The
World Series has been the annual championship
series of the highest level of professional baseball in the United
States
and Canada
since 1903,
concluding the postseason of Major League Baseball. Since
the Series takes place in October, sportswriters many years ago
dubbed the event the
Fall Classic; it is also
sometimes known as the
October Classic or simply
The Series. It is played between the
League Championship Series
winning clubs from MLB's two circuits, the
American and
National Leagues. The World Series has been
played every year since 1903 with the exception of
1904 (boycott) and
1994 (player strike). Though professional
baseball has employed various championship formulas since the
1860s, the term "World Series" is usually understood to refer
exclusively to the modern World Series.
Although the name "World series" might imply an international
competition, no international federation has ever sanctioned the
series as a world championship event. Nevertheless, as only a
handful of countries have national baseball leagues and,
historically, the best baseball players generally play for MLB
teams, the winners of the World Series are sometimes informally
referred to as "world champions" by fans, players, executives, and
the media within the United States and Canada.
The World Series championship is determined through a
best-of-seven playoff except for
1903,
1919,
1920 and
1921, when the winner was determined
through a
best-of-nine playoff.
The winning team is awarded the
Commissioner's Trophy and the
team presents its players and executives individual World Series
championship rings. The Series-winning club also receives a larger
proportion of the gate receipts from the series.
The
New York Yankees of the
American League have played in 40 of the 105 World Series and have
won 27 World Series championships, most of any Major League
franchise. From the National League, the
Dodgers have participated the most in
the Series with 18 appearances (9 each in Brooklyn and Los
Angeles), and have won the Series 6 times (once as Brooklyn, five
times as Los Angeles). The
St. Louis
Cardinals have represented the National League 17 times and
have won 10 championships, which is the second most of any Major
League Team. Presently, the
Chicago
Cubs have played the most seasons without winning the World
Series, with their last championship coming in 1908.
Precursors to the modern World Series (1857–1902)
The original World Series
Until the formation of the
American Association in
1882 as a second major league, the
National
Association of Professional Base Ball Players (1871-75) and
then the
National League (founded
1876) represented the top level of organized baseball in the United
States. All championships went to whoever had the best record at
the end of the season, without a postseason series being played.
Starting in 1884 and going through 1890, the National League and
the American Association faced each other in a series of games at
the end of the season to determine an overall champion. These
matchups were disorganized in comparison to the modern Series:
games played ranged from as few as three in
1884 to a high of 15 in 1887 (Detroit beat
St. Louis 10 games to 5), and both the
1885 and
1890 Series ended in ties, each team
having won three games with one tie game.
The series were promoted and referred to as the "The Championship
of the United States", "World's Championship Series", or "World's
Series" for short. As
baseball
outside of North America was not equal to that of North America
at the time, the winners of the championships were by default the
best baseball team in the world.
The 19th-century competitions are, however, not officially
recognized as part of World Series history by
Major League Baseball, as the
organization considers 19th-century baseball to be a prologue to
the modern baseball era. Until about 1960, some sources treated the
19th-century Series on an equal basis with the post-19th-century
series. After about 1930, however, many authorities list the start
of the World Series in 1903 and discuss the earlier contests
separately.(For example, the 1929
World Almanac and Book of
Facts lists "Baseball's World Championships 1884-1928" in
a single table, but the 1943 edition lists "Baseball World
Championships–1903-1942".)
According to baseball scholars cited in the
Public Broadcasting Service
television documentary
Baseball: A Film by Ken Burns,
players searched worldwide for teams to compete in "World Games" or
"World Series" during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Players and
promoters such as
Albert Spalding
would travel the world for teams to play against each other or
against American teams. The barn-storming "tours" didn't last long,
yet they gave the opportunity to promote sporting goods, as well as
to create new leagues and rules. Although the tours did not succeed
in spreading baseball to the rest of the world (or in creating
foreign teams that would be accepted into the existing annual
competition), the title "World Series" has remained.
1892–1900: "The Monopoly Years"
Following the collapse of the American Association after the 1891
season, four of its clubs were admitted to the National League. The
league championship was awarded in 1892 by a playoff between
half-season champions. This scheme was abandoned after one season.
Beginning in 1893 — and continuing until divisional play was
introduced in 1969 — the pennant was awarded to the first-place
club in the standings at the end of the season. For four seasons,
1894–97, the league champions played the runners-up in the post
season championship series called the
Temple
Cup. A second attempt at this format was the
Chronicle-Telegraph Cup series,
which was played only once, in 1900.
In
1901, the
American League was formed as a second major
league. No championship series were played in 1901 or 1902 as the
National and American Leagues fought each other for business
supremacy.
