1976 World Series

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1976 World Series
Image:World Series Logo 1976.png
Team / Wins Manager Season
Cincinnati Reds (4) Sparky Anderson 102-60, .630
New York Yankees (0) Billy Martin 97-62, .610
Dates: October 16October 21
MVP:Johnny Bench
Television: NBC
TV announcers: Joe Garagiola, Sr., Tony Kubek, Phil Rizzuto, Marty Brennaman
Radio network: CBS
radio announcers: Bill White, Marty Brennaman and Bill Sorrell
Umpires: Lee Weyer (NL), Lou DiMuro (AL), Billy Williams (NL), Bill Deegan (AL), Bruce Froemming (NL), Dave Phillips (AL)
Future Hall of Famers: Reds: Sparky Anderson (mgr.), Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan, Tony Perez.
Yankees: Catfish Hunter.
ALCS: New York Yankees over Kansas City Royals (3-2)
NLCS: Cincinnati Reds over Philadelphia Phillies (3-0)
World Series Program

The 1976 World Series matched the defending champion Cincinnati Reds of the National League against the New York Yankees of the American League, with the Reds sweeping the Series to repeat.

The Cincinnati Reds won the National League West division by 10 games over the Los Angeles Dodgers then defeated the Philadelphia Phillies, three games to none, in the National League Championship Series. The New York Yankees won the American League East division by 10 ½ games over the Baltimore Orioles then defeated the Kansas City Royals, three games to two, in the American League Championship Series.

Contents

[edit] Background

After spending the last two years sharing home field with the New York Mets at Shea Stadium, the New York Yankees returned home to a re-built Yankee stadium. George Steinbrenner will now have owned the team for 3 years, since 1973, with Billy Martin serving the first of his five stints as manager since 1975. General Manager Gabe Paul made numerous trades getting Mickey Rivers and Ed Figueroa from the Angels for Bobby Bonds; Willie Randolph and Dock Ellis from the Pirates for Doc Medich; and Doyle Alexander, Ken Holtzman, and Grant Jackson from the Orioles for Rudy May, Tippy Martinez, Scott McGregor, and Rick Dempsey.

The heart of the team was Yankee captain, Thurman Munson, whose grit and determination were factors in his winning the MVP award in the American League. Third baseman, Graig Nettles, and first baseman, Chris Chambliss were the key run producers, while speedy outfielders Roy White and Rivers set the table for the power hitters. Super free agent Catfish Hunter headed the staff while reliever Sparky Lyle led the A.L. in saves with 23. The Yankees finished 10 ½ ahead in the A.L. East advancing to the World Series by beating the Kansas City Royals in the 5th game of the playoffs on a ninth-inning walk-off home run by Chambliss.

The defending champion, Cincinnati Reds were piloted by Sparky Anderson who had a solid lineup from top to bottom led by two-time MVP, second baseman Joe Morgan while catcher Johnny Bench, first baseman Tony Perez, and outfielder George Foster provided enough power to drive in sparkplugs, Pete Rose, and Ken Griffey. This was the first World Series to utilize the designated hitter. Dan Driessen was the primary DH for the Reds while the Yankees interchanged Lou Piniella, Carlos May, and Elliott Maddox.

The Reds relied on left-handers Don Gullett and Fred Norman to pacify the Yankee hitters in games one and two, respectively. Gullett had come back from a mid-season injury to start game one but had to leave the game in the 8th inning due to a twisted ankle while Norman out-pitched ace Hunter in game two. Game three in New York pitted effective Pat Zachary for the Reds against newly acquired Yankee, Dock Ellis. Ellis would last only 3 1/3 innings, taken out in the 4th after a homer by Driessen. Game four was delayed a day due to rain but the Reds were ready for the sweep. Four Cincinnati runs in the ninth blew open the game, triggering Billy Martin to lose his cool causing his ejection from the game.

The Cincinnati Reds outscored the New York Yankees 22 to 8 and became the first N.L. team to repeat as World Champions since the 1921-1922 New York Giants. Bench would claim the MVP of the series hitting .533 with 3 home runs and 6 runs batted in. Honorable mention goes to Thurman Munson who had 9 hits and a .529 batting average.

[edit] Summary

NL Cincinnati Reds (4) vs. AL New York Yankees (0)
Game Road Home Score Date Location Attendance Time of Game
1 Yankees Reds 5 - 1 Sat. Oct. 16 (D)Riