Yankee champ Bernie Williams reflects on how baseball helped after 9/11

Yankee champ Bernie Williams reflects on how baseball helped after 9/11

Former New York Yankee Bernie Williams, who was part of four World Series championships with the team, reflected on 9/11 during the unveiling of artist Charles Fazzino’s exhibit “A Time of Remembrance” at Carlton Fine Arts.

“I was in New York during 9/11 and I was questioning a lot of things about my work and the fact that we would just throw a ball, hit a ball and run the bases,” the center fielder said. “That kind of line of work seemed a little insignificant in light of what was happening.”

Williams says that coming in contact with those directly affected by the tragedy changed his outlook.

“Everything started turning around when we started visiting the Javits Center, the hospital and the armory,” he said. “When they started saying, ‘The Yankees are here! The Yankees are here!,’ and gave people a smile in that moment.”

Williams — who played for the team from 1991-2006 — says the experience affected how he felt about the 2001 World Series against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

New York Yankees Tino Martinez (center), Roger Clemens (left) and Bernie Williams (right) wear FDNY and NYPD hats during team workouts at Bank One Ballpark in Phoenix, Arizona on October 26, 2001.
New York Yankees Tino Martinez (center), Roger Clemens (left) and Bernie Williams (right) wear FDNY and NYPD hats during team workouts at Bank One Ballpark in Phoenix, Arizona on October 26, 2001.
REUTERS/Colin Braley

“We were playing for something bigger than myself, bigger than the team, bigger than major league baseball,” he said. “We were playing for the city of New York and the country.”

While the team did not win the Series that year, President George W. Bush was on hand during Game 3 to show the city’s resilience by throwing out the ceremonial first pitch.

President George W. Bush throws out the ceremonial first pitch before game three of the 2001 World Series at Yankee Stadium on October 30, 2001.
Then President George W. Bush throws out the ceremonial first pitch before Game 3 of the 2001 World Series at Yankee Stadium on October 30, 2001. The George W. Bush Presidential Library

“The gravity of the moment never really hit me until the first step coming out of that dugout,” Bush says in ESPN Films’ “30 for 30,” short film “First Pitch.” “I remember the noise and it was deafening. I remember looking around the stadium, this giant crowd. Standing on the mound at Yankee Stadium was by far the most nervous moment of my presidency.”

Williams now plays guitar in the jazz band, Bernie Williams Collective.