List of New York Yankees seasons and M. Bison: Difference between pages

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{{for|the Street Fighter character known as "M. Bison" in Japan|Balrog (Street Fighter)}}
[[Image:100 1971 edited.JPG|thumb|right|[[Yankee Stadium]] has hosted Yankees games since 1923]]
{{General CVG character
The [[New York Yankees]] are a [[professional baseball]] team based in [[the Bronx]], a [[Borough (New York City)|borough]] of New York City, New York. Also known as "the Bronx Bombers" and "the Pinstripers",<ref>{{cite web | author = [[CNNfn]] | title = Bronx Bombers to be sold? | publisher = [[CNN]] | date = 1998-03-19 | url = http://money.cnn.com/1998/03/19/bizbuzz/yankee/ | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | last = Antonen | first = Mel | title = Pinstripers paint Red Sox blue | publisher = ''[[USA Today]]'' | date = 2004-10-17 | url = http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/playoffs/2004-10-17-yankees-red-sox-game3_x.htm | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref> the Yankees play in the [[American League East|East Division]] of [[Major League Baseball]]'s (MLB) [[American League]] (AL). In its 108 major league [[Season (sports)|seasons]], the [[Professional sports league organization#The system developed in baseball|franchise]] has won 26 [[World Series]] championships, the most of any MLB team and 16 more than the second-place [[St. Louis Cardinals]].<ref>{{cite web | title = World Series Winners | publisher = [[ESPN]] | url = http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/alltime/worldseries | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref> Since {{mlby|1923}}, the Yankees have played home games in [[Yankee Stadium]], except for a stint at [[Shea Stadium]] from {{mlby|1974}} to {{mlby|1975}} while Yankee Stadium was undergoing renovations.<ref>{{cite web | title = Yankee Stadium History | publisher = [[New York Yankees]] | url = http://newyork.yankees.mlb.com/nyy/ballpark/stadium_history.jsp | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref> In 2009, the team will move into a [[New Yankee Stadium|new ballpark]], which will also be called Yankee Stadium.<ref>{{cite web | author = [[Associated Press]] | title = Cost of new Yankee Stadium up to $1.3 billion | publisher = [[NBC Sports]] | date = 2008-02-07 | url = http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/23058071/ | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|name=M. Bison
|image=[[Image:Bison (Super Turbo).PNG|175px]]
|caption=M. Bison in ''[[Super Street Fighter II Turbo]]'', as illustrated by Bengus.
|series=[[Street Fighter (series)|''Street Fighter'' series]]
|firstgame=''[[Street Fighter II]]''
|artist=Akiman (''Street Fighter II'')
|voiceactor=[[Tom Wyner]] (''Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie'')<br>[[Richard Newman]] (TV series)
|japanactor=[[Tomomichi Nishimura]] (''Alpha'' series, ''EX'' series, ''Marvel vs.'' series, ''Namco x Capcom'')<br>[[Kenji Utsumi]] (''Street Fighter II V'')<br>[[Norio Wakamoto]] (''Capcom vs. SNK'' series, ''SVC Chaos: SNK vs. Capcom'', ''Capcom Fighting Evolution'', ''Street Fighter IV'')<br>[[Banjō Ginga]] (CD drama)<br>[[Takeshi Kusaka]] (''Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie'')
|liveactor=[[Raúl Juliá]] (1994)<br>[[Neal McDonough]] (2009)
|inuniverse={{Street Fighter character
|birthplace = Unknown (born [[April 17]], year unknown)
|nationality = Secret Society of Shadaloo
|fightingstyle =Psycho Power
}}}}
'''M. Bison''', known as {{nihongo|'''Vega'''|ベガ|Bega}} in [[Japan]], is a [[fictional character|video game character]] created by [[Capcom]]. First introduced in ''[[Street Fighter II: The World Warrior]]'', he is a recurring [[boss (video game)|boss]] and [[antagonist]] of the ''[[Street Fighter (series)|Street Fighter]]'' series of [[fighting game]]s.


A would-be world [[dictator]], Bison's ambition is to control the world's governments through his covert [[crime syndicate]], {{nihongo|'''Shadaloo'''<ref name="ign"/><ref name="swiki">[http://strategywiki.org/wiki/Capcom_vs._SNK/Characters/M._Bison M. Bison]. [http://strategywiki.org/ StrategyWiki]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 25|3-25]].</ref><ref>[http://www.bladeandepsilon.com/htmbison.htm M. Bison]. [http://www.bladeandepsilon.com/ C&A Productions]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 26|3-26]].</ref>|シャドルー|Shadorū|sometimes spelled as "Shadoloo", "Shadowloo" or "Shadowlaw"<ref name="shadowlaw">[http://animeworld.com/reviews/streetfighter2movie.html ''Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie'' Review]. [http://animeworld.com/ Anime World] ([[2006]]-[[June 6|6-20]]). Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 26|3-26]].</ref>}}. He serves as the host of ''Street Fighter II'' 's fighting [[tournament]]<ref name="gamespot">[http://www.gamespot.com/features/vgs/universal/sfhistory/char_m_bison.html The History of ''Street Fighter'' - M. Bison]. [http://www.gamespot.com/ GameSpot]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 26|3-26]].</ref> and is the last opponent fought in the game. Several ''Street Fighter'' characters — including [[Guile (Street Fighter)|Guile]], [[T. Hawk]], [[Cammy]], [[Rose (Street Fighter)|Rose]] and [[Chun-Li]] — have their personal [[vendetta]]s against M. Bison and have entered the tournament in the hope of having a shot at him. M. Bison wields '''Psycho Power''', an [[evil]] energy which manifests as blue or purple [[flame]]s and [[electricity]]. The character was named the 30th most diabolical video game villain of all time by PC World.<ref>{{cite web |author=GamePro Staff |publisher = PC World |url=http://www.pcworld.idg.com.au/index.php/id;338891934;pp;1 |title=The 47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time |year=2008 |month=February |accessdate=2008-08-06}}</ref>
One of the American League's eight original members, the club was founded in [[Baltimore, Maryland|Baltimore]], [[Maryland]] as the Baltimore Orioles in {{mlby|1901}}.<ref>{{cite web | last = Neyer | first = Rob | authorlink = Rob Neyer | title = Back when baseball was really messed up | publisher = ESPN | date = 2002-07-16 | url = http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/columns/story?columnist=neyer_rob&id=1406240 | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref> The franchise moved to New York City in {{mlby|1903}} and became known as the New York Highlanders; in {{mlby|1913}}, the team changed its name to the Yankees.<ref>{{cite web | title = Yankees Timeline: 1903-1925 | publisher = New York Yankees | url = http://newyork.yankees.mlb.com/nyy/history/timeline1.jsp | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref> From {{mlby|1921}} to {{mlby|1964}}, the Yankees were the most successful MLB franchise, winning 20 World Series titles and 29 AL [[Pennant (sports)#Pennants as trophies|pennants]]. Following an 11-year playoff drought, the club appeared in the playoffs five times in a six-year period and won back-to-back World Series championships in {{mlby|1977}} and {{mlby|1978}}. The Yankees won the World Series again in {{mlby|1996}}, and in {{mlby|1998}} began a run of three consecutive Series titles. From 1995 to 2007, the Yankees made the playoffs each year; their 13-season postseason streak was the second-longest in MLB history.<ref>{{cite web | last = Hoch | first = Bryan | title = Yankees' playoff run one for the ages | publisher = [[Major League Baseball]] | date = 2008-09-23 | url = http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080922&content_id=3528344&vkey=news_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb | accessdate = 2008-10-11 }}</ref>


==Conception and creation==
==Table key==
<!-- Do NOT "fix" this section. The names given are the original Japanese ones. -->
[[Image:Ruth Gehrig WPt.jpg|thumb|right|[[Babe Ruth]] and [[Lou Gehrig]] led the [[Murderers' Row]] teams of the late 1920s.]]
In the original Japanese version of ''Street Fighter II'', the single-player mode concludes with a series of matches against four computer-controlled opponents: M. Bison, a former [[Professional boxing|pro boxer]]; Balrog, a masked [[Spain|Spaniard]] with a clawed [[gauntlet (gloves)|gauntlet]]; [[Sagat]], a returning character from the original ''[[Street Fighter (video game)|Street Fighter]]''; and Vega, a [[dictator]] dressed in red [[military uniform]], the game's very last opponent. As ''Street Fighter II'' was being [[Internationalization and localization|localized]] for the [[United States]], concerns arose over M. Bison, who resembled an analogue of [[Mike Tyson]] to the point of [[copyright infringement|likeness infringement]].<ref name="ign">[http://stars.ign.com/objects/142/14220303_biography.html Balrog Biography]. [http://www.ign.com IGN]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 10|4-10]].</ref><ref>[http://strategywiki.org/wiki/Capcom_vs._SNK/Characters/Balrog Balrog]. [http://strategywiki.org/ StrategyWiki]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 29|3-29]].</ref> Believing the character to be a legal liability, Capcom chose to reshuffle the names of its characters.<ref>[http://www.gamesradar.com/f/street-fighter-week-the-evolution-of-ken-and-ryu/a-2008031383931724090/p-2 ''Street Fighter'' Week - The Evolution of Ken and Ryu]. [http://www.gamesradar.com/ gamesradar.com]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 2|4-2]].</ref><ref>[http://www.eventhubs.com/guides/2007/oct/21/street-fighter-terminology-acronyms-lexicon-and-glossary-guide/ ''Street Fighter'' Terminology]. [http://www.eventhubs.com/ EventHubs.com]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 29|3-29]].</ref> The Spaniard was renamed [[Vega (Street Fighter)|Vega]], the boxer became [[Balrog (Street Fighter)|Balrog]], and Vega inherited the name M. Bison. Unlike the original Japanese games, the initial in his name is never given any particular meaning. In the ''Street Fighter EX'' games and the ''Marvel'' fighting game series, the character is addressed simply as '''Bison'''.
</noinclude>
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%"
|-
|<center>ALCS</center>||[[American League Championship Series]]
|-
|<center>ALDS</center>||[[American League Division Series]]
|-
|<center>CPOY</center>||[[Major League Baseball Comeback Player of the Year Award|Comeback Player of the Year]]
|-
|<center>CYA</center>||[[Cy Young Award]]
|-
|<center>Finish</center>||Final position in league or division
|-
|<center>GB</center>||"Games Back" from first-place team{{ref label|GB|a|a}}
|-
|<center>Losses</center>||Number of regular season losses
|-
|<center>MOY</center>||[[Manager of the Year Award|Manager of the Year]]
|-
|<center>MVP</center>||[[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|Most Valuable Player]]
|-
|<center>ROY</center>||[[American League]] [[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|Rookie of the Year]]
|-
|<center>Wins</center>||Number of regular season wins
|}
<noinclude>


