Is the Curse of the Bambino Back in Play for the Boston Red Sox? Why 18 is A Very Unlucky Number and Why Fans Should be Very Worried

BABE RUTH RED SOX BALLPLAYER DISPLAYED ON WALL OUTSIDE POLAR PARK WORCESTER, hotel verone. Babe Ruth red sox ball player displayed drinking a beer with red sox logo, on wall at POlar park ballfield, hotel vernon, one of babe ruths stops coming through worcester

Red Sox fans fear history repeating as World Series drought hits ominous 18-year mark

Boston, MA — The Red Sox might have manhanled the struggling New York Yankees this weekend, but the franchise has bigger problems to worry about after celebrating a mid-season World Series-like win. It could be the highlight of the season for the Red Sox, and it could also be the most excitement Sox fans can see for another 80 or so years if history repeats itself.

The number 18 is haunting the Boston Red Sox again — and some fans are whispering whether the Curse of the Bambino is back from the dead.

Is the Curse of the Bambino Back in Play for the Boston Red Sox? Why 18 is A Very Unlucky Number and Why Fans Should be Very Worried
Offerings at the grave Yankee slugger Babe Ruth. Baseballs and other offerings are left at the grave Yankee slugger Babe Ruth in Valhalla, New York

With the team’s last World Series win coming in 2018, this season marks the seventh year without a championship — and a spooky trend is emerging. The Red Sox famously won five titles in the early 20th century before plunging into an 86-year drought, starting after their 1918 win and not ending until the curse-breaking 2004 season. Now, after four championships in a 14-year span between 2004 and 2018, Boston has yet to return to the Fall Classic stage — and the calendar is eerily starting to mirror the past.

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So far, the Red Sox have nine total titles, won in 1903, 1912, 1915, 1916, 1918, 2004, 2007, 2013, and 2018. What’s drawing attention now is the five-title cluster in the 1910s — followed by a nearly nine-decade collapse — compared to the tight grouping in the 2000s and 2010s.

The question being asked from Fenway Park to the Fens: Is history repeating itself? 1918. 2018.

There’s no Babe Ruth sale to blame this time, and no team owner shipping off future Hall of Famers to finance Broadway plays. But Boston’s struggles since their 2018 title are beginning to look uncomfortably familiar. The team has failed to find consistent pitching, cycled through managers, and let star players like Mookie Betts walk, all while watching rivals surge past them in October.

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Baseball historians have taken notice of the odd symmetry. The first Boston drought started after a dominant stretch ending in 1918 — just like the current standstill began in 2018. And now, if the Sox fail to win another ring before 2032, the team will officially enter another 14-year gap — the same length as the glory run that began in 2004.

Is the Curse of the Bambino Back in Play for the Boston Red Sox? Why 18 is A Very Unlucky Number and Why Fans Should be Very Worried
BABE RUTH RED SOX BALLPLAYER DISPLAYED ON WALL OUTSIDE POLAR PARK WORCESTER, hotel verone. Babe Ruth red sox ball player displayed drinking a beer with red sox logo, on wall at POlar park ballfield, hotel vernon, one of babe ruths stops coming through worcester

While talk of a new “curse” remains more rivalry joke than clubhouse concern, diehards can’t help but feel a chill when they see the last title year: ‘18.

Chants of 1918 at Yankee Stadium in future years could be replaced by chants of 2018.

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And for those who believe baseball thrives on superstition and symmetry, the Red Sox’s historic timeline may be repeating itself — one winless season at a time.

Key Points

  • The Red Sox have not won a World Series since 2018, raising concerns about a new title drought
  • Boston’s previous title cluster in the early 1900s was followed by an 86-year championship gap
  • Fans are noting eerie historical similarities between the team’s title patterns over the past century
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