The
1950 World Series was the 47th
World Series between the
American and
National Leagues for the championship of
Major League Baseball. The
Philadelphia Phillies as 1950
champions of the National League and the
New York Yankees, as 1950 American League
champions, competed to win a best-of-seven game series.
The Series began on Wednesday, October 4, and concluded Saturday,
October 7.
The Phillies had home field advantage for the series, meaning
no more than three games would be played at the Yankees' stadium,
Yankee
Stadium
. The Yankees won their 13th championship in
their 48-year history, taking the series four games to zero. The
final game in the series resulted in the New York Yankees winning,
5–2 over Philadelphia. It was the only game in the series decided
by more than one run. This was the last all-white World Series as
neither club had integrated in 1950.
The same teams would again meet in the
2009 World Series, and in that year the
Yankees would once again win the
MLB championship.
Teams
Philadelphia Phillies
The Phillies, a particularly young team which came to be known as
the "Whiz Kids", had won the
National
League pennant in dramatic fashion on the final day of the
season to garner their second pennant—their first in 35 years. But
writing in the
New York
Times on October 3, 1950, John Drebinger picked the
Yankees to win the Series in five games: "The Stengelers simply
have too much over-all pitching. They have the long range power.
They posses rare defensive skill, and they have the poise and
experience gained through the past four years which brought them
two world championships and three pennants." Odds makers made the
Yankees 2–5 favorites to win the Series.
Curt Simmons, a seventeen-game winner
for the Phillies in 1950, had been called to military duty in
September and was unavailable for this Series. Simmons was
stationed at
Camp Atterbury and
requested and was granted a leave on October 4 to attend the
Series. The Phillies chose not to request that
Commissioner Chandler rule Simmons eligible
for the Series but Simmons chose to attend to support the team.
Simmons' place on the Series roster was taken by pitcher
Jocko Thompson. Phillies ace
Robin Roberts didn't start Game 1
because he had had three starts in five days including the pennant
winner on the final day of the regular season—played October 1,
1950 (three days before Game 1).
New York Yankees
Summary
Matchups
Game 1
Wednesday,
October 4, 1950 at Shibe
Park
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Because his #1 starter,
Robin
Roberts, had just pitched in three of the last five games of
the frantic 1950 pennant race, Phils manager Eddie Sawyer surprised
the world by naming his bullpen ace,
Jim
Konstanty, to open on the mound for Philadelphia, opposing
21-game winner
Vic Raschi of the Yankees.
Konstanty was outstanding, allowing just four hits and a run in
eight innings, but Raschi was tougher, shutting out the Phils on
only two hits en route to a 1–0 victory in the opener.
Game 2

DiMaggio catches Ennis' deep fly
Thursday,
October 5, 1950 at Shibe
Park
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
20-game winner Robin Roberts and
Allie
Reynolds both pitched outstanding baseball for nine innings, as
strong pitching and stout defense again prevailed in the series.
Gene Woodling drove in
Jerry Coleman for a Yankee run in the second,
and
Richie Ashburn tallied
Mike Goliat in the fifth, forcing a 1–1 tie
which held up through nine full innings. This set the stage for
Joe DiMaggio, leading off the tenth
inning for the Yankees. With one swing, DiMaggio smashed a home run
to left field to provide the difference in a 2–1 extra-inning win
for the Yankees as the series shifted to New York.
DiMaggio had a hand in holding the Phillies at bay long enough to
get his key at-bat. In the sixth inning, Ennis hit a deep fly to
center, but DiMaggio made a spectacular over-the-shoulder running
catch, near the 400 foot marker at the base of the scoreboard in
right-center. This play is far less well-known but was
similar-looking to the famous Willie Mays catch in the
1954 World Series.
Game 3
Friday,
October 6, 1950 at Yankee
Stadium
in Bronx, New York
Phils lefty
Ken Heintzelman started
the third game vs. Yankee stalwart
Eddie
Lopat. Heintzelman continued the Phils' great pitching,
carrying a 2–1 lead into the eighth inning, when he lost control
and walked the bases loaded. Konstanty relieved him and got
Bobby Brown to ground to shortstop
Granny Hamner, but Hamner misplayed
the ball to allow the tying run to score.
Russ Meyer came on for the Phillies in
the last of the ninth. After retiring the first two batters, Meyer
allowed consecutive singles to set the stage for
Jerry Coleman, who drove in the winning run
with a base hit to give the Yankees a 3–2 win.
In attendance at the game was
Grover Cleveland Alexander who
had led the Phillies to their previous pennant in 1915. It was his
first World Series game in twenty years. Ill from the effects of
long term alcohol abuse, Alexander was generally ignored. He would
be dead less than a month later on November 4, 1950 at age
63.
Game 4
Saturday,
October 7, 1950 at Yankee
Stadium
in Bronx, New York
Phillies starter
Bob Miller matched up
against rookie
Whitey Ford, making his
first
World Series appearance, as the
Yankees tried to wrap up the series in four straight. New York
scored two runs in the first inning, and with the help of
Yogi Berra's homer, three more in the sixth to
take a commanding 5–0 lead. With a 5–0 shutout, the first two Phils
reached base in the ninth, before Ford got the next two out.
Andy Seminick then flied to left, but
left fielder
Gene Woodling dropped
what looked like the series-ending out, allowing two runs to score.
Mike Goliat kept the inning going with a hit, and Stengel removed
Ford to bring in
Allie Reynolds.
Reynolds struck out pinch-hitter
Stan
Lopata, giving the Yanks a 5–2 win and the World Series
victory.
Composite box
1950 World Series
(4–0): New
York Yankees (A.L.) over
Philadelphia Phillies (N.L.)
Earned runs
- During the Series, the New York
Yankees pitching rotation only allowed three (3) earned runs
and finished the Fall Classic with a combined 0.73 ERA. The other
pitching staffs with a combined World
Series ERA less than 1.00:
References
Further reading
External links