== Year by year ==
==History==
===''Street Fighter'' series===
[[Image:Yogi2.JPG|thumb|right|During his 19 seasons with the Yankees, [[Yogi Berra]] played on 10 [[World Series]]-winning teams.]]
Bison first appears in the original ''Street Fighter II'' as the final computer-controlled opponent in the single-player mode, following the player's defeat of the other three Grand Masters. The battle taking place in the streets of [[Bangkok, Thailand]] in front of a crowd, where he poses with his cape prior to battle. His special techniques consist of the Psycho Crusher, the Knee Press (aka Scissor Kick) and the Head Press. He was originally a non-playable character in the first edition of ''Street Fighter II'', but became selectable from ''[[Street Fighter II#Champion Edition|Champion Edition]]'' and onward, while maintaining his position as the final boss until ''[[Super Street Fighter II Turbo]]'', in which a hidden character named [[Akuma (Street Fighter)|Akuma]] defeats Bison and challenges the player as an alternate final boss.
[[Image:DonLarsen.jpg|thumb|right|[[Don Larsen]] threw a [[perfect game]] in Game 5 of the [[1956 World Series]], which the Yankees won in seven games.]]
[[Image:Reggie.JPG|thumb|right|[[Reggie Jackson]] played five seasons for the Yankees, and helped them win the World Series in 1977 and 1978.]]
[[Image:Don Mattingly.JPG|thumb|right|[[Don Mattingly]] was selected to six [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star Games]] in his 14-year career.]]
[[Image:JeterSmilingt.JPG|thumb|right|[[Derek Jeter]], the current captain of the Yankees, has led the team to four World Series titles.]]


The storyline through the numerous versions of ''Street Fighter II'' characterizes Bison as the leader of a terrorist organization called "Shadaloo" who sponsors the World Warrior tournament. A few characters who participate in the tournament have a personal vendetta against Bison. [[Chun-Li]] and [[Guile (Street Fighter)|Guile]] are both seeking to avenge the deaths of loved ones (Chun-Li's father and Guile's friend respectively), while [[T. Hawk]] wants to regain his homeland. [[Cammy]], an amnesiac, believes that Bison is connected to her past and learns in her ending that she was once one of his agents (changed to being lovers in the original English localization of the arcade, although this was changed back in the [[Game Boy Advance]] version, ''Super Turbo Revival'').
{| class="wikitable"
|align="center" bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[List of World Series#The modern World Series|World Series Champions]]'''<br>({{mlby|1903}}&ndash;present)
|align="center" bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''[[American League]] Champions'''<br>({{mlby|1901}}&ndash;present){{ref label|AL|b|b}}
|align="center" bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''[[American League East|Division]] Champions'''<br>({{mlby|1969}}&ndash;present)
|align="center" bgcolor="#96CDCD"|'''[[Major League Baseball Wild Card|Wild Card]] Berth'''<br>({{mlby|1994}}&ndash;present)
|}