Modern World Series (1903–present)
First attempt
After two years of bitter competition and player raiding (in 1902,
the AL and NL champions even went so far as to challenge each other
to a
tournament in
football after the end of the baseball season), the
National and American Leagues made peace and, as part of the
accord, several pairs of teams squared off for interleague
exhibition games after the 1903 season. These series were arranged
by the participating clubs, as the 1880s World's Series matches had
been. One of them matched the two pennant winners,
Pittsburgh Pirates of the NL
and the Boston Americans (later known as the
Red Sox) of the AL; that one is known as the
1903 World Series. It had been
arranged well in advance by the two owners, as both teams were
league leaders by large margins. Boston upset Pittsburgh by 5 games
to 3, winning with pitching depth behind
Cy
Young and
Bill Dinneen and with the
support of the band of
Royal Rooters.
The Series brought much civic pride to Boston and proved the new
American League could beat the Nationals.
Boycott of 1904
The
1904 Series, if it had been
held, would have been between the AL's Boston Americans (Boston Red
Sox) and the NL's
New York
Giants (now the San Francisco Giants). At that point there was
no governing body for the World Series nor any requirement that a
Series be played. Thus the Giants' owner,
John T. Brush,
refused to allow his team to participate in such an event, citing
the "inferiority" of the upstart American League.
John McGraw, the Giants' manager,
even went so far as to say that his Giants were already "world
champions" since they were the champions of the "only real major
league". At the time of the announcement, their new cross-town
rivals, the
New York
Highlanders (now the NY Yankees), were leading the AL, and the
prospect of facing the Highlanders did not please Giants
management. Boston won on the last day of the season, and the
leagues had previously agreed to hold a World's Championship Series
in 1904, but it was not binding, and Brush stuck to his original
decision. In addition to political reasons, Brush also factually
cited the lack of rules under which money would be split, where
games would be played, and how they would be operated and
staffed.
During the winter of 1904–05, however, feeling the sting of press
criticism, Brush had a change of heart and proposed what came to be
known as the "Brush Rules," under which the series were played
subsequently. One rule was that player shares would come from a
portion of the gate receipts for the first four games only. This
was to discourage teams from "fixing" early games in order to
prolong the series and make more money. Receipts for later games
would be split among the two clubs and the National Commission, the
governing body for the sport, which was able to cover much of its
annual operating expense from World Series revenue. Most
importantly, the now-official and compulsory World's Series matches
were operated strictly by the National Commission itself, not by
the participating clubs.
With the new rules in place and the National Commission in control,
McGraw's
Giants decided
to show up for the
1905 Series,
and beat the
Philadelphia A's four
games to one. The Series was held in every subsequent season for 89
years.
The list of post-season rules evolved over time. In
1925, Brooklyn owner
Charles Ebbets convinced others to adopt as a
permanent rule the 2-3-2 pattern used in
1924. Prior to
1924, the pattern had been to alternate by
game or to make another arrangement convenient to both clubs.
1919: The fix
Gambling and game-fixing had been a problem in professional
baseball from the beginning; star pitcher
Jim
Devlin was banned for life in
1877, when the National League was just two
years old. Baseball's gambling problems came to a head in 1919,
when 8 players of the
Chicago White Sox conspired to
throw the
1919 World Series.
The
Sox had won the
Series in
1917 and were heavy
favorites to beat the
Cincinnati Reds in
1919, but first baseman
Chick Gandil had other plans. Gandil, in
collaboration with gambler Joseph "Sport" Sullivan, approached his
teammates and got six of them to agree to throw the Series:
starting pitchers
Eddie Cicotte and
Lefty Williams, shortstop
Swede Risberg, left fielder
Shoeless Joe Jackson, center fielder
Happy Felsch, and utility infielder
Fred McMullin. Third baseman
Buck Weaver knew of the fix but declined to
participate. The Sox, who were promised $100, 000 for cooperating,
proceeded to lose the Series in eight games, pitching poorly,
hitting poorly and making many errors. Though he took the money,
Jackson insisted to his death that he played to the best of his
ability in the series (he was the best hitter in the series, but
had markedly worse numbers in the games the White Sox lost).
During the Series, writer and humorist
Ring
Lardner had facetiously called the event the "World's Serious".
The Series turned out to indeed have serious consequences for the
sport. After rumors circulated for nearly a year, the players were
suspended in September 1920.
The "
Black Sox" were acquitted in a
criminal conspiracy trial. However, baseball in the meantime had
established the office of
Commissioner in an effort to
protect the game's integrity, and the first commissioner,
Kenesaw Mountain Landis, banned all
of the players involved, including Weaver, for life. The White Sox
would not win a World Series again until
2005.
The events of the 1919 Series, seguéing into the
"live ball" era, marked a point in time of
change of the fortunes of a number of teams. The two most prolific
World Series winners to date, the Yankees and the Cardinals, did
not win their first championship until the 1920s; and three of the
teams that were highly successful prior to 1920 (the Red Sox, White
Sox and Cubs) went the rest of the 20th century without another
World Series win. The Red Sox and White Sox finally won again in
2004 and 2005, respectively. The Cubs are still waiting for their
next trophy.
