered several clutch postseason hits, and Jonny Gomes's grittiness became a recurring storyline in national coverage of the team.


== Attractions and Legacy ==
== Attractions and Legacy ==


The championship's legacy manifests in multiple ways throughout Boston's civic landscape. '''Fenway Park''', the home of the Red Sox since 1912, remains central to how the city commemorates the 2013 championship. The stadium features multiple references to the World Series victory, including championship banners and memorabilia displayed prominently within the facility. The Red Sox organization maintains exhibits documenting the season, its context within the broader 2013 marathon bombing tragedy, and the ways athletics and community healing intersected.
The championship's legacy is present throughout Boston's civic landscape. '''Fenway Park''', home of the Red Sox since 1912, prominently displays the 2013 championship banner alongside those from 2004 and 2007, and the park maintains exhibits documenting the season in the context of the marathon bombing and the city's recovery. For many visitors, the 2013 display functions as a piece of recent history rather than simple sports memorabilia.
 
The victory parade route through downtown Boston has become a point of reference for residents and tourists interested in the city's modern history. The route passes through neighborhoods that displayed extensive "Boston Strong" signage in 2013, and plaques and memorials throughout the city reference the marathon bombing survivors, placing sporting triumph and communal grief in close geographic proximity. Anniversary ceremonies marking the championship, including events organized by Red Sox Legends fan groups and the team itself, continue to draw participants who experienced 2013 as a formative year in Boston's identity.<ref>{{cite web |title=Red Sox 2013 World Series anniversary ceremony |url=https://www.facebook.com/groups/378719847852803/posts/924255519965897/ |work=Boston Red Sox Legends |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>


The victory parade route through downtown Boston has become a pilgrimage site for sports enthusiasts and tourists seeking to understand Boston's modern history. The route passes through neighborhoods that displayed extensive "Boston Strong" signage and community installations during 2013. Plaques and memorials throughout the city reference the marathon bombing survivors, creating a landscape where sporting triumph and communal tragedy are geographically and historically adjacent. For many visitors, understanding the 2013 Red Sox championship provides insight into Boston's character and resilience, making it a significant component of the city's contemporary identity. The championship remains among the most meaningful in franchise history, not solely because of the athletic achievement but because of its role in facilitating psychological recovery during a moment of profound municipal distress.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boston Marathon bombing and Red Sox championship: a city's story of resilience |url=https://mass.gov/news/boston-marathon-bombing-legacy |work=Commonwealth of Massachusetts |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
The 2013 championship remains among the most meaningful in franchise history, not only because of the athletic achievement, but because of what the season represented for a city processing real loss. The Red Sox didn't heal Boston. But they gave it a reason to celebrate while it healed itself.


{{#seo: |title=2013 World Series: "Boston Strong" | Boston.Wiki |description=The Boston Red Sox's 2013 World Series championship, symbolizing the city's resilience following the Boston Marathon bombing tragedy in April. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title=2013 World Series: "Boston Strong" | Boston.Wiki |description=The Boston Red Sox's 2013 World Series championship, symbolizing the city's resilience following the Boston Marathon bombing tragedy in April. |type=Article }}

Latest revision as of 02:40, 20 May 2026

The 2013 World Series was played between the Boston Red Sox and the St. Louis Cardinals from October 23 to October 30, 2013, with Boston winning the series four games to two. It was the Red Sox's third World Series championship since 2004 and their first since 2007. The series took place against the backdrop of the April 15, 2013, Boston Marathon bombing, and the team's championship run became closely tied to the city's broader recovery. The phrase "Boston Strong" emerged in the immediate aftermath of the bombing, traced to social media posts and memorial signs at the Boylston Street finish line within hours of the attack, and was subsequently adopted by the Red Sox organization throughout the postseason.[1] The championship parade drew an estimated one million spectators to downtown Boston, making it among the largest celebrations in the city's modern history.[2]

History

The 2013 season began with significant roster changes and elevated expectations. General Manager Ben Cherington overhauled the roster following a disappointing 2012 campaign, signing outfielder Shane Victorino, first baseman Mike Napoli, and outfielder Jonny Gomes, while also acquiring pitcher Ryan Dempster. Manager John Farrell, in his first year leading the club after a previous tenure managing the Toronto Blue Jays from 2011 to 2012 and serving as Red Sox pitching coach before that, implemented a fresh culture of accountability and team unity. The team's most visible symbol of that unity became an unlikely one: the players collectively grew beards as a show of solidarity, and the resulting "Beards of Boston" became one of the defining visual narratives of the season.[3] The team finished the regular season with a 97-65 record, best in the American League East and second-best in the entire league.