Capcom later released ''[[Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams]]'', a [[prequel]] to the ''Street Fighter II'' games inspired by [[Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie|animated movie]] that further fleshed out and developed the fictional universe of the series. Bison appears in the first ''Alpha'' as the final boss for certain characters and a hidden playable character available via a code. Two characters with ties to Bison were introduced: [[Rose (Street Fighter)|Rose]] a fortune teller with spiritual ties to Bison, whose Soul Power is the opposite of Bison's Psycho Power; and [[Charlie (Street Fighter)|Charlie]] (Nash in Japan), Guile's dead war buddy from ''Street Fighter II'', who seeks to track him down.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:95%"
|-
!rowspan=2|Season
!rowspan=2|Team
!rowspan=2|[[List of organized baseball leagues|League]]
!rowspan=2|[[Division (sports)|Division]]
!colspan=5|[[Major League Baseball season|Regular season]]
!rowspan=2|[[Playoff#Playoffs in Major League Baseball|Postseason]]
!rowspan=2|[[Baseball awards|Awards]]
|-
!Finish
![[Win (baseball)|Wins]]
![[Loss (baseball)|Losses]]
![[Winning percentage|Win%]]
![[Games behind|GB]]{{ref label|Halve|c|c}}
|-
|align="center" colspan="11" style="background:#1C2841; color:white"|'''Baltimore Orioles'''
|-
|{{mlby|1901}}
|[[1901 Baltimore Orioles season|1901]]
|[[American League|AL]]
|
|5th
|68
|65
|.511
|13½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1902}}
|[[1902 Baltimore Orioles season|1902]]
|AL
|
|8th
|50
|88
|.362
|34
|
|
|-
|align="center" colspan="11" style="background:#1C2841; color:white"|'''New York Highlanders'''
|-
|{{mlby|1903}}
|[[1903 New York Highlanders season|1903]]
|AL
|
|4th
|72
|62
|.537
|17
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1904}}
|[[1904 New York Highlanders season|1904]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|92
|59
|.609
|1½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1905}}
|[[1905 New York Highlanders season|1905]]
|AL
|
|6th
|71
|78
|.477
|21½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1906}}
|[[1906 New York Highlanders season|1906]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|90
|61
|.596
|3
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1907}}
|[[1907 New York Highlanders season|1907]]
|AL
|
|5th
|70
|78
|.473
|21
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1908}}
|[[1908 New York Highlanders season|1908]]
|AL
|
|8th
|51
|103
|.331
|39½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1909}}
|[[1909 New York Highlanders season|1909]]
|AL
|
|5th
|74
|77
|.490
|23½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1910}}
|[[1910 New York Highlanders season|1910]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|88
|63
|.583
|14½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1911}}
|[[1911 New York Highlanders season|1911]]
|AL
|
|6th
|76
|76
|.500
|25½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1912}}
|[[1912 New York Highlanders season|1912]]
|AL
|
|8th
|50
|102
|.329
|55
|
|
|-
|align="center" colspan="11" style="background:#1c2841; color:white"|'''New York Yankees'''
|-
|{{mlby|1913}}
|[[1913 New York Yankees season|1913]]
|AL
|
|7th
|57
|94
|.377
|38
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1914}}
|[[1914 New York Yankees season|1914]]
|AL
|
|6th
|70
|84
|.455
|30
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1915}}
|[[1915 New York Yankees season|1915]]
|AL
|
|5th
|69
|83
|.454
|32½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1916}}
|[[1916 New York Yankees season|1916]]
|AL
|
|4th
|80
|74
|.519
|11
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1917}}
|[[1917 New York Yankees season|1917]]
|AL
|
|6th
|71
|82
|.464
|28½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1918}}
|[[1918 New York Yankees season|1918]]
|AL
|
|4th
|60
|63
|.488
|13½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1919}}
|[[1919 New York Yankees season|1919]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|80
|59
|.576
|7½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1920}}
|[[1920 New York Yankees season|1920]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|95
|59
|.617
|3
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1921}}
|[[1921 New York Yankees season|1921]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|98
|55
|.641
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1921 World Series|World Series]] to [[San Francisco Giants|New York Giants]], 5&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 1921 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1921_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|1922}}
|[[1922 New York Yankees season|1922]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|94
|60
|.610
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1922 World Series|World Series]] to [[San Francisco Giants|New York Giants]], 4&ndash;0&ndash;1{{ref label|22Game2|d|d}}<ref>{{cite web | title = 1922 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1922_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1923}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1923 New York Yankees season|1923]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|98
|54
|.645
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1923 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[San Francisco Giants|New York Giants]], 4&ndash;2'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1923 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1923_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Babe Ruth]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref>{{cite web | title = Babe Ruth | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/r/ruthba01.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|-
|{{mlby|1924}}
|[[1924 New York Yankees season|1924]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|89
|63
|.586
|2
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1925}}
|[[1925 New York Yankees season|1925]]
|AL
|
|7th
|69
|85
|.448
|28½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1926}}
|[[1926 New York Yankees season|1926]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|91
|63
|.591
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1926 World Series|World Series]] to [[St. Louis Cardinals]], 4&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 1926 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1926_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1927}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1927 New York Yankees season|1927]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|110
|44
|.714
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1927 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Pittsburgh Pirates]], 4&ndash;0'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1927 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1927_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Lou Gehrig]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref>{{cite web | title = Lou Gehrig | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/g/gehrilo01.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1928}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1928 New York Yankees season|1928]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|101
|53
|.656
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1928 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[St. Louis Cardinals]], 4&ndash;0'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1928 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1928_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|1929}}
|[[1929 New York Yankees season|1929]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|88
|66
|.571
|18
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1930}}
|[[1930 New York Yankees season|1930]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|86
|68
|.558
|16
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1931}}
|[[1931 New York Yankees season|1931]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|94
|59
|.614
|13½
|
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1932}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1932 New York Yankees season|1932]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|107
|47
|.695
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1932 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Chicago Cubs]], 4&ndash;0'''{{ref label|32Ruth|e|e}}<ref>{{cite web | title = 1932 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1932_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|1933}}
|[[1933 New York Yankees season|1933]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|91
|59
|.607
|7
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1934}}
|[[1934 New York Yankees season|1934]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|94
|60
|.610
|7
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1935}}
|[[1935 New York Yankees season|1935]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|89
|60
|.597
|3
|
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1936}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1936 New York Yankees season|1936]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|102
|51
|.667
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1936 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[San Francisco Giants|New York Giants]], 4&ndash;2'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1936 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1936_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Lou Gehrig]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP">{{cite web | title = Most Valuable Player winners | publisher = Major League Baseball | url = http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/awards/mlb_awards_content.jsp?content=mvp_history | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1937}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1937 New York Yankees season|1937]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|102
|52
|.662
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1937 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[San Francisco Giants|New York Giants]], 4&ndash;1'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1937 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1937_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1938}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1938 New York Yankees season|1938]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|99
|53
|.651
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1938 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Chicago Cubs]], 4&ndash;0'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1938 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1938_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1939}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1939 New York Yankees season|1939]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|106
|45
|.702
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1939 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Cincinnati Reds]], 4&ndash;0'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1939 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1939_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Joe DiMaggio]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1940}}
|[[1940 New York Yankees season|1940]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|88
|66
|.571
|2
|
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1941}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1941 New York Yankees season|1941]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|101
|53
|.656
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1941 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Brooklyn Dodgers]], 4&ndash;1'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1939 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1941_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Joe DiMaggio]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1942}}
|[[1942 New York Yankees season|1942]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|103
|51
|.669
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1942 World Series|World Series]] to [[St. Louis Cardinals]], 4&ndash;1<ref>{{cite web | title = 1942 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1942_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Joe Gordon]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1943}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1943 New York Yankees season|1943]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|98
|56
|.636
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1943 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[St. Louis Cardinals]], 4&ndash;1'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1943 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1943_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Spud Chandler]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1944}}
|[[1944 New York Yankees season|1944]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|83
|71
|.539
|6
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1945}}
|[[1945 New York Yankees season|1945]]
|AL
|
|4th
|81
|71
|.533
|6½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1946}}
|[[1946 New York Yankees season|1946]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|87
|67
|.565
|17
|
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1947}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1947 New York Yankees season|1947]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|97
|57
|.630
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1947 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Brooklyn Dodgers]], 4&ndash;3'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1947 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1947_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Joe DiMaggio]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1948}}
|[[1948 New York Yankees season|1948]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|94
|60
|.610
|2½
|
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1949}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1949 New York Yankees season|1949]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|97
|57
|.630
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1949 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Brooklyn Dodgers]], 4&ndash;1'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1949 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1949_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1950}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1950 New York Yankees season|1950]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|98
|56
|.636
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1950 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Philadelphia Phillies]], 4&ndash;0'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1950 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1950_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Phil Rizzuto]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1951}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1951 New York Yankees season|1951]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|98
|56
|.636
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1951 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[San Francisco Giants|New York Giants]], 4&ndash;2'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1951 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1951_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Yogi Berra]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/><br>[[Gil McDougald]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY">{{cite web | title = Rookie of the Year winners | publisher = Major League Baseball | url = http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/awards/mlb_awards_content.jsp?content=roy_history | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1952}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1952 New York Yankees season|1952]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|95
|59
|.617
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1952 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Brooklyn Dodgers]], 4&ndash;3'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1952 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1952_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1953}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1953 New York Yankees season|1953]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|99
|52
|.656
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1953 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Brooklyn Dodgers]], 4&ndash;2'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1953 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1953_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|1954}}
|[[1954 New York Yankees season|1954]]
|AL
|
|2nd
|103
|51
|.669
|8
|
|[[Yogi Berra]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/><br>[[Bob Grim (baseball)|Bob Grim]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1955}}
|[[1955 New York Yankees season|1955]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|96
|58
|.623
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1955 World Series|World Series]] to [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Brooklyn Dodgers]], 4&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 1955 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1955_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Yogi Berra]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1956}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1956 New York Yankees season|1956]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|97
|57
|.630
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1956 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Brooklyn Dodgers]], 4&ndash;3'''{{ref label|56PG|f|f}}<ref>{{cite web | title = 1956 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1956_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Mickey Mantle]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1957}}
|[[1957 New York Yankees season|1957]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|98
|56
|.636
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1957 World Series|World Series]] to [[Atlanta Braves|Milwaukee Braves]], 4&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 1957 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1957_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Mickey Mantle]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/><br>[[Tony Kubek]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1958}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1958 New York Yankees season|1958]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|92
|62
|.597
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1958 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Atlanta Braves|Milwaukee Braves]], 4&ndash;3'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1958 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1958_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Bob Turley]] ([[Cy Young Award|CYA]])<ref name="CYA">{{cite web | title = Cy Young Award winners | publisher = Major League Baseball | url = http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/awards/mlb_awards_content.jsp?content=cy_history | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|-
|{{mlby|1959}}
|[[1959 New York Yankees season|1959]]
|AL
|
|3rd
|79
|75
|.513
|15
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1960}}
|[[1960 New York Yankees season|1960]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|97
|57
|.630
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1960 World Series|World Series]] to [[Pittsburgh Pirates]], 4&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 1960 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1960_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Roger Maris]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1961}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1961 New York Yankees season|1961]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|109
|53
|.673
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1961 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Cincinnati Reds]], 4&ndash;1'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1961 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1961_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Roger Maris]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/><br>[[Whitey Ford]] ([[Cy Young Award|CYA]])<ref name="CYA"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1962}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1962 New York Yankees season|1962]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''1st'''
|96
|66
|.593
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''Won [[1962 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[San Francisco Giants]], 4&ndash;3'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1962 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1962_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Mickey Mantle]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/><br>[[Tom Tresh]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1963}}
|[[1963 New York Yankees season|1963]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|104
|57
|.646
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1963 World Series|World Series]] to [[Los Angeles Dodgers]], 4&ndash;0<ref>{{cite web | title = 1963 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1963_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Elston Howard]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1964}}
|[[1964 New York Yankees season|1964]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|1st
|99
|63
|.611
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1964 World Series|World Series]] to [[St. Louis Cardinals]], 4&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 1964 World Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1964_WS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|1965}}
|[[1965 New York Yankees season|1965]]
|AL
|
|6th
|77
|85
|.475
|25
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1966}}
|[[1966 New York Yankees season|1966]]
|AL
|
|10th
|70
|89
|.440
|26½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1967}}
|[[1967 New York Yankees season|1967]]
|AL
|
|9th
|72
|90
|.444
|20
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1968}}
|[[1968 New York Yankees season|1968]]
|AL
|
|5th
|83
|79
|.512
|20
|
|[[Stan Bahnsen]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1969}}
|[[1969 New York Yankees season|1969]]
|AL
|[[American League East Division|East]]{{ref label|69East|g|g}}
|5th
|80
|81
|.497
|28½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1970}}
|[[1970 New York Yankees season|1970]]
|AL
|East
|2nd
|93
|69
|.574
|15
|
|[[Thurman Munson]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1971}}
|[[1971 New York Yankees season|1971]]
|AL
|East
|4th
|82
|80
|.506
|21
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1972}}{{ref label|72Strike|h|h}}
|[[1972 New York Yankees season|1972]]
|AL
|East
|4th
|79
|76
|.510
|6½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1973}}
|[[1973 New York Yankees season|1973]]
|AL
|East
|4th
|80
|82
|.494
|17
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1974}}
|[[1974 New York Yankees season|1974]]
|AL
|East
|2nd
|89
|73
|.549
|2
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1975}}
|[[1975 New York Yankees season|1975]]
|AL
|East
|3rd
|83
|77
|.519
|12
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1976}}
|[[1976 New York Yankees season|1976]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|97
|62
|.610
|&mdash;
|Won [[1976 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Kansas City Royals]], 3&ndash;2<br>Lost [[1976 World Series|World Series]] to [[Cincinnati Reds]], 4&ndash;0<ref>{{cite web | title = 1976 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/1976.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-26 }}</ref>
|[[Thurman Munson]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/><br>[[Dock Ellis]] ([[MLB Comeback Player of the Year Award|CPOY]])<ref>{{cite web | last = Formo | first = Tony | title = Dock Ellis | publisher = Baseball Library | url = http://www.baseballlibrary.com/ballplayers/player.php?name=Dock_Ellis_1945 | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1977}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1977 New York Yankees season|1977]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''East'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''1st'''
|100
|62
|.617
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|Won [[1977 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Kansas City Royals]], 3&ndash;2<br>'''Won [[1977 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers]], 4&ndash;2'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1977 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/1977.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|[[Sparky Lyle]] ([[Cy Young Award|CYA]])<ref name="CYA"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1978}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1978 New York Yankees season|1978]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''East'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''1st'''{{ref label|78Division|i|i}}
|100
|63
|.613
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|Won [[1978 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Kansas City Royals]], 3&ndash;1<br>'''Won [[1978 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Los Angeles Dodgers]], 4&ndash;2'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1978 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/1978.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|[[Ron Guidry]] ([[Cy Young Award|CYA]])<ref name="CYA"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1979}}
|[[1979 New York Yankees season|1979]]
|AL
|East
|4th
|89
|71
|.556
|13½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1980}}
|[[1980 New York Yankees season|1980]]
|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|103
|59
|.636
|&mdash;
|Lost [[1980 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] to [[Kansas City Royals]], 3&ndash;0<ref>{{cite web | title = 1980 AL Championship Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1980_ALCS.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|rowspan=2|{{mlby|1981}}{{ref label|81Strike|j|j}}
|rowspan=2|[[1981 New York Yankees season|1981]]
|rowspan=2 bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|rowspan=2 bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|34
|22
|.607
|&mdash;
|rowspan=2|Won [[1981 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Milwaukee Brewers]], 3&ndash;2<br> Won [[1981 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Oakland Athletics]], 3&ndash;0<br>Lost [[1981 World Series|World Series]] to [[Los Angeles Dodgers]], 4&ndash;2<ref>{{cite web | title = 1981 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/1981.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|rowspan=2|[[Dave Righetti]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY"/>
|-
|6th
|25
|26
|.490
|5
|-
|{{mlby|1982}}
|[[1982 New York Yankees season|1982]]
|AL
|East
|5th
|79
|83
|.488
|16
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1983}}
|[[1983 New York Yankees season|1983]]
|AL
|East
|3rd
|91
|71
|.562
|7
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1984}}
|[[1984 New York Yankees season|1984]]
|AL
|East
|3rd
|87
|75
|.537
|17
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1985}}
|[[1985 New York Yankees season|1985]]
|AL
|East
|2nd
|97
|64
|.602
|2
|
|[[Don Mattingly]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1986}}
|[[1986 New York Yankees season|1986]]
|AL
|East
|2nd
|90
|72
|.556
|5½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1987}}
|[[1987 New York Yankees season|1987]]
|AL
|East
|4th
|89
|73
|.549
|9
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1988}}
|[[1988 New York Yankees season|1988]]
|AL
|East
|5th
|85
|76
|.528
|3½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1989}}
|[[1989 New York Yankees season|1989]]
|AL
|East
|5th
|74
|87
|.460
|14½
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1990}}
|[[1990 New York Yankees season|1990]]
|AL
|East
|7th
|67
|95
|.414
|21
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1991}}
|[[1991 New York Yankees season|1991]]
|AL
|East
|5th
|71
|91
|.438
|20
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1992}}
|[[1992 New York Yankees season|1992]]
|AL
|East
|4th
|76
|86
|.469
|20
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1993}}
|[[1993 New York Yankees season|1993]]
|AL
|East
|2nd
|88
|74
|.543
|7
|
|
|-
|{{mlby|1994}}{{ref label|94Strike|k|k}}
|[[1994 New York Yankees season|1994]]
|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|70
|43
|.619
|&mdash;
|
|[[Buck Showalter]] ([[Manager of the Year Award|MOY]])<ref name="MOY">{{cite web | title = Manager of the Year winners | publisher = Major League Baseball | url = http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/awards/mlb_awards_content.jsp?content=mgr_history | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|-
|{{mlby|1995}}{{ref label|95Season|l|l}}
|[[1995 New York Yankees season|1995]]
|AL
|East
|bgcolor="#96CDCD"|2nd
|79
|65
|.549
|7
|Lost [[1995 American League Division Series|ALDS]] to [[Seattle Mariners]], 3&ndash;2<ref>{{cite web | title = 1995 AL Division Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1995_ALDS2.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1996}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1996 New York Yankees season|1996]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''East'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''1st'''
|92
|70
|.568
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|Won [[1996 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]], 3&ndash;1<br>Won [[1996 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Baltimore Orioles]], 4&ndash;1<br>'''Won [[1996 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Atlanta Braves]], 4&ndash;2'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1996 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/1996.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|[[Derek Jeter]] ([[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|ROY]])<ref name="ROY"/><br>[[Joe Torre]] ([[Manager of the Year Award|MOY]])<ref name="MOY"/>
|-
|{{mlby|1997}}
|[[1997 New York Yankees season|1997]]
|AL
|East
|bgcolor="#96CDCD"|2nd
|96
|66
|.593
|2
|Lost [[1997 American League Division Series|ALDS]] to [[Cleveland Indians]], 3&ndash;2<ref>{{cite web | title = 1997 AL Division Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1997_ALDS1.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1998}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1998 New York Yankees season|1998]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''East'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''1st'''
|114
|48
|.704
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|Won [[1998 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]], 3&ndash;0<br>Won [[1998 American League Division Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Cleveland Indians]], 4&ndash;2<br>'''Won [[1998 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[San Diego Padres]], 4&ndash;0'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1998 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/1998.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|[[Joe Torre]] ([[Manager of the Year Award|MOY]])<ref name="MOY"/>
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|1999}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[1999 New York Yankees season|1999]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''East'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''1st'''
|98
|64
|.605
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|Won [[1999 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]], 3&ndash;0<br>Won [[1999 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Boston Red Sox]], 4&ndash;1<br>'''Won [[1999 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[Atlanta Braves]], 4&ndash;0'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 1999 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/1999.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''{{mlby|2000}}'''
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|'''[[2000 New York Yankees season|2000]]'''
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|'''AL'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''East'''
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|'''1st'''
|87
|74
|.540
|&mdash;
|bgcolor="#FFE6BD"|Won [[2000 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Oakland Athletics]], 3&ndash;2<br>Won [[2000 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Seattle Mariners]], 4&ndash;2<br>'''Won [[2000 World Series|World Series]] vs. [[New York Mets]], 4&ndash;1'''<ref>{{cite web | title = 2000 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/2000.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|2001}}
|[[2001 New York Yankees season|2001]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|95
|65
|.594
|&mdash;
|Won [[2001 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Oakland Athletics]], 3&ndash;2<br>Won [[2001 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Seattle Mariners]], 4&ndash;1<br>Lost [[2001 World Series|World Series]] to [[Arizona Diamondbacks]], 4&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 2001 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/2001.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|[[Roger Clemens]] ([[Cy Young Award|CYA]])<ref name="CYA"/>
|-
|{{mlby|2002}}
|[[2002 New York Yankees season|2002]]
|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|103
|58
|.640
|&mdash;
|Lost [[2002 American League Division Series|ALDS]] to [[Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim|Anaheim Angels]], 3&ndash;1<ref>{{cite web | title = 2002 AL Division Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/2002_ALDS1.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|2003}}
|[[2003 New York Yankees season|2003]]
|bgcolor="#FFCCCC"|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|101
|61
|.623
|&mdash;
|Won [[2003 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Minnesota Twins]], 3&ndash;1<br>Won [[2003 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] vs. [[Boston Red Sox]], 4&ndash;3<br>Lost [[2003 World Series|World Series]] to [[Florida Marlins]], 4&ndash;2<ref>{{cite web | title = 2003 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/2003.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|2004}}
|[[2004 New York Yankees season|2004]]
|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|101
|61
|.623
|&mdash;
|Won [[2004 American League Division Series|ALDS]] vs. [[Minnesota Twins]], 3&ndash;1<br>Lost [[2004 American League Championship Series|ALCS]] to [[Boston Red Sox]], 4&ndash;3<ref>{{cite web | title = 2004 New York Yankees | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/2004.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|2005}}
|[[2005 New York Yankees season|2005]]
|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st{{ref label|05Division|m|m}}
|95
|67
|.586
|&mdash;
|Lost [[2005 American League Division Series|ALDS]] to [[Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim]], 3&ndash;2<ref>{{cite web | title = 2005 AL Division Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/2005_ALDS2.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|[[Alex Rodriguez]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/><br>[[Jason Giambi]] ([[MLB Comeback Player of the Year Award|CPOY]])<ref>{{cite web | author = Associated Press | title = Griffey, Giambi named comeback players of '05 | publisher = ESPN | date = 2005-10-06 | url = http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2182725 | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|-
|{{mlby|2006}}
|[[2006 New York Yankees season|2006]]
|AL
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|East
|bgcolor="#D0E7FF"|1st
|97
|65
|.599
|&mdash;
|Lost [[2006 American League Division Series|ALDS]] to [[Detroit Tigers]], 3&ndash;1<ref>{{cite web | title = 2006 AL Division Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/2006_ALDS1.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|
|-
|{{mlby|2007}}
|[[2007 New York Yankees season|2007]]
|AL
|East
|bgcolor="#96CDCD"|2nd
|94
|68
|.580
|2
|Lost [[2007 American League Division Series|ALDS]] to [[Cleveland Indians]], 3&ndash;1<ref>{{cite web | title = 2007 AL Division Series | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/2007_ALDS2.shtml | accessdate = 2008-07-27 }}</ref>
|[[Alex Rodriguez]] ([[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|MVP]])<ref name="MVP"/>
|-
|{{mlby|2008}}
|[[2008 New York Yankees season|2008]]
|AL
|East
|3rd
|89
|73
|.549
|8
|
|
|-
|}
These statistics are from [[Baseball-Reference]]'s ''New York Yankees History & Encyclopedia'',<ref>{{cite web | title = New York Yankees History & Encyclopedia | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYY/ | accessdate = 2008-08-16 }}</ref> except where noted, and are current as of September&nbsp;28, 2008. '''Bold''' denotes a World Series championship.