New York Yankees dynasty (1920–1964)
The New York Yankees signed
Babe Ruth from
the Boston Red Sox after the
1919 season, appeared in
their first
World Series two years
later in
1921, and
became frequent participants thereafter. Over a period of 45 years,
1920 to
1964, the Yankees played in the World
Series 29 times. This period reached its apex between
1949 and 1964, when the Yankees reached the
World Series 14 times in sixteen years (missing only
1954 and
1959), winning nine. From
1949 to
1953, the Yankees won the World Series five
years in a row; no other franchise has won more than three
consecutively.
1969: League Championship Series
Prior to 1969, the National League and the American League each
crowned its champion (the "pennant winner") based on the best
win-loss record at the end of the regular season.
A structured playoff series began in 1969, when both the National
and American Leagues were reorganized into two divisions each, East
and West. The two division winners within each league played each
other in a best-of-five
League Championship Series to
determine who would advance to the World Series. In 1985, the
format changed to best-of-seven.
The
National League
Championship Series (NLCS) and
American League Championship
Series (ALCS), since the expansion to best-of-seven, are always
played in a 2-3-2 format: Games 1, 2, 6 and 7 are played in the
stadium of the team that has home-field advantage, and Games 3, 4
and 5 are played in the stadium of the team that does not.
1971: World Series at night
MLB night games started being held in
1935 by the
Cincinnati Reds, but the World
Series remained a strictly daytime event for years thereafter. In
the final game of the
1949 World
Series, a Series game was finished under lights for the first
time. The first scheduled night World Series game was Game 4 of the
1971 World Series. Afterwards more
and more Series games were scheduled at night, when television
audiences were larger. Game 6 of the
1987 World Series was the last World
Series game played in the daytime.
1976: The Designated Hitter comes to the World Series
The National and American Leagues operated under essentially
identical rules until
1973, when
the American League adopted the
designated hitter rule, allowing its teams
to use another hitter to bat in place of the (usually) weak-hitting
pitcher. The National League did not adopt the DH rule. This
presented a problem for the World Series, whose two contestants
would now be playing their regular-season games under different
rules. From 1973 to
1975, the World
Series did not include a DH. Starting in
1976, the World Series allowed for the use
of a DH in even-numbered years only. Finally, in
1986, baseball adopted the current rule in
which the DH is used for World Series games played in the AL
champion's park but not the NL champion's. Thus, the DH rule's use
or non-use can help the team that has home-field advantage.
1989 earthquake
When the
1989 World Series began, it was
notable chiefly for being the first ever World Series matchup
between the two San Francisco Bay Area
teams, the San Francisco Giants and
Oakland
Athletics. Oakland won the first two games at home, and
the two teams crossed the bridge to San Francisco
to play Game 3 on Tuesday, October 17.
ABC's broadcast of Game 3 began at 5
p.m. local time, approximately 30 minutes before the first pitch
was scheduled.
At 5:04, while broadcasters Al Michaels and Tim
McCarver were narrating highlights and the teams were warming
up, the Loma Prieta
earthquake
occurred (magnitude 6.9 with an epicenter ten miles
(16 km) northeast of Santa Cruz, CA). The earthquake
caused substantial property and economic damage in the Bay Area and
killed 62 people.
Television viewers saw the video signal
deteriorate and heard Michaels say "I'll tell you what, we're
having an earth--" before the feed from Candlestick Park
was lost. Fans filing into the stadium saw
Candlestick sway visibly during the quake. Television coverage
later resumed, using backup generators, with Michaels becoming a
news reporter on the unfolding disaster. Approximately 30 minutes
after the earthquake, Commissioner
Fay
Vincent ordered the game to be postponed. Fans, workers, and
the teams evacuated a blacked out (although still sunlit)
Candlestick. Game 3 was finally played on October 27, and Oakland
won that day and the next to complete a four-game sweep.
1994: League Division Series
In 1994, each league was restructured into three divisions, with
the three division winners and the newly introduced wild card
winner advancing to a best-of-five playoff round (the "
division series"), the
National League Division
Series (NLDS) and
American League Division
Series (ALDS). The team with the best league record is matched
against the wild card team, unless they are in the same division,
in which case, the team with the second-best record plays against
the wild card winner. The remaining two division winners are pitted
against each other. The winners of the series in the first round
advance to the best-of-seven NLCS and ALCS. Due to a players'
strike, however, the inaugural NLDS and ALDS were not played until
1995. Home field advantage is given to the team with the better
regular season record, with the exception that the Wild Card team
cannot get home-field advantage.
1994–95 strike
After the
boycott of 1904, the World Series
was played every year until 1994
despite World War I, the global influenza pandemic of 1918–19, the
Great Depression of the 1930s,
America's involvement in World War II,
and even an earthquake
in the host cities of the 1989 World Series. A breakdown in
collective bargaining led to a strike in August 1994 and the
eventual cancellation of the rest of the season, including the
playoffs.
