
Johnny Pesky: Red Sox legend
Johnny Pesky has become a Red Sox legend not so much for his eight years playing for the club, but for his lifetime association with the franchise as one of its most beloved figures.
Jim Davis/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Pesky, whose No. 6 was retired in 2008, served as a player, coach, manager, broadcaster, special advisor and goodwill ambassador for the Red Sox, with whom he started in 1942.
Jim Rogash/Getty Images
| May 10, 2012
Pesky was a fixture at spring training, where he liked to work with young players. Here, he chatted with Nomar Garciaparra in 1995.
Frank O'Brien/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Pesky became a favorite of players and fans alike. He drew mobs of fans seeking his autograph at spring training in 2006.
Barry Chin/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Pesky, right, with Ted Williams, left the Red Sox after his rookie season to spend three seasons in military service. He returned in 1946 and led the team in hits in his first three campaigns.
AP
| May 10, 2012
Pesky, left, maintained a lifelong friendship with Williams, and mourned him at the 2002 service the Red Sox held marking the left fielder's death. With Pesky were Dominic DiMaggio, center, and former broadcaster Curt Gowdy.
Jim Davis/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
For generations of Red Sox players, Pesky was a source of baseball knowledge. Here, Manny Ramirez gave Pesky a bear hug at spring training in 2002.
Jim Davis/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012

Pesky regularly dispensed hitting advice, sometimes to players who would go on to become Hall of Famers, such as Jim Rice.
Charles Carey/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
In 1995 and 1996, Red Sox manager Kevin Kennedy, left, often called on Pesky for advice.
Jim Davis/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Pesky served as an advisor in the dugout to Red Sox coaches and players, including Roger Clemens, for many years.
Barry Chin/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Working out with Pesky became a rite of passage for Red Sox players, and Jose Offerman took ground balls from Pesky on his first day with the Red Sox in 1999.
Barry Chin/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Pesky, center, helped continue a tradition of longtime Red Sox coaches such as Eddie Popowski, left, and Charlie Wagner (shown in 1997) becoming fixtures at spring training.
Frank O'Brien/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Curt Schilling spent time conferring with Pesky in 2004, his first spring training after being acquired from Arizona.
Charles Krupa/AP
| May 10, 2012
Pesky has hit thousands of fungoes to Red Sox players at Fenway Park over his decades of service to the franchise.
Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
In April 2005, Red Sox owners bestowed a World Series ring on Pesky after the team ended its 86-year title drought.
Jim Davis/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Later that year, Pesky lost his wife of 60 years, Ruth. “She was a hell of a gal,” he said of her.
Evan Richman/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
In 2006, as the Red Sox celebrated Pesky's 87th birthday, they officially named the right field foul marker "Pesky's Pole."
Jim Davis/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Pesky, whom the Fenway Park crowd always seemed to love to salute, became a fixture at special occasions like Opening Day in the 2000s.
Jim Davis/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012
Pesky, with fellow Red Sox legend Dwight Evans, was one of the team's honored guests at Fenway Park's 100th anniversary in April 2012.
Barry Chin/Globe Staff
| May 10, 2012

Pesky played for three teams, including the Tigers and Senators, and was once fired as the Red Sox manager. But he’ll likely forever be linked as one of the faces of the Red Sox franchise.
Charles Krupa/AP
| May 10, 2012