''[[Street Fighter Alpha 2]]'', released the following year in [[1996 in video gaming|1996]], follows the same plot as the original ''Alpha'', but features completely revamped endings. Bison is featured in this game as a regular playable character.
==All-time records==
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:95%"
|-
!rowspan=1|Statistic
!rowspan=1|Wins
!rowspan=1|Losses
!rowspan=1|Win%
|-
|Baltimore Orioles regular season record (1901&ndash;1902)
|118
|153
|.435
|-
|New York Highlanders/Yankees regular season record (1903&ndash;2008)
|9354
|7082
|.569
|-
|'''All-time regular season record (1901&ndash;2008)'''
|'''9472'''
|'''7235'''
|'''.567'''
|-
|All-time postseason record
|202
|137
|.596
|-
|'''All-time regular and postseason record'''
|'''9674'''
|'''7372'''
|'''.568'''
|}


In ''[[Street Fighter Alpha 3]]'', released in [[1998 in video gaming|1998]], a non-playable version of Bison called Final M. Bison serves as the final boss of all the characters (with the exception of Bison himself, who fights [[Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]]). Several revelations are made in this game, including the fact that Rose is the good half of Bison's soul and the fact that Cammy is a female clone of Bison. In the end of the game (regardless which ending the player gets), Bison's body is destroyed and a new one is built for him by his scientists after the game (an attempt to explain his different appearance between ''Street Fighter II'' and the ''Alpha'' games).
==See also==
*[[History of the New York Yankees]]