As the labor talks began, baseball franchise owners demanded a
salary cap in order to limit payrolls,
the elimination of salary
arbitration,
and the right to retain free agent players by matching a
competitor's best offer. The
Major League Baseball
Players Association refused to agree to limit payrolls, noting
that the responsibility for high payrolls lay with those owners who
were voluntarily offering contracts. One difficulty in reaching a
settlement was the absence of a
commissioner. When
Fay Vincent was forced to resign in 1992, owners
did not replace him, electing instead to make
Milwaukee Brewers owner
Bud Selig acting commissioner. Thus the
commissioner, responsible for ensuring the integrity and protecting
the welfare of the game, was an interested party rather than a
neutral arbiter, and baseball headed into the
1994 work
stoppage without an independent commissioner for the first time
since the office was founded in
1920.
The previous collective bargaining agreement expired on Dec. 31,
1993, and baseball began the 1994 season without a new agreement.
Owners and players negotiated as the season progressed, but owners
refused to give up the idea of a salary cap and players refused to
accept one. On August 12, 1994, the players went on strike. After a
month passed with no progress in the labor talks, Selig cancelled
the rest of the
1994 season and the
postseason on Sept. 14. The
World
Series was not played for the first time in 90 years. The
Montreal Expos were the best team in
baseball at the time of the stoppage, with a record of 74-40.
(Since their founding in 1969, the Expos, now the
Washington Nationals, have never played
in a World Series.)
The labor dispute lasted into the spring of 1995, with owners
beginning
spring training with
replacement players. However, the MLBPA returned to work on April
2, 1995 after a federal judge,
Sonia
Sotomayor, ruled that the owners had engaged in unfair labor
practices. The season started on April 25 and the
1995 World Series was played as scheduled,
with Atlanta beating Cleveland four games to two.
2003: All-Star Game used to determine home-field advantage
Prior to 2003,
home-field
advantage in the World Series alternated from year to year
between the NL and AL. After the
2002 Major League
Baseball All-Star Game ended in a tie, MLB decided to award
home-field advantage in the World Series to the winner of the
All-Star Game. (It is unclear who would receive home-field
advantage if the All-Star Game ends in a tie or if the All-Star
Game is rained out.) Originally implemented as a two-year trial
from 2003 to 2004, the practice has been extended indefinitely. The
American League has won every All-Star Game since this change and
thus has enjoyed home-field advantage since 2002, when it also had
home-field advantage based on the alternating schedule. The
decision has upset some purists (and National League fans).
Subsequently, the AL has won the Series four times, and the NL has
won three times; no series has gone seven games.
Modern World Series appearances by franchise
World Series record by team or franchise, 1903-2009
| Team † |
Titles |
Last |
Series |
Last |
| New York Yankees
[Highlanders] (AL) |
27 |
2009 |
40 |
2009 |
| St. Louis
Cardinals (NL) |
10 |
2006 |
17 |
2006 |
| [Philadelphia/Kansas City]
Oakland Athletics (AL) |
9 |
1989 |
14 |
1990 |
| Boston Red Sox
[Americans] (AL) |
7 |
2007 |
11 |
2007 |
| [Brooklyn] Los Angeles Dodgers (NL) ‡ |
6 |
1988 |
18 |
1988 |
| Cincinnati
Reds (NL) |
5 |
1990 |
9 |
1990 |
| Pittsburgh
Pirates (NL) |
5 |
1979 |
7 |
1979 |
| [New York] San Francisco Giants (NL) |
5 |
1954 |
17 |
2002 |
| Detroit Tigers
(AL) |
4 |
1984 |
10 |
2006 |
| Chicago White
Sox (AL) |
3 |
2005 |
5 |
2005 |
| [Boston/Milwaukee] Atlanta Braves (NL) |
3 |
1995 |
9 |
1999 |
| [Washington Senators] Minnesota Twins (AL) |
3 |
1991 |
6 |
1991 |
| [St. Louis Browns] Baltimore Orioles (AL) |
3 |
1983 |
7 |
1983 |
| Philadelphia Phillies (NL) |
2 |
2008 |
7 |
2009 |
| Cleveland
Indians (AL) |
2 |
1948 |
5 |
1997 |
| Chicago Cubs
(NL) |
2 |
1908 |
10 |
1945 |
| Florida
Marlins (NL,1993) * |
2 |
2003 |
2 |
2003 |
| Toronto Blue
Jays (AL,1977) * |
2 |
1993 |
2 |
1993 |
| New York Mets
(NL,1962) * |
2 |
1986 |
4 |
2000 |
| Kansas City
Royals (AL, 1969) * |
1 |
1985 |
2 |
1985 |
Los
Angeles Angels of Anaheim (AL, 1961) *
[Los Angeles/California/Anaheim Angels]
|
1 |
2002 |
1 |
2002 |
| Arizona
Diamondbacks (NL, 1998) * |
1 |
2001 |
1 |
2001 |
| San Diego
Padres (NL, 1969) * |
0 |
|
2 |
1998 |
| Houston Astros
[Colt .45's] (NL,1962) * |
0 |
|
1 |
2005 |
| Colorado
Rockies (NL,1993) * |
0 |
|
1 |
2007 |
| [Seattle Pilots] Milwaukee Brewers (AL 1969; NL 1998)
* |
0 |
|
1 |
1982 |
| Tampa Bay Rays
[Devil Rays] (AL,1998) * |
0 |
|
1 |
2008 |
| [Washington Senators] Texas Rangers (AL,1961) * |
0 |
|
0 |
|
| [Montreal Expos] Washington Nationals (NL,1969) * |
0 |
|
0 |
|
| Seattle
Mariners (AL,1977) * |
0 |
|
0 |
|
|
Notes
American League (AL) teams have won
62 of the
105
World Series played so far (62–43 or 59%–41%). Of that number, the
New York Yankees have won
27, accounting for about 25% of all the
series played and about 44% of the 62 wins by American League
teams. The
St. Louis Cardinals
have won
10 World Series, or about 10% of
all victories and about 23% of the 43 National League
victories.
