Why should Yankee players and fans have to keep Mickey Mantle’s open?

There was a whole to-do in the media this weekend about how the Mickey Mantle’s restaurant is in financial trouble, and may have to close. They haven’t paid rent for four months, and may be evicted soon. (Imagine that!)

So Bill Liederman, the former owner of the place, is trying to raise one million dollars to keep the restaurant open. He has been trying to hit up retired Yankee players like Goose Gossage and David Cone for $10,000 each, and current players as well, and seemed annoyed that they weren’t jumping to do so. “Their agents just laugh,” he complained about the current team.

And this morning, I heard Liederman being interviewed on 1010 WINS asking for fans to donate $1,000 or more each and “band together” and save the restaurant, because “most Yankee fans have been there.” To which I say, you have got to be kidding me in expecting fans — or anybody — to give money for this!

I guess I missed when a restaurant with an unusable website, serving overpriced, lousy food, with terrible service from wait staff and bartenders alike (check out the reviews online for the place — they’re brutal!), became a charity. Especially when the place’s owners haven’t bothered to pay their rent for this entire year.

Am I supposed to be outraged that the landlord is trying to evict them? Absolutely not. He’s not running a charity, either. Of all the worthwhile things that people can spend their money on, and donate their money to, and Liederman is trying to keep a tourist trap open? No thanks, I’ll pass. Especially given what a jerk Liederman is. Let me explain.

I can have a long memory on things. And I remember the stunt Liederman pulled when he owned the place. In 2004, when the Boston Red Sox beat the Yankees in the ALCS, it was naturally one of the most horrible times ever for Yankee fans. So what did Liederman do? He announced that he was renaming the place from Mickey Mantle’s Restaurant to Ted Williams’ Restaurant through the end of the World Series. He also sold Red Sox hats in the store.

I was appalled over that, as were many, many Yankee fans, who called and showed up to complain. That was a terrible time, and to have the owner of Mickey Mantle’s, whose restaurant’s existence was based on Yankee fans, do such a thing was ridiculously tasteless. Way to kick your fan base in the stomach, dude.

Then Liederman had the gall to say that The Mick gave him the idea: “His spirit came to me when the game was over and said, ‘Bill, let’s do this for my favorite player. Let’s put Ted’s name up there for a week,'” Liederman told the press at the time. How ridiculous.

Since Liederman’s “joke” didn’t go over well with either the Yankee fan base or with the Mantle family, the sign was pulled down within a few days, and he ended up selling the place within the year.

Now he’s back in the picture, trying to get Yankee fans and players to give their hard-earned money to keep it open. To which I say, why don’t you hit up your beloved Red Sox Nation for donations, dude? Sell your scheme somewhere else. I ain’t buying it.


What do you think? Tell us about it!

Arrow to top