Johnny Damon didn’t arrive in Boston as a “face of the franchise” superstar in the same way some Red Sox icons did.
He became one by doing the job that often defines October teams: setting the tone.
From 2002 to 2005, Damon was the heartbeat at the top of the lineup — a center fielder with enough speed to pressure defenses, enough pop to flip games early, and enough presence to make Fenway feel loud from the first pitch.
And when the Red Sox finally broke through in 2004, Damon authored one of the signature moments of the entire championship run: a Game 7 grand slam in the Bronx that helped launch Boston into the World Series.
Damon’s impact was felt in the ways great leadoff hitters change games:
That’s why Damon wasn’t just a guy on the 2004 team. He was part of the identity of those early-2000s Red Sox clubs.
If you’re telling Damon’s Red Sox story, 2004 is the center of it.
During the regular season, Damon hit .304 with 20 home runs and 94 RBIs — rare run production for a leadoff hitter — and then opened the postseason scorching hot, going 7-for-15 in Boston’s ALDS sweep of the Angels.
Then came the ALCS. Damon struggled early in the series — and that’s what makes what happened next so memorable.
In Game 7 of the 2004 ALCS, Damon ambushed the first pitch he saw from Javier Vázquez and crushed a grand slam to blow the game open. Later, he added another homer off Vázquez — a two-run shot — as Boston slammed the door on the Yankees in the most famous rivalry comeback in MLB history.
It’s hard to overstate the place that inning holds in Red Sox memory. It’s one of the moments fans point to when they talk about the shift — from decades of tightness and heartbreak to a team that suddenly looked unshakeable.
Damon didn’t just have one iconic swing that October. He helped set the tone in the World Series clincher, leading off Game 4 with a home run that gave Boston an immediate 1–0 lead on the night the drought ended.
That leadoff shot is a perfect snapshot of Damon’s Red Sox value: early momentum, instant pressure, and a crowd that’s fully in the game before the starter even settles in.
If you want the skimmable resume of why he matters in franchise history, here it is:
Damon’s Boston legacy has an unavoidable twist: after the 2005 season, he signed with the New York Yankees, agreeing to a four-year, $52 million deal.
For Red Sox fans, that move reshaped how his name lands in beloved conversations — but it didn’t delete what he did in Boston, either. The 2004 postseason heroics are permanently etched into the franchise’s defining era, regardless of what uniform he wore later.
Damon isn’t typically listed alongside the franchise’s inner-circle lifers (Williams, Yaz, Ortiz) — but his Boston chapter is still historically significant because it’s tied directly to the moment the story changed.
If you’re ranking the most important Red Sox of the 2004 title run, Damon belongs near the top because:
And in 2026, the organization made its view official: Damon was selected as a Red Sox Hall of Fame inductee (Class of 2026).