By the first World Series in 1903, eight teams belonged to the
American League (founded in
1901),
and another eight to the National League (or "Senior Circuit",
founded in
1876). Each of the 16
original teams has now won at least two Series.
No new team joined either league until
1961. Out of the 14 "
expansion teams" which have joined since
then, 11 have reached the World Series so far, while 18 out of the
47 Series (and 94 pennants) after 1960 have included an expansion
team, always playing against one of the original 16 teams.
Expansion teams won 9 of those 18 Series.
Team patterns in the World Series
This information is up to date through the
2009 World Series:
Streaks and droughts
- Since their first championship in 1923, the New York Yankees have won two or more World
Series titles in every decade except the 1980s, when they won none.
Additionally, they have won at least one American League pennant in
every decade since the 1920s. The Yankees are the only team in
either League to win more than three series in a row, winning in
four consecutive seasons from 1936-39, and five consecutive seasons
from 1949-53.
- The New York Giants' four
World Series appearances from 1921 to 1924 are the most consecutive
appearances for any National League franchise.
- The 1907–1908 Cubs, 1921–1922
Giants and 1975–1976 Reds are the only National League
teams to win back-to-back World Series.
- The 1907–1909 Detroit Tigers and
the 1911–1913 New York Giants
are the only teams to lose three consecutive World Series.
- The Chicago Cubs hold the record
for the longest World Series drought (still active through 2009),
with their last title coming in 1908 (101 years). In fact, they also hold
the longest drought without a World Series appearance, not having
won the NL pennant since 1945. Even
had they won the 1945 World
Series, they would still hold the longest active World Series
championship drought, the second longest being since 1948 by the
Cleveland Indians.
- Twenty-two of the 27 teams to play in the World Series have won
it at least once. The only exceptions are: Houston Astros (formerly Colt .45s,
enfranchised in 1962), Milwaukee
Brewers (formerly Seattle Pilots, 1969), San Diego Padres (1969), Colorado Rockies (1993), and Tampa Bay Rays (formerly Devil Rays, 1998).
The Padres are the only one of these five to have appeared twice
(1984, 1998).
- As of 2009, only three teams (all of them expansion) have not
won a pennant: the Texas
Rangers (formerly Washington Senators, est. 1961), Washington Nationals (formerly Montreal
Expos, est. 1969), and Seattle
Mariners (est. 1977). However, all three teams have
participated in post season play, either in the Division Series or
League Championship Series.
Game-by-game
- Game 7 has been won by the home team in the last 8 world series
(the 1982 St. Louis Cardinals,
1985 Kansas City Royals, 1986 New York Mets, 1987 and 1991 Minnesota
Twins, 1997 Florida Marlins, 2001 Arizona Diamondbacks, and 2002 Anaheim Angels). The 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates are the
last team to win a World Series Game 7 on the road. The recent
trend suggests the theoretical advantage to gaining Game 7
at home by winning the All-Star Game. This trend contradicts the
previous historical trend in which Game 7 had been most often won
by the road team: Not just 1979, but also 1975, 1972, 1971, 1968, 1967, 1965 and 1962. During the 1960s and 1970s, the home
team had won Game 7 only in 1960,
1964, and 1973. However, no Series has extended to
Game 7 since the All-Star Game rule took effect in 2003.
- The 1981 Los Angeles Dodgers are the
last team to win a World Series after losing the first two games on
the road. The recent tendency of a team winning the first two games
at home and then winning the Series suggests the
theoretical advantage to gaining home-field advantage (and
the first two games at home) by winning the All-Star Game.
- The Pittsburgh Pirates have won all five of their World Series
championships in seven games.