The season proved emotionally charged from the start. On April 15, 2013, two bombs detonated near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three spectators: Martin Richard, Krystle Campbell, and Lingzi Lu. A fourth person, MIT Police Officer Sean Collier, was killed during the subsequent manhunt. More than 260 others were injured, many suffering catastrophic limb loss. The city was placed under a virtual lockdown on April 19 as law enforcement pursued suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was captured that evening in Watertown. Two days before the lockdown, on April 20, designated hitter David Ortiz addressed Fenway Park before a game with a speech that would define the season. "This is our f--king city," Ortiz told the crowd, "and nobody's going to dictate our freedom." The moment was widely broadcast and immediately treated as a turning point in the city's public response to the attack.[4]

The playoff run gathered symbolic weight as the postseason progressed. Boston dispatched the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Division Series three games to one, then defeated the Detroit Tigers four games to two in the American League Championship Series. A key moment in that series came in Game 2, when Ortiz hit a grand slam off Tigers closer Torii Hunter in the eighth inning to tie the game, a swing widely credited with turning the series. Throughout the playoffs, Red Sox players wore pins commemorating the marathon victims, and the organization donated portions of playoff revenues to the One Fund Boston, a charitable foundation established to assist those affected by the bombing. The One Fund ultimately raised more than $60 million for survivors and victims' families.[5]

The World Series

The World Series opened in Boston on October 23, 2013. The St. Louis Cardinals, a storied franchise seeking their eleventh championship, provided a formidable opponent. Game 1 went to St. Louis, 8-1, behind a strong outing from Cardinals starter Adam Wainwright. Boston responded in Game 2, winning 4-2 behind pitcher John Lackey. The series returned to St. Louis for Games 3 through 5, with the Cardinals winning Games 3 and 4 before Boston took Game 5, 3-1. Back at Fenway Park for Game 6, Jon Lester delivered one of the postseason's dominant pitching performances, going 7 2/3 innings while allowing only one run. Boston won 6-1 to clinch the title. David Ortiz was named World Series Most Valuable Player after batting .688 in the series with a home run, two doubles, and six RBI, one of the highest batting averages in World Series MVP history.[6] Fenway Park, home to the Red Sox since 1912, became a gathering point for the city during those games, with the stadium functioning as much as a civic space as a sports venue.

Culture

The intersection between the championship and the marathon bombing created a cultural moment that reached well beyond the sport. "Boston Strong" appeared on t-shirts, window decals, overpasses, and municipal infrastructure across the city, transforming a phrase of grief into a unifying civic identity. Red Sox players made repeated visits to marathon survivors at Massachusetts General Hospital and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital throughout the season, building personal relationships with victims that the team's front office didn't orchestrate as publicity. Those connections were real, and they showed.

Local institutions, from the Boston Public Library to neighborhood civic organizations, incorporated the championship into broader community healing efforts. Museums and cultural centers documented the 2013 season as a significant moment in the city's identity, recognizing how athletic success and shared grief can merge into something that outlasts both. The victory parade in November 2013 acquired an almost ceremonial quality, distinct from the celebrations of 2004 and 2007. Residents lined the streets with signs honoring marathon victims alongside expressions of sports joy. Scholars of urban identity and sports sociology noted the season as a case study in how a franchise can function as a vehicle for collective emotional recovery. The championship didn't erase what happened in April. But it gave the city something to hold onto.

The Red Sox's annual Patriots' Day game at Fenway Park has since become a formal occasion to honor the marathon and its survivors, a tradition that continues to connect the 2013 championship to the city's ongoing commemorations of the bombing.[7]

Notable People

The 2013 World Series featured several players whose performances became central to the season's meaning. David Ortiz, the veteran designated hitter known as "Big Papi," served as the emotional and offensive leader of the team from April through October. His April 20 speech at Fenway Park set the tone for the entire season, and his .688 batting average in the World Series, with six RBI, produced one of the most statistically dominant performances by a designated hitter in Series history. Ortiz's connection to the city's bombing recovery was not incidental. He made personal visits to injured survivors, spoke about the attacks repeatedly in interviews, and wore his "Boston Strong" identity with evident sincerity throughout the year.[8]

Manager John Farrell directed the team with a measured demeanor that helped steady a roster navigating an emotionally turbulent spring and summer. His decision to embrace the team's beard-growing tradition as a cultural statement, rather than enforce a more conventional dress code, signaled a willingness to let the players define their own chemistry. That approach worked. Farrell's steady leadership through a season when external circumstances constantly threatened to overwhelm the team's focus proved as important as any tactical decision he made.

Pitcher Jon Lester was one of the team's most important contributors throughout the year. Lester had been with the Red Sox organization for years prior, developed through Boston's farm system, and his Game 6 World Series performance against St. Louis stood as the series' defining pitching effort. Other key contributors included catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who provided offensive production from a position not typically known for it, and pitcher Jake Peavy, acquired at the trade deadline to strengthen a rotation that needed depth heading into October. Outfielder Shane Victorino delivered several clutch postseason hits, and Jonny Gomes's grittiness became a recurring storyline in national coverage of the team.

Attractions and Legacy

The championship's legacy is present throughout Boston's civic landscape. Fenway Park, home of the Red Sox since 1912, prominently displays the 2013 championship banner alongside those from 2004 and 2007, and the park maintains exhibits documenting the season in the context of the marathon bombing and the city's recovery. For many visitors, the 2013 display functions as a piece of recent history rather than simple sports memorabilia.

The victory parade route through downtown Boston has become a point of reference for residents and tourists interested in the city's modern history. The route passes through neighborhoods that displayed extensive "Boston Strong" signage in 2013, and plaques and memorials throughout the city reference the marathon bombing survivors, placing sporting triumph and communal grief in close geographic proximity. Anniversary ceremonies marking the championship, including events organized by Red Sox Legends fan groups and the team itself, continue to draw participants who experienced 2013 as a formative year in Boston's identity.[9]

The 2013 championship remains among the most meaningful in franchise history, not only because of the athletic achievement, but because of what the season represented for a city processing real loss. The Red Sox didn't heal Boston. But they gave it a reason to celebrate while it healed itself.

References