Bison is featured as a non-playable boss character in the [[1997 in video gaming|1997]] game ''[[Street Fighter EX]]'', the first [[3D computer graphics|3D]] entry in the series. He becomes a playable character in the upgraded version ''Street Fighter EX Plus'' ([[1997 in video gaming|1997]]) and its [[PlayStation]] port ''Street Fighter EX Plus Alpha''. While Bison was absent in the original version of ''[[Street Fighter EX2]]'', he appears in the upgrade ''[[Street Fighter EX2 Plus]]'' ([[1999 in video gaming|1999]]) and its sequel ''[[Street Fighter EX3]]'' ({{vgy|2001}} as a regular character, as a modified version known as "Bison 2".
==Notes==
*{{note label|GB|a|a}}This is determined by calculating the difference in wins plus the difference in losses divided by two.
*{{note label|AL|b|b}}For lists of all American League pennant winners, see [[American League pennant winners 1901–68]] and [[American League Championship Series]].
*{{note label|Halve|c|c}}Half-game increments are possible because games can be cancelled due to rain.
*{{note label|22Game2|d|d}}The second game of the series ended after 10 innings due to darkness, with the score tied 2–2.<ref>{{cite journal | title = History of the World Series - 1922 | publisher = ''[[Sporting News]]'' | url = http://www.sportingnews.com/archives/worldseries/1922.html | accessdate = 2008-08-13 }}</ref>
*{{note label|32Ruth|e|e}}During Game 3 of this series. [[Babe Ruth]] hit his [[Babe Ruth's called shot|called shot]], a home run into the center field bleachers of [[Wrigley Field]].<ref>{{cite news | last = Bock | first = Hal | title = Monday marks 75th anniversary of Babe Ruth's called shot against Cubs in World Series | publisher = ''USA Today'' | date = 2007-09-27 | url = http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/2007-09-27-3523148865_x.htm | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref>
*{{note label|56PG|f|f}}[[Don Larsen]] pitched the only [[perfect game]] in World Series history in Game 5.<ref>{{cite news | last = Haberman | first = Clyde | authorlink = Clyde Haberman | title = Immortalized by a Moment of Perfection | publisher = ''[[The New York Times]]'' | date = 2006-10-03 | url = http://select.nytimes.com/2006/10/03/nyregion/03nyc.html | accessdate = 2008-08-13 }}</ref>
*{{note label|69East|g|g}}In 1969, the American League split into East and West divisions.
*{{note label|72Strike|h|h}}The [[1972 Major League Baseball strike]] forced the cancellation of the Yankees' first seven games of the season.<ref name="strike">{{cite web | author = Associated Press | title = Baseball stoppages date back to 1972 | publisher = ESPN | date = 2002-08-29 | url = http://espn.go.com/mlb/news/2002/0829/1424697.html | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref>
*{{note label|78Division|i|i}}The Yankees finished the season tied for first with the [[Boston Red Sox]]. New York defeated the Red Sox 5–4 in a [[one-game playoff]] to clinch the division title. The game is best remembered for [[Bucky Dent]]'s three-run [[home run]] in the seventh [[innings|inning]], which gave the Yankees a 3–2 lead.<ref>{{cite news | last = Fratus | first = Ken | title = 25 years ago: How an otherwise forgettable shortstop became a permanent Dent in Boston's heart | publisher = ''[[The Boston Globe]]'' | date = 2003-09-29 | url = http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/redsox/articles/2003/09/29/25_years_ago/ | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref>
*{{note label|81Strike|j|j}}The [[1981 Major League Baseball strike]] caused the season to be split into two halves. The Yankees were given a berth in an expanded playoff tournament because they led the American League East when the strike began. The [[Milwaukee Brewers]] finished the second half in first place to earn the division's other playoff berth.<ref>{{cite web | title = 1981 Season | publisher = ESPN | url = http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/alltime/season?year=1981 | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref>
*{{note label|94Strike|k|k}}The [[1994 Major League Baseball strike]], which started on August&nbsp;12, led to the cancellation of the playoffs and World Series.<ref>{{cite web | author = Associated Press | title = Strike looms large over All-Star Game | publisher = [[CNN Sports Illustrated]] | date = 2002-07-07 | url = http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/baseball/2002/allstar/news/2002/07/07/allstar_labor_ap/ | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref> The Yankees held the best record in the American League at the time of the strike.<ref>{{cite web | title = 1994 Season | publisher = ESPN | url = http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/alltime/season?year=1994 | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref>
*{{note label|95Season|l|l}}The 1994 MLB strike lasted until April&nbsp;2, 1995, causing the shortening of the 1995 season to 144 games.<ref name="strike"/>
*{{note label|05Division|m|m}}The Yankees finished the season tied for first with the Boston Red Sox, but were awarded the division title because they won the season series with the Red Sox.<ref>{{cite web | author = Associated Press | title = Red Sox clinch berth, make Yanks' playoff road tougher | publisher = ESPN | date = 2005-10-02 | url = http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=251002102 | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref>


Bison is set to return in ''[[Street Fighter IV]]'', a continuation of ''Street Fighter II'' set prior to the events of ''Street Fighter III''.
==References==
;General
*{{cite web | title = Complete Baseball Team and Baseball Team Encyclopedias | publisher = [[Baseball-Reference]] | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/ | accessdate = 2008-08-13 }}<br/>
*{{cite web | title = Baseball-Reference Postseason Index | publisher = Baseball-Reference | url = http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/ | accessdate = 2008-08-13 }}


===Other games===
;Specific
{{Original research|section|date=April 2008}}
{{Reflist|2}}
Bison appears in the ''[[Street Fighter: The Movie]]'', a [[1995 in video gaming|1995]] video game adaptation of the [[Street Fighter (film)|1994 film]]. The game plays in a similar way to the ''[[Mortal Kombat (series)|Mortal Kombat]]'', with each character represented by [[Digitizing|digitized]] [[Sprite (computer graphics)|sprite]]s of the film's actors. Bison's portrayer, [[Raúl Juliá]], had intended to participate in the project but bowed out due to health problems.<ref>Alan Noon. [http://forums.shoryuken.com/showpost.php?s=7e11ed445760994fdea740c4d3bd8850&p=3588790&postcount=100 Street Fighter the Movie Broke My Heart]. [http://shoryuken.com/ Shoryuken.com]. ([[2007]]-[[January 25|1-25]]) Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 1|4-2]].</ref> Consequently, Bison's fight animations were performed by actor Darko Tuscan. Film clips of Juliá as Bison are included within the game's [[cut scenes]].


In the ''[[Marvel vs. Capcom (series)|Marvel vs. Capcom]]'' series of [[crossover]] fighting games, Bison is frequently included among the ranks of Capcom characters.<ref name="fgen">[http://www.fightersgeneration.com/characters/bison.html Master Bison]. [http://www.fightersgeneration.com/ The Fighter's Generation]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 10|4-10]].</ref> Both ''[[X-Men vs. Street Fighter]]'' ([[1996 in video gaming|1996]]) and ''[[Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter]]'' ([[1997 in video gaming|1997]]) feature Bison as a playable character. Bison's character sprite is identical to that of his ''Street Fighter Alpha'' incarnation. He is noticeably absent from ''[[Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes]]'' (1998), though he appears in several of the game's ending sequences.<ref>[http://www.vgmuseum.com/end/arcade/a/mvcchu.htm Ending for ''Marvel vs Capcom'' - Chun-Li (Arcade)]. [http://www.vgmuseum.com/ VGMuseum]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 13|4-12]].</ref><ref>[http://www.vgmuseum.com/end/arcade/a/mvcsha.htm Ending for ''Marvel vs Capcom'' - Shadow Lady (Arcade)]. [http://www.vgmuseum.com/ VGMuseum]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 13|4-13]].</ref> In ''[[Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes]]'' ([[2000 in video gaming|2000]]), the ''Alpha'' version of Bison is once again a playable character, though he must be unlocked before he is made available.
{{MLB season-by-season team history}}

{{New York Yankees}}
Bison underwent a makeover for his role in the ''[[SNK vs. Capcom (series)|SNK vs. Capcom]]'' series, reverting to the slimmer appearance of his ''Street Fighter II'' debut.<ref name="kikouken"/> He has regularly appeared in each entry of the series, beginning with ''[[SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium]]'' (1999) and its sequels, ''[[Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000]]'' and ''[[Capcom vs. SNK 2]]'' ([[2001 in video gaming|2001]]). Bison appears at the halfway point of each game as a [[Boss (video games)#Mini-boss|mid-boss]] (along with [[Geese Howard]]) if the player has accumulated enough points. Most recently, he was included as a playable character in ''[[SNK vs. Capcom: SVC Chaos]]'' ([[2003 in video gaming|2003]])<ref name="fgen"/>.

Bison appeared in ''[[Capcom Fighting Jam]]'' ([[2004 in video gaming|2004]]),<ref name="fgen"/> which features an assortment of characters from each individual series published by Capcom.

Outside of the [[Video game genres#Fighting|fighting game genre]], a [[super deformed]] version of Bison has also appeared in the [[handheld game console|handheld]] [[collectible card game]] ''[[SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash]]'' (1999). He also appears in the Japanese [[Action role-playing game|action]]/[[Tactical role-playing game|tactical RPG]] hybrid ''[[Namco × Capcom]]''.

==Characteristics==
Bison's attire consists of a red [[military uniform]] with metal shoulder plates, wrist bands, and [[shin guard]]s. On his cap is the [[skull]] [[insignia]] of Shadaloo. Before a match, Bison is seen sporting a grey [[cloak]] around his uniform, which he tosses aside once the fight begins. In all appearances following ''Street Fighter II'' , Bison is shown lacking [[pupil]]s and [[Iris (anatomy)|iris]]es, leaving his eyes ghastly white. Bison's signature move is the Psycho Crusher,<ref name="swiki"/> which sends him spiraling through the air while wreathed in fiery energy. The resultant damage either immolates or electrocutes his victim. His other famous move is the Double Knee Press (also known as the Scissor Kick), a forward flip which sends him barreling toward his opponent. Some gaming literature has specified Bison's fighting style as [[Lerdrit]], a military variant of [[Muay Thai]].

In the ''[[Street Fighter Alpha]]'' series, Bison's physical stature is larger and more imposing. He wears a gray-colored [[cape]] at all times, including battles. Bison's repertoire of moves was changed to reflect his 'new' appearance: Among his new abilities is the ''Psycho Shot'', a previously-unseen projectile attack.<ref name="kikouken">[http://kikouken.com/information/psycho.htm Psycho Power to the People]. [http://kikouken.com Kikouken.com]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 9|4-9]].</ref> Bison also demonstrates greater mastery over his Psycho Power, able to [[teleport]] across the screen and hover in the air.

In the ''[[Capcom vs SNK]]'' series, Bison's physical appearance is much leaner, one reminiscent of his role in ''Street Fighter II.''<ref name="kikouken"/> As before, he removes his cloak before battle. Also when faced with Geese Howard(SNK's Final Boss), instead of him removing his cloak, it will be disintegrated by Geese's projectile. He gains a move called the "Psycho Banish" which allows him to negate projectiles.

==Final M. Bison==
A version of M. Bison officially referred to as '''Final M. Bison''' <ref>[http://www.gamefaqs.com/coinop/arcade/file/583625/26094 ''Street Fighter Plot Guide''] Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[October 12|10-12]]</ref> appears in [[Street Fighter Alpha 3]]. This incarnation of M. Bison is him at the height of his psycho power. M. Bison becomes his most powerful incarnation by using a device called the psycho drive. Because of this immense power increase, Final M. Bison seeks a new body, which happens to be that of [[Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]]'s. Eventually, Final M. Bison is defeated by the likes of [[Chun-Li]] and [[Charlie (Street Fighter)|Charlie]]. His body is destroyed along with [[M._Bison#Shadaloo|Shadowlaw]]'s secret base. Final M. Bison does not appear ever again in any of the other street fighter games. Since he had lost his body, M. Bison takes over the body of Rose, his good half, until ''Shadowlaw'' scientists can build him a new one (the one that is seen in [[Street Fighter II]]). However, by doing this, he weakens his psycho power by having a good side and not being completely evil. This can explan the power difference that is apparent between Final M. Bison and the M. Bison that appears in ''Street Fighter II''. Unlike previous incarnations of M. Bison, the ''Street Fighter II'' version cannot teleport or fly, and is visibly thinner.