- There have been eighteen World Series 4-game sweeps. Nine
different teams have swept a World Series at least once, the
Yankees having the most overall
(8). The Red Sox and Reds both have done it twice. The Braves, Orioles, White Sox, Dodgers, Athletics and Giants have each swept one. Six of
these have also been swept in a World Series at least once, except
the Orioles, Red Sox and White Sox. The Red Sox' two World Series
sweeps are the most of any team that has never been swept in
one.
- The Athletics, Cardinals,
Cubs, Tigers and Yankees are the only teams to be
swept twice in a World Series. The Athletics and Yankees are the
only two of these with at least one World Series sweep to their
credit, the other three being among nine teams overall that have
never swept a World Series, but have been swept in one (the
Astros, Cardinals, Indians, Padres, Phillies, Pirates, and Rockies being the others).
- The Cubs in 1907 and the Giants in 1922 won 4 games to 0, but each of those
Series' included a tied game and are not considered to be true
sweeps. In 1907, the first game was the tie and the Cubs won four
straight after that. In 1922, Game
2 was the tie.
- The Cincinnati Reds
are the only National League team which has swept a World Series
since 1963, sweeping the series in
1976 and 1990.
- Nine World Series have ended with "walkoff" hits, i.e., that
game and the Series ended when the home team won with a base hit in
the bottom of the ninth or in extra innings. (Also, the 1912 World Series ended in a walkoff
sacrifice fly.) The first walkoff
Series winner came in the 1924 World
Series, when Earl McNeely doubled
home Muddy Ruel in the bottom of the 12th
inning of Game 7 to win a championship for the Washington Senators.
The most recent walkoff Series winner was the 2001 World Series, which ended with
Luis Gonzalez blooping a
single over the head of Derek Jeter to
score Jay Bell. Two men have ended a World
Series with a walk-off home run:
Bill Mazeroski in 1960 and Joe Carter in 1993. Mazeroski's was a solo shot
in the bottom of the ninth of Game 7 to win a championship for the
Pittsburgh Pirates, while
Carter's was a three-run shot in Game 6 that won a championship for
the Toronto Blue Jays.
- The Philadelphia
Phillies and the Tampa
Bay Rays are the first teams to have an elimination game (or
any game) be suspended because of weather, and not have it
cancelled. Game 5 (in Philadelphia) was suspended Monday, October
27, 2008 with a 2-2 score, and resumed in the bottom of the sixth
on October 29.
Local rivalries
When two teams share the same state or city, fans often develop
strong loyalties to one and antipathies towards the other,
sometimes building on already-existing rivalries between cities or
neighborhoods. Before the introduction of
interleague play in 1997, the only
opportunity for two teams in different leagues to face each other
(and for their fans to compare them) in officially-recorded
competition would have been in a World Series.
Cross-town and trans-Bay Series
Fourteen "
Subway Series" have been
played entirely within New York City. Thirteen matched the American
League's
New York Yankees with
either the
New York Giants or
Brooklyn Dodgers (NL) before
those franchises moved to California in 1958. The fourteenth Subway
Series, between the
Yankees and
New York Mets, took place in
2000.
No subway, in fact,
was necessary to travel between fields of the first two "Subway
Series" in 1921 and 1922, since the opposing Yankees and
Giants shared the Polo
Grounds
as their home park.
Only one
other Series has been played entirely on one field: the 1944 World Series, where the St. Louis Cardinals (NL)
defeated the St. Louis
Browns in six games, all held in their shared home at Sportsman's
Park
.
The only city besides New York and St Louis to host an entire World
Series is Chicago in
1906, when
the
Chicago White Sox
(AL) beat the
Chicago Cubs
in six games.
The
1989 World Series, sometimes
called the "Bay Bridge
Series" or the "BART Series" (after the connecting
transit line), featured two teams from the San Francisco
Bay Area
. The Oakland
Athletics (A's) defeated the San Francisco Giants (NL) in a
four-game sweep, after the series had been interrupted just before
the start of Game 3 by an earthquake
which
severed the bridge and halted play for ten days.
Other cross-town rivalries
For the other two cities where a cross-town competition, connected
by local transit, was once possible — Boston (till 1953 when the
Braves moved to Milwaukee) and Philadelphia (till 1955 when the
Athletics moved to Kansas City) — an October meeting came closest
to occurring in
1948, when the
Boston Braves won the
National League pennant, and their nearby rivals, the
Boston Red Sox, tied for the
American League pennant on the last day of the
season. However, the
Cleveland Indians
defeated the Red Sox in a
one-game
playoff, and then defeated the Braves in the Series.
An opportunity for an all-Boston contest between league champions
was missed in 1891, when the Braves, then the Boston Beaneaters, of
the
National League declined to play
the
Boston Reds of the soon-to-dissolve
American
Association. The only cross-town series before the modern World
Series era occurred in 1889, when the National League's champion,
the
New York Giants defeated the
American Association's champion, the
Brooklyn Bridegrooms (later the
Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers of the National League).
