Challenge The Yankees


Challenge The Yankees was a popular baseball board game, sold only in 1964 and 1965 by Hasbro of Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

Gameplay

The game consists of 25 New York Yankees player cards, 25 All Star player cards, a baseball diamond game board, cards representing different plays 4 pegs to move around the bases, manager strategy cards, and other accessories. The player up at bat rolls the dice, and refers to that "batter's" card, to check to see what that dice roll represents for that particular ball player, and moves a pegs accordingly. Each player's card is different, for example, a dice roll of 3 when Yogi Berra is at bat represents a home run, while a 3 rolled for Bill Mazeroski represents a base on balls. The object is to score the most runs at the end of 9 innings.
The 50 player cards in the set are approximately 4" × 5½", with a blank back, and feature a small black & white photo of the player, a facsimile autograph, and a few biographical details and stats. The only way to distinguish the cards between the two years is to compare the stats. There has been some confusion over the years about the 50 player cards in the 1964 set, and the 50 in the 1965 set. Some players are the same in both editions, and some are different.

Development

Challenge The Yankees was created to profit on the reputation and popularity of the New York Yankees, to face the best players in the league at the time as worthy challengers. Roger Franklin was attending classes at New York University when he thought of the idea that would become Challenge the Yankees, and developed them game with his later Phi Lambda Delta fraternity brother Allen Finkelson, when they talked about it while playing in an Island Park, New York summer baseball league in summer 1949. The game was published by Hassenfield Bros.

Collectors

Collectors like to be certain which year player card they are buying. Below is the complete listing of 1964 and 1965 cards. The ERA for pitchers and batting averages for the position players are noted in order to distinguish between 1964 and 1965. Only four of the 100 cards are identical for the two years: Yankees Hector Lopez and Tom Metcalf, and All Stars Carl Yastrzemski and Johnny Podres. Every other card differs in some small way, either by player fact, ERA or Batting Average.

1964 Set

Position Player's Batting Ave or Pitcher's ERA
Player nameERA/batting averages
Hank Aaron.320
Yogi Berra.285
Johnny Blanchard.247
Jim Bouton3.04
Clete Boyer.243
Marshall Bridges3.75
Harry Bright.255
Tom Cheney3.67
Del Crandall.257
Al Downing2.81
Whitey Ford2.78
Tito Francona.278
Jake Gibbs.250
Pedro Gonzalez.192
Dick Groat.293
Steve Hamilton3.47
Elston Howard.286
Al Kaline.309
Tony Kubek.275
Phil Linz.276
Hector Lopez.272
Art Mahaffey3.81
Frank Malzone.280
Mickey Mantle.309
Juan Marichal3.07
Roger Maris.261
Eddie Mathews.280
Bill Mazeroski.264
Ken McBride3.54
Willie McCovey.282
Tom Metcalf2.77
Jim O'Toole3.52
Milt Pappas3.42
Joe Pepitone.265
Ron Perranoski2.33
Johnny Podres3.63
Dick Radatz2.13
Hal Reniff2.78
Bobby Richardson.272
Rich Rollins.302
Ron Santo.266
Bill Skowron.289
Duke Snider.298
Bill Stafford3.55
Ralph Terry3.52
Tom Tresh.278
Pete Ward.290
Carl Warwick.256
Stan Williams3.74
Carl Yastrzemski.294

1965 Yankee Rollie Sheldon Card

Not all of the 1965 sets contain the NYY Rollie Sheldon card. Rollie was traded to Kansas City on May 3, 1965 and his card was withdrawn from the set, making it more scarce than the others.