In terms of gameplay, Final M. Bison is incredibly strong, equal or greater in strength to [[Akuma (Street Fighter)#Shin Akuma|Shin Akuma]]. He has his own ism, sometimes referred to by fans as ''Shadowlaw''-ism or Boss-ism. His fierce punches are stronger than his normal form's, visibly cutting the wind. Final M. Bison also has a trademark super move, which is essentially a super powered psycho crusher. It covers the entire screen and cannot be blocked in the air. And as expected, it takes off immense damage, almost 3/4 of a normal character's life energy. Final M. Bison is the final boss of every character except [[Ryu (Street Fighter)#Evil Ryu|Evil Ryu]] in ''Street Fighter Alpha 3'', and can only be selected by a human player in the console and handheld versions of the game.

==In other media==
===Live-action===
====''Street Fighter''====
Bison is portrayed by [[Raúl Juliá]] in the [[1994 in film|1994]] [[live-action]] film ''[[Street Fighter (film)|Street Fighter]]''.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111301/ ''Street Fighter'' (1994)]. [[IMBD]]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 1|4-1]].</ref> At one point during the film, Bison quotes the video games by saying "Anyone who opposes me will be destroyed", while Van Damme quotes the line "Are you man enough to fight with me?"<ref name="quotes">[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111301/quotes Memorable quotes for ''Street Fighter'' (1994)]. [[IMBD]]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 29|3-29]].</ref> In the film, General M. Bison is a crazed military commander who plans to mass-produce [[supersoldier]]s to take over the world. He is depicted as an average fighter, with no [[Superpower (ability)|super powers]] whatsoever (partially due to Juliá's ill health, he was not able to perform the stunts necessary to make Bison an equal match for Guile). Instead, his uniform contains powerful [[electromagnet]]s which allow him to [[levitation|levitate]], as well as shoot [[lightning]] from his hands. During the film's climactic fight, Bison challenges, "You come to fight a madman, and instead find a god? Do you still refuse to accept my godhood? Keep your own God! In fact, this time may be a good time to pray to Him! For I beheld [[Satan]] as he fell from [[Heaven]] like lightning!" (cf. [[Gospel of Luke]] 10:18'': ''"And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven."'' [[KJV]])<ref name="quotes"/>

A very arrogant man, Bison adorns his quarters with comically-heroic [[portrait]]s of himself. Hanging on his wall is an edited version of [[Jacques-Louis David]]'s painting, '[[Napoleon Crossing the Alps]]'. The original painting depicted [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon Bonaparte]] posing on a white horse; Napoleon's body is replaced by an image of Bison in the same pose.

This version of Bison appears in the arcade and home versions of the ''[[Street Fighter: The Movie]]'' video game tie-in. Although Julia is credited in the attract sequence of the arcade version, the character portrayed for the game was actually played by Julia{{'}}s stunt double Darko Tuscan.

====''Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li''====
{{main|Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li}}
Bison is slated to appear in the upcoming movie focusing on Chun-Li. He will be played by [[Neal McDonough]].<ref>[http://www.aintitcool.com/node/36075 The new M. Bison is...] [http://www.aintitcool.com/ Ain't It Cool News]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 29|3-29]].</ref><ref>[http://movies.ign.com/articles/860/860977p1.html Bison Cast]. [http://movies.ign.com/ IGN]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 29|3-29]].</ref>

===Animation===
====''Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie''====
Bison is featured prominently in the Japanese [[anime]] film ''[[Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie]]''. He is the main [[antagonist]] of the film and a shared enemy of several other fighters, mainly Chun-Li and Guile. Bison is voiced by [[Takeshi Kusaka]] in the Japanese version, in the [[English (language)|English]] [[Dub localization|dub]] he is voiced by [[Tom Wyner]] and [[:pt:Antônio Moreno|Antônio Moreno]] in the [[Brazil]]ian dub.<ref>[http://imdb.com/title/tt0114563/fullcredits#cast ''Sutorîto Faitâ II gekijô-ban'']. [http://imdb.com IMBD]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 26|3-26]].</ref>

Bison's organization, Shadowlaw, is stated as being an international [[Terrorism|terrorist organization]]. It employs a great deal of [[sci-fi]] technology, including [[cyborg]]s (known as "Monitor Cyborgs") which pose as human while broadcasting live images to Bison.<ref>[http://www.absoluteanime.com/street_fighter/bison.htm Character Profile: M. Bison]. [http://www.absoluteanime.com/ Absolute Anime]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 29|3-29]].</ref> The spelling "Shadowlaw" is used on-screen early in the anime.

Intrigued by [[Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]]'s fighting skill, Bison orders a nationwide [[manhunt]] to capture and brainwash him to work for Shadowlaw.<ref>Noah Davis. [http://www.popmatters.com/pm/film/reviews/street-fighter-ii-the-animated-movie-1994 ''Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie'' (1994)]. [http://www.popmatters.com/ PopMatters]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[March 26|3-26]].</ref> [[Ken (Street Fighter)|Ken]], Ryu's old friend, is brainwashed by Bisons "Psycho Power" after the terrorist leader easily outmatches him in a fight. With Ryu's help, Ken shakes off Bison's influence, and the two of them destroy Bison's [[VTOL]] [[fighter jet]] with a combined [[Hadouken]] fireball. Though Bison is thought to have perished, he reappears at the helm of a [[semi truck]] bearing down on Ryu before the film ends. Ryu leaps towards the truck ready for another battle, and the [[end credits]] roll.

====''Street Fighter: The Animated Series''====
Bison's portrayal in the US [[Street Fighter (animated series)|Street Fighter]] series is considerably close to the portrayal of him in both the live-action film and significant aspects of the video game. His primary nemesis is Guile, as in the movie. In the first season, Bison's attack on Chun-Li's village (referenced in the live-action film), appears in a flashback, revealing how he killed Chun-Li's father, who attacked him in futile defiance. Bison later reveals to a vengeful Chun-Li that he also slayed his own father, and remarks that she doesn't see ''him'' whining about it as she does.

The second season explored Bison's relationship with Cammy in the same manner as the games and in the anime movie, with Cammy being triggered as a "sleeper agent" in the opening episodes. She discovers the truth about Bison in the series finale, but not before she reestablishes her romantic bond with him.

Bison seems to worship a Thai [[deity]] that instructs him on what to do with his resources, and in the finale, Bison convinces himself he has been told to destroy the Earth through the launching of nuclear missiles. A final battle with Guile, Cammy, Chun-Li, Sagat, and Cammy's former teammates concludes with Bison being eaten alive by his own computers, aborting the launch and seemingly killing him.

===Comics===

====UDON Comics====
Bison is heavily featured as the primary antagonist of the [[UDON]]-published ''Street Fighter'' comic series. His story is greatly unchanged from the official version, portraying him as the dark and sinister leader of Shadaloo. He operates behind a veil of various agents and associates who do his bidding as well as having numerous enemies (such as Chun-Li and Guile). Like the official story, Bison has a great interest in Ryu after watching him defeat Sagat at the last Street Fighter tournament and observing the nature of the Satsui no Hadou. At the end of the first series of comics, Bison is defeated in a battle with his own creation (Charlie, who had been empowered with Shadaloo technology) when Charlie sacrifices himself to plunge Bison into a river. Bison survives the fall and his body rebuilt (again, repeating the events of the official canon), whereupon he resumes his role as Shadaloo dictator.

However, unlike the official story, Bison's background is fully explored in these comics. UDON's story states that Bison was once a pupil of a great spiritualist whose tribe was Rose's place of origin. This spirtualist (who is referred to only as "Master" in the comics) teaches Bison the force known as "Soul Power". Years later, Bison returns to her and lays waste to her and her people using his corrupted form of the energy, now dubbed "Psycho Power". Rose is the only survivor of the genocide.

==Shadaloo==
Shadaloo is a [[fictional]] crime organization which is run by Bison. Its insignia is a winged skull with a lightning bolt—forming an "S" for Shadaloo—etched onto its forehead. The symbol can be seen on Bison's cap, as well as in numerous [[cut scenes]].<ref name="bisonend">[http://www.vgmuseum.com/end/arcade/c/sfa3bad.htm Ending for ''Street Fighter Alpha 3'' - Bad Ending (Arcade)]. [http://www.vgmuseum.com/ VGMuseum]. Retrieved on [[2008]]-[[April 2|4-2]].</ref> The Four Devas of Shadaloo include [[Balrog (Street Fighter)|Balrog]], [[Vega (Street Fighter)|Vega]], [[Sagat]], and Bison himself. Both Balrog and Vega are fighters who were recruited under the promise of wealth, whereas Sagat was motivated by the prospect of revenging himself on Ryu. In ''Street Fighter II'', Bison ostensibly hosts the game's fighting tournament to seek out new talent for Shadaloo.

Bison and Shadaloo feature more prominently in the ''Alpha'' series of games. New Shadaloo [[henchman|henchmen]] are introduced, including the [[Dolls (Street Fighter)|The Dolls]], a group of female fighters who are programmed to serve Bison. Cammy was bred as a member of this group, but eventually regained her senses and fled to [[England]]. In ''Street Fighter Alpha 3'', Bison's headquarters is located in the interior of a Thai statue depicting a female [[deity]]. During the [[game over]] sequence, the face of the statue crumbles away, revealing a skull-like [[robot]]ic head. The robot's eyes fire a laser into the [[stratosphere]], which is intercepted by Bison's satellite and deflected back toward Earth.<ref name="bisonend"/>

In the 1994 live-action ''Street Fighter'' film, Shadaloo (spelled as ''Ŝadoluo'' in [[Esperanto]]) is a hostile [[dictatorship]]. According to maps shown during the film's opening, it is a [[fictitious]] country located in a segment of present-day [[Burma]].