Other cross-state and trans-Canada rivalries
The historic rivalry between
Northern and
Southern California added to the
interest in the Oakland Athletics-
Los Angeles Dodgers series in
1974 and
1988 and in the San Francisco Giants'
series against the then-
Anaheim
Angels in
2002. (The two Los
Angeles area teams have never competed in a Series, nor has the
only team in San Diego, the
Padres,
ever played a Series against another California team.)
Other
than the St. Louis World Series of 1944, the only postseason
tournament entirely within Missouri
was the I-70
Series in 1985 (named for the interstate highway connecting the two cities)
between the St. Louis Cardinals
and the Kansas City Royals, who
won at home in the seventh game.
While the
Philadelphia
Athletics never played in World Series against either the
Philadelphia Phillies or the
Pittsburgh Pirates, they did
engage in a popular semi-annual tradition of preseason
City Series exhibition games against the
Phillies.
In the only other states that also have or once had teams in both
major leagues since 1903, there has never been a World Series
between teams in Ohio (
Cincinnati
Reds and
Cleveland Indians),
Florida (
Florida Marlins and
Tampa Bay Rays), or Texas (
Houston Astros and
Texas Rangers).
In Canada, the
Toronto Blue Jays
never played a World Series with the then-
Montreal Expos before the Expos left Canada
in 2005 to become the Washington Nationals. Before the Expos'
departure, they and the Blue Jays had won an equal number of
contests for the all-Canada
Pearson
Cup.
The original sixteen teams
At the time the first modern World Series began in 1903, each
league had eight clubs, all of which survive today (although
sometimes in a different city or with a new nickname), comprising
the "original sixteen".
- Every original team has won at least two World Series titles.
The Philadelphia Phillies
(National League) were the last of the original teams to win their
first Series, in 1980. They were
also the last to win at least two, with their second Series victory
in 2008.
- The last original American League team to win its first World
Series was the Baltimore Orioles
(former St. Louis Browns), winning
in 1966.
- The Orioles were also the last original team in the majors to
make their first World Series appearance, as the St. Louis Browns
in 1944. Although they never won
another American League pennant while in St. Louis, they have won
three World Series in six appearances since moving to Baltimore.
The last original National League team to make their modern World
Series début were the St. Louis
Cardinals in 1926, which they
also won. Ironically, as noted above, they have gone on to win more
World Series than any other National League club, holding the lead
at 10 victories through 2009.
- The New York Yankees have defeated all eight original NL teams
in a World Series. Conversely, they have lost at least one World
Series to every original NL team except the Chicago Cubs and the Philadelphia Phillies. The Boston Red Sox have played at least one
Series against every original National League team except
the (Boston, Milwaukee and Atlanta) Braves, with whom they shared a home city
through 1953.
- The St. Louis Cardinals are currently the only club of the
National League's original eight that holds an overall Series lead
over the Yankees, 3 to 2, taking that lead in 1964. The Giants won
their first two Series over the Yankees (1921 and 1922), but the
Yankees have faced the Giants five times since then and have won
all five, taking the overall lead over the Giants in 1937. The
Pittsburgh Pirates and Yankees have faced each other twice (1927
and 1960), with the Yankees winning in 1927 and the Pirates winning
in 1960, making the two teams .500 against each other.
Expansion teams (after 1960)
- The 2001 Arizona Diamondbacks were the fastest
expansion franchise ever to win a pennant (4th season) and a World
Series (4th season), after being founded in 1998. Second fastest
were the 1997 Florida Marlins, after being founded in 1993
(5th season). The fastest AL expansion franchise to win a pennant
were the Tampa Bay Rays in 2008 (11th
season) and the fastest AL expansion franchise to win a World
Series were the Toronto Blue Jays
in 1992 (16th season).
- While the New York Mets (NL) were
the first expansion team to win or appear in the World Series
(1969), the American League would have to wait until 1980 for its first expansion-team World
Series appearance, and until 1985
for its first expansion-team win. Both were by the Kansas City Royals. The AL also had two
expansion teams appear in the World Series (the Milwaukee Brewers being the second, in
1982) before the National League's
second expansion team to appear—the San
Diego Padres in 1984.
- No two out of the fourteen post-1960 expansion teams have yet
met each other in a World Series, although eleven expansion teams
have now contested at least one Series (each time against one of
the sixteen teams established by 1903). Expansion teams are 9–9 in
the World Series, with three teams (the New York Mets, Toronto Blue Jays and Florida Marlins) each winning two. Five
expansion teams have appeared in the World Series without ever
winning a championship: Houston
Astros (formerly Colt .45s), Milwaukee Brewers (formerly Seattle
Pilots), San Diego Padres, Colorado Rockies, and Tampa Bay Rays (formerly Devil Rays). Three
expansion teams have not yet won a league pennant (and therefore
also have not appeared in a World Series): the Texas Rangers (formerly the last
Washington Senators), Seattle
Mariners, and Washington
Nationals (formerly Montreal Expos).
