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      • A tradition dating back to 1929. Other teams before 1929 tried putting numbers on their uniforms, but mostly on an experimental only basis, usually not lasting longer than a season or sometimes even past a few games.
      www.yankeenumbers.com/playerslist.asp?x_Number=39&z_Number==,,
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  2. In 1998, the Yankees had the number #39 sewn on the back of their caps, next to the MLB logo, for Darryl Strawberry, because he was suffering from colon cancer at the time. The Yankees wore a patch for the 100th Anniversary of the American League on the side of the caps for their opening series in 2001.

  3. Since 1976, the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball (MLB) have maintained a strict appearance policy, specifying that players' hair must not touch their collars and that they may have mustaches but no other facial hair.

  4. Oct 6, 2021 · Let’s start today with something that most of you probably know already: The Yankees have some serious inconsistencies in their famed interlocking “NY” logo. As you can see above, there are three distinct versions of it — one each for the home jersey, the cap, and the batting helmet.

  5. Jun 29, 2020 · More than a decade later, uniform numbers returned for good when the 1929 Yankees - a team that featured eight eventual Hall of Famers including legendary sluggers Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig - assigned players their numbers based on where they hit in the lineup, hence Babe Ruth's now legendary No. 3 and Lou Gehrig's equally iconic No. 4 (which ...

  6. Jan 7, 2017 · Yankees Uniform Tidbit #6: What About The Patches On Their Uniform? Putting a patch on the uniform began in the 1980’s. The patch changes from year to year, but usually contains the year and the...

  7. Aug 14, 2024 · The origin of the New York Yankees logo dates back to the 1800s. Although the Yankees logo may be known across the globe on hats, jackets, and shirts, many people may not know the history of...

  8. Dec 28, 2023 · The eight-panel cap would morph into the six-panel cap you see today. Brims would grow even longer in the 1920s and '30s, and soon, latex and rubber were even being included in the construction of the hats. Of course, just as players today modify their own gear, ballplayers did the same in the past.

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