==Promotion and reception==
[[IGN]] ranked Bison at number four in their "Top 25 Street Fighter Characters" article, noting his role as a villain in the series that did not leave fighting to his [[henchmen]].<ref>[http://stars.ign.com/articles/895/895030p2.html Top 25 Street Fighter Characters - The Final Five]. [[IGN]]. Retrieved on [[2008-08-15]]</ref> ''[[GamePro]]'' placed him at number thirty in their "47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time" article, stating "This guy had the nerve to look you dead in the face, threaten your very soul and then tell you he represents an organization called Shadoloo. That's brave, man."<ref>[[GamePro]] staff ([[2008-02-04]]). [http://www.pcworld.idg.com.au/index.php/id;338891934;pp;1;secid;772455 The 47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time]. [[PC World]]. Retrieved on [[2008-09-16]]</ref>

==References==
{{reflist|2}}
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{{Major Street Fighter Characters}}


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{{featured list}}
[[Category:New York Yankees seasons|New York Yankees seasons]]
[[Category:Street Fighter characters]]
[[Category:New York Yankees|Seasons]]
[[Category:Video game bosses]]
[[Category:Major League Baseball teams seasons]]
[[Category:Fictional military personnel]]
[[Category:Fictional mass murderers]]
[[Category:Fictional characters who can teleport]]
[[Category:Fictional criminals]]
[[Category:Fictional dictators]]
[[Category:Fictional terrorists]]
[[Category:Fictional generals]]
[[Category:1991 introductions]]


[[es:M. Bison]]
[[fr:Saisons des Yankees de New York]]
[[fr:M. Bison (Street Fighter)]]
[[ja:ニューヨーク・ヤンキースの年度別成績一覧]]
[[it:M. Bison]]
[[ja:シャドルー]]
[[ja:ベガ (ストリートファイター)]]
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[[ur:ام – بائسن (اسٹریٹ فائٹر)]]

Revision as of 07:30, 12 October 2008

M. Bison
Street Fighter series character
File:Bison (Super Turbo).PNG
M. Bison in Super Street Fighter II Turbo, as illustrated by Bengus.
First gameStreet Fighter II

M. Bison, known as Vega (ベガ, Bega) in Japan, is a video game character created by Capcom. First introduced in Street Fighter II: The World Warrior, he is a recurring boss and antagonist of the Street Fighter series of fighting games.

A would-be world dictator, Bison's ambition is to control the world's governments through his covert crime syndicate, Shadaloo[1][2][3] (シャドルー, Shadorū, sometimes spelled as "Shadoloo", "Shadowloo" or "Shadowlaw"[4]). He serves as the host of Street Fighter II 's fighting tournament[5] and is the last opponent fought in the game. Several Street Fighter characters — including Guile, T. Hawk, Cammy, Rose and Chun-Li — have their personal vendettas against M. Bison and have entered the tournament in the hope of having a shot at him. M. Bison wields Psycho Power, an evil energy which manifests as blue or purple flames and electricity. The character was named the 30th most diabolical video game villain of all time by PC World.[6]

Conception and creation

In the original Japanese version of Street Fighter II, the single-player mode concludes with a series of matches against four computer-controlled opponents: M. Bison, a former pro boxer; Balrog, a masked Spaniard with a clawed gauntlet; Sagat, a returning character from the original Street Fighter; and Vega, a dictator dressed in red military uniform, the game's very last opponent. As Street Fighter II was being localized for the United States, concerns arose over M. Bison, who resembled an analogue of Mike Tyson to the point of likeness infringement.[1][7] Believing the character to be a legal liability, Capcom chose to reshuffle the names of its characters.[8][9] The Spaniard was renamed Vega, the boxer became Balrog, and Vega inherited the name M. Bison. Unlike the original Japanese games, the initial in his name is never given any particular meaning. In the Street Fighter EX games and the Marvel fighting game series, the character is addressed simply as Bison.

History

Street Fighter series

Bison first appears in the original Street Fighter II as the final computer-controlled opponent in the single-player mode, following the player's defeat of the other three Grand Masters. The battle taking place in the streets of Bangkok, Thailand in front of a crowd, where he poses with his cape prior to battle. His special techniques consist of the Psycho Crusher, the Knee Press (aka Scissor Kick) and the Head Press. He was originally a non-playable character in the first edition of Street Fighter II, but became selectable from Champion Edition and onward, while maintaining his position as the final boss until Super Street Fighter II Turbo, in which a hidden character named Akuma defeats Bison and challenges the player as an alternate final boss.

The storyline through the numerous versions of Street Fighter II characterizes Bison as the leader of a terrorist organization called "Shadaloo" who sponsors the World Warrior tournament. A few characters who participate in the tournament have a personal vendetta against Bison. Chun-Li and Guile are both seeking to avenge the deaths of loved ones (Chun-Li's father and Guile's friend respectively), while T. Hawk wants to regain his homeland. Cammy, an amnesiac, believes that Bison is connected to her past and learns in her ending that she was once one of his agents (changed to being lovers in the original English localization of the arcade, although this was changed back in the Game Boy Advance version, Super Turbo Revival).

Capcom later released Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams, a prequel to the Street Fighter II games inspired by animated movie that further fleshed out and developed the fictional universe of the series. Bison appears in the first Alpha as the final boss for certain characters and a hidden playable character available via a code. Two characters with ties to Bison were introduced: Rose a fortune teller with spiritual ties to Bison, whose Soul Power is the opposite of Bison's Psycho Power; and Charlie (Nash in Japan), Guile's dead war buddy from Street Fighter II, who seeks to track him down.

Street Fighter Alpha 2, released the following year in 1996, follows the same plot as the original Alpha, but features completely revamped endings. Bison is featured in this game as a regular playable character.

In Street Fighter Alpha 3, released in 1998, a non-playable version of Bison called Final M. Bison serves as the final boss of all the characters (with the exception of Bison himself, who fights Ryu). Several revelations are made in this game, including the fact that Rose is the good half of Bison's soul and the fact that Cammy is a female clone of Bison. In the end of the game (regardless which ending the player gets), Bison's body is destroyed and a new one is built for him by his scientists after the game (an attempt to explain his different appearance between Street Fighter II and the Alpha games).

Bison is featured as a non-playable boss character in the 1997 game Street Fighter EX, the first 3D entry in the series. He becomes a playable character in the upgraded version Street Fighter EX Plus (1997) and its PlayStation port Street Fighter EX Plus Alpha. While Bison was absent in the original version of Street Fighter EX2, he appears in the upgrade Street Fighter EX2 Plus (1999) and its sequel Street Fighter EX3 (Template:Vgy as a regular character, as a modified version known as "Bison 2".

Bison is set to return in Street Fighter IV, a continuation of Street Fighter II set prior to the events of Street Fighter III.

Other games

Bison appears in the Street Fighter: The Movie, a 1995 video game adaptation of the 1994 film. The game plays in a similar way to the Mortal Kombat, with each character represented by digitized sprites of the film's actors. Bison's portrayer, Raúl Juliá, had intended to participate in the project but bowed out due to health problems.[10] Consequently, Bison's fight animations were performed by actor Darko Tuscan. Film clips of Juliá as Bison are included within the game's cut scenes.

In the Marvel vs. Capcom series of crossover fighting games, Bison is frequently included among the ranks of Capcom characters.[11] Both X-Men vs. Street Fighter (1996) and Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter (1997) feature Bison as a playable character. Bison's character sprite is identical to that of his Street Fighter Alpha incarnation. He is noticeably absent from Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes (1998), though he appears in several of the game's ending sequences.[12][13] In Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes (2000), the Alpha version of Bison is once again a playable character, though he must be unlocked before he is made available.

Bison underwent a makeover for his role in the SNK vs. Capcom series, reverting to the slimmer appearance of his Street Fighter II debut.[14] He has regularly appeared in each entry of the series, beginning with SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium (1999) and its sequels, Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000 and Capcom vs. SNK 2 (2001). Bison appears at the halfway point of each game as a mid-boss (along with Geese Howard) if the player has accumulated enough points. Most recently, he was included as a playable character in SNK vs. Capcom: SVC Chaos (2003)[11].

Bison appeared in Capcom Fighting Jam (2004),[11] which features an assortment of characters from each individual series published by Capcom.

Outside of the fighting game genre, a super deformed version of Bison has also appeared in the handheld collectible card game SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash (1999). He also appears in the Japanese action/tactical RPG hybrid Namco × Capcom.

Characteristics

Bison's attire consists of a red military uniform with metal shoulder plates, wrist bands, and shin guards. On his cap is the skull insignia of Shadaloo. Before a match, Bison is seen sporting a grey cloak around his uniform, which he tosses aside once the fight begins. In all appearances following Street Fighter II , Bison is shown lacking pupils and irises, leaving his eyes ghastly white. Bison's signature move is the Psycho Crusher,[2] which sends him spiraling through the air while wreathed in fiery energy. The resultant damage either immolates or electrocutes his victim. His other famous move is the Double Knee Press (also known as the Scissor Kick), a forward flip which sends him barreling toward his opponent. Some gaming literature has specified Bison's fighting style as Lerdrit, a military variant of Muay Thai.

In the Street Fighter Alpha series, Bison's physical stature is larger and more imposing. He wears a gray-colored cape at all times, including battles. Bison's repertoire of moves was changed to reflect his 'new' appearance: Among his new abilities is the Psycho Shot, a previously-unseen projectile attack.[14] Bison also demonstrates greater mastery over his Psycho Power, able to teleport across the screen and hover in the air.

In the Capcom vs SNK series, Bison's physical appearance is much leaner, one reminiscent of his role in Street Fighter II.[14] As before, he removes his cloak before battle. Also when faced with Geese Howard(SNK's Final Boss), instead of him removing his cloak, it will be disintegrated by Geese's projectile. He gains a move called the "Psycho Banish" which allows him to negate projectiles.

Final M. Bison

A version of M. Bison officially referred to as Final M. Bison [15] appears in Street Fighter Alpha 3. This incarnation of M. Bison is him at the height of his psycho power. M. Bison becomes his most powerful incarnation by using a device called the psycho drive. Because of this immense power increase, Final M. Bison seeks a new body, which happens to be that of Ryu's. Eventually, Final M. Bison is defeated by the likes of Chun-Li and Charlie. His body is destroyed along with Shadowlaw's secret base. Final M. Bison does not appear ever again in any of the other street fighter games. Since he had lost his body, M. Bison takes over the body of Rose, his good half, until Shadowlaw scientists can build him a new one (the one that is seen in Street Fighter II). However, by doing this, he weakens his psycho power by having a good side and not being completely evil. This can explan the power difference that is apparent between Final M. Bison and the M. Bison that appears in Street Fighter II. Unlike previous incarnations of M. Bison, the Street Fighter II version cannot teleport or fly, and is visibly thinner.

In terms of gameplay, Final M. Bison is incredibly strong, equal or greater in strength to Shin Akuma. He has his own ism, sometimes referred to by fans as Shadowlaw-ism or Boss-ism. His fierce punches are stronger than his normal form's, visibly cutting the wind. Final M. Bison also has a trademark super move, which is essentially a super powered psycho crusher. It covers the entire screen and cannot be blocked in the air. And as expected, it takes off immense damage, almost 3/4 of a normal character's life energy. Final M. Bison is the final boss of every character except Evil Ryu in Street Fighter Alpha 3, and can only be selected by a human player in the console and handheld versions of the game.

In other media

Live-action

Street Fighter

Bison is portrayed by Raúl Juliá in the 1994 live-action film Street Fighter.[16] At one point during the film, Bison quotes the video games by saying "Anyone who opposes me will be destroyed", while Van Damme quotes the line "Are you man enough to fight with me?"[17] In the film, General M. Bison is a crazed military commander who plans to mass-produce supersoldiers to take over the world. He is depicted as an average fighter, with no super powers whatsoever (partially due to Juliá's ill health, he was not able to perform the stunts necessary to make Bison an equal match for Guile). Instead, his uniform contains powerful electromagnets which allow him to levitate, as well as shoot lightning from his hands. During the film's climactic fight, Bison challenges, "You come to fight a madman, and instead find a god? Do you still refuse to accept my godhood? Keep your own God! In fact, this time may be a good time to pray to Him! For I beheld Satan as he fell from Heaven like lightning!" (cf. Gospel of Luke 10:18: "And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven." KJV)[17]

A very arrogant man, Bison adorns his quarters with comically-heroic portraits of himself. Hanging on his wall is an edited version of Jacques-Louis David's painting, 'Napoleon Crossing the Alps'. The original painting depicted Napoleon Bonaparte posing on a white horse; Napoleon's body is replaced by an image of Bison in the same pose.

This version of Bison appears in the arcade and home versions of the Street Fighter: The Movie video game tie-in. Although Julia is credited in the attract sequence of the arcade version, the character portrayed for the game was actually played by Julia's stunt double Darko Tuscan.

Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li

Bison is slated to appear in the upcoming movie focusing on Chun-Li. He will be played by Neal McDonough.[18][19]

Animation

Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie

Bison is featured prominently in the Japanese anime film Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie. He is the main antagonist of the film and a shared enemy of several other fighters, mainly Chun-Li and Guile. Bison is voiced by Takeshi Kusaka in the Japanese version, in the English dub he is voiced by Tom Wyner and Antônio Moreno in the Brazilian dub.[20]

Bison's organization, Shadowlaw, is stated as being an international terrorist organization. It employs a great deal of sci-fi technology, including cyborgs (known as "Monitor Cyborgs") which pose as human while broadcasting live images to Bison.[21] The spelling "Shadowlaw" is used on-screen early in the anime.

Intrigued by Ryu's fighting skill, Bison orders a nationwide manhunt to capture and brainwash him to work for Shadowlaw.[22] Ken, Ryu's old friend, is brainwashed by Bisons "Psycho Power" after the terrorist leader easily outmatches him in a fight. With Ryu's help, Ken shakes off Bison's influence, and the two of them destroy Bison's VTOL fighter jet with a combined Hadouken fireball. Though Bison is thought to have perished, he reappears at the helm of a semi truck bearing down on Ryu before the film ends. Ryu leaps towards the truck ready for another battle, and the end credits roll.

Street Fighter: The Animated Series

Bison's portrayal in the US Street Fighter series is considerably close to the portrayal of him in both the live-action film and significant aspects of the video game. His primary nemesis is Guile, as in the movie. In the first season, Bison's attack on Chun-Li's village (referenced in the live-action film), appears in a flashback, revealing how he killed Chun-Li's father, who attacked him in futile defiance. Bison later reveals to a vengeful Chun-Li that he also slayed his own father, and remarks that she doesn't see him whining about it as she does.

The second season explored Bison's relationship with Cammy in the same manner as the games and in the anime movie, with Cammy being triggered as a "sleeper agent" in the opening episodes. She discovers the truth about Bison in the series finale, but not before she reestablishes her romantic bond with him.

Bison seems to worship a Thai deity that instructs him on what to do with his resources, and in the finale, Bison convinces himself he has been told to destroy the Earth through the launching of nuclear missiles. A final battle with Guile, Cammy, Chun-Li, Sagat, and Cammy's former teammates concludes with Bison being eaten alive by his own computers, aborting the launch and seemingly killing him.

Comics

UDON Comics

Bison is heavily featured as the primary antagonist of the UDON-published Street Fighter comic series. His story is greatly unchanged from the official version, portraying him as the dark and sinister leader of Shadaloo. He operates behind a veil of various agents and associates who do his bidding as well as having numerous enemies (such as Chun-Li and Guile). Like the official story, Bison has a great interest in Ryu after watching him defeat Sagat at the last Street Fighter tournament and observing the nature of the Satsui no Hadou. At the end of the first series of comics, Bison is defeated in a battle with his own creation (Charlie, who had been empowered with Shadaloo technology) when Charlie sacrifices himself to plunge Bison into a river. Bison survives the fall and his body rebuilt (again, repeating the events of the official canon), whereupon he resumes his role as Shadaloo dictator.

However, unlike the official story, Bison's background is fully explored in these comics. UDON's story states that Bison was once a pupil of a great spiritualist whose tribe was Rose's place of origin. This spirtualist (who is referred to only as "Master" in the comics) teaches Bison the force known as "Soul Power". Years later, Bison returns to her and lays waste to her and her people using his corrupted form of the energy, now dubbed "Psycho Power". Rose is the only survivor of the genocide.

Shadaloo

Shadaloo is a fictional crime organization which is run by Bison. Its insignia is a winged skull with a lightning bolt—forming an "S" for Shadaloo—etched onto its forehead. The symbol can be seen on Bison's cap, as well as in numerous cut scenes.[23] The Four Devas of Shadaloo include Balrog, Vega, Sagat, and Bison himself. Both Balrog and Vega are fighters who were recruited under the promise of wealth, whereas Sagat was motivated by the prospect of revenging himself on Ryu. In Street Fighter II, Bison ostensibly hosts the game's fighting tournament to seek out new talent for Shadaloo.

Bison and Shadaloo feature more prominently in the Alpha series of games. New Shadaloo henchmen are introduced, including the The Dolls, a group of female fighters who are programmed to serve Bison. Cammy was bred as a member of this group, but eventually regained her senses and fled to England. In Street Fighter Alpha 3, Bison's headquarters is located in the interior of a Thai statue depicting a female deity. During the game over sequence, the face of the statue crumbles away, revealing a skull-like robotic head. The robot's eyes fire a laser into the stratosphere, which is intercepted by Bison's satellite and deflected back toward Earth.[23]

In the 1994 live-action Street Fighter film, Shadaloo (spelled as Ŝadoluo in Esperanto) is a hostile dictatorship. According to maps shown during the film's opening, it is a fictitious country located in a segment of present-day Burma.

Promotion and reception

IGN ranked Bison at number four in their "Top 25 Street Fighter Characters" article, noting his role as a villain in the series that did not leave fighting to his henchmen.[24] GamePro placed him at number thirty in their "47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time" article, stating "This guy had the nerve to look you dead in the face, threaten your very soul and then tell you he represents an organization called Shadoloo. That's brave, man."[25]

References

  1. ^ a b Balrog Biography. IGN. Retrieved on 2008-4-10.
  2. ^ a b M. Bison. StrategyWiki. Retrieved on 2008-3-25.
  3. ^ M. Bison. C&A Productions. Retrieved on 2008-3-26.
  4. ^ Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie Review. Anime World (2006-6-20). Retrieved on 2008-3-26.
  5. ^ The History of Street Fighter - M. Bison. GameSpot. Retrieved on 2008-3-26.
  6. ^ GamePro Staff (2008). "The 47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time". PC World. Retrieved 2008-08-06. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  7. ^ Balrog. StrategyWiki. Retrieved on 2008-3-29.
  8. ^ Street Fighter Week - The Evolution of Ken and Ryu. gamesradar.com. Retrieved on 2008-4-2.
  9. ^ Street Fighter Terminology. EventHubs.com. Retrieved on 2008-3-29.
  10. ^ Alan Noon. Street Fighter the Movie Broke My Heart. Shoryuken.com. (2007-1-25) Retrieved on 2008-4-2.
  11. ^ a b c Master Bison. The Fighter's Generation. Retrieved on 2008-4-10.
  12. ^ Ending for Marvel vs Capcom - Chun-Li (Arcade). VGMuseum. Retrieved on 2008-4-12.
  13. ^ Ending for Marvel vs Capcom - Shadow Lady (Arcade). VGMuseum. Retrieved on 2008-4-13.
  14. ^ a b c Psycho Power to the People. Kikouken.com. Retrieved on 2008-4-9.
  15. ^ Street Fighter Plot Guide Retrieved on 2008-10-12
  16. ^ Street Fighter (1994). IMBD. Retrieved on 2008-4-1.
  17. ^ a b Memorable quotes for Street Fighter (1994). IMBD. Retrieved on 2008-3-29.
  18. ^ The new M. Bison is... Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved on 2008-3-29.
  19. ^ Bison Cast. IGN. Retrieved on 2008-3-29.
  20. ^ Sutorîto Faitâ II gekijô-ban. IMBD. Retrieved on 2008-3-26.
  21. ^ Character Profile: M. Bison. Absolute Anime. Retrieved on 2008-3-29.
  22. ^ Noah Davis. Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie (1994). PopMatters. Retrieved on 2008-3-26.
  23. ^ a b Ending for Street Fighter Alpha 3 - Bad Ending (Arcade). VGMuseum. Retrieved on 2008-4-2.
  24. ^ Top 25 Street Fighter Characters - The Final Five. IGN. Retrieved on 2008-08-15
  25. ^ GamePro staff (2008-02-04). The 47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time. PC World. Retrieved on 2008-09-16

Template:Major Street Fighter Characters