- The Florida Marlins are the only
MLB team that has won the World Series in every post-season
appearance (1997 and 2003).
Other notes
- The team with the better regular-season winning percentage has
won the World Series 51 times, or 49% (51 of 104) of the time.
- The
Toronto Blue Jays are the only
non-U.S.
team to ever win a pennant or a World Series, doing
both twice, in 1992 and 1993.
- The Chicago Cubs are the only team
with a title to have never clinched one at home.
International participation
In spite of its name, the World Series remains solely the
championship of the major-league baseball teams in the United
States and Canada, although MLB, its players, and the media
sometimes informally refer to World Series winners as "world
champions" of baseball.
The United States, Canada
and Mexico
(Liga Méxicana de
Béisbol, established 1925) were the only professional
baseball countries until a few decades into the 20th
century. The first
Japanese professional
baseball efforts began in
1920.
The current Japanese leagues date from the late 1940s (after World
War II). Various Latin American leagues also formed around that
time.
By the 1990s, baseball was played at a highly-skilled level in many
countries, giving a strong international flavor to the Series. Many
of the best players from Latin America, the Caribbean, the
Pacific Rim, and elsewhere now play on Major
League rosters. The notable exceptions are Cuban citizens, because
of the
political tensions
between the USA and Cuba since 1959 (however, a number of
Cuba's finest ballplayers have still managed to defect to the
United States over the past half-century to play in the American
professional leagues). Players from the Japanese Leagues also have
a more difficult time coming to the Major Leagues because they must
first play 10 years in Japan before becoming free agents, although
they may be
posted by their Japanese
teams for bids from MLB teams before 10 years of service. Reaching
the high-income Major Leagues tends to be the goal of many of the
best players around the world.
Image gallery
Image:WorldSeries1903-640.jpg|Rooftop view of a 1903 World
Series game in BostonImage:West Side Park 1906 World
Series.JPG|Game action in the 1906 Series in Chicago (the only
all-Chicago World Series to
date)Image:Wamby19201010UATP.JPG|Bill
Wambsganss completes his unassisted triple play in
1920Image:1924worldseries.jpg|Washington's Bucky Harris scores his home run in the fourth
inning of Game 7 (October 10, 1924)Image:The Catch.png|Willie Mays' catch in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series
See also
References
- World Series by franchise
- List of World Series at Baseball Reference
- Abrams, Roger. The First World Series and the Baseball
Fanatics of 1903. Northeastern, 2003, ISBN 978-1555535612,
page 50
- World Series Summary, Major League Baseball
website, accessed 24 October, 2006
- for example, Ernest Lanigan's Baseball Cyclopedia
from 1922, and Turkin and Thompson's Encyclopedia of
Baseball series throughout the 1950s.
- The Sporting News Record Book, which
began publishing in the 1930s, listed only the modern Series, but
also included regular-season achievements for all the 19th century
leagues. Also, a paperback from 1961 called World Series
Encyclopedia, edited by Don Schiffer, mentioned the 1880s and
1890s Series in the introduction but otherwise left them out of the
discussion.
- page 776 of the facsimile edition, published by the American
Heritage Press and Workman Publishing, 1971, ISBN
0-07071-881-4
- page 677. The World Almanac has also long since
modified that list's heading to read simply "World Series
Results".
- "Baseball: A Film by Ken Burns" PBS 1994
- Abrams, pages 50-51
- Temple Cup at Baseball Library
- New York Times, 13 November 1897
- Abrams, pages 51
- Abrams, pages 52-54
- The Sporting News
- Berry Tramel, The Oklahoman, April 15,
2009]
- World Series ended with walkoff hits
- Game 8 play by play, 1912 World Series
- Frank Thomas in the
Chicago White Sox victory
celebration in 2005 exclaimed "We're world's champions,
baby!" At the close of the 2006 Series, Baseball Commissioner
Bud Selig called the
St. Louis Cardinals
"champions of the world." Likewise, the cover of Sports
Illustrated magazine for November 6, 2006, featured
Series MVP David Eckstein and was
subtitled "World Champions." Immediately after the final putout of
the 2008
World Series, FOX Sports TV play-by-play broadcaster
Joe Buck commented
that "Phillies are world
champions."
Source books
- Ernest Lanigan, Baseball
Cyclopedia, 1922, originally published by Baseball
Magazine, available as a reprint from McFarland.
- Jordan A. Deutsch, Richard M.
Cohen, David
Neft, Roland T. Johnson, The Scrapbook History of
Baseball, 1975, Bobbs-Merrill
Company.
- Sporting News,
Baseball Record Book and Baseball Guide,
published annually since ca. 1941.
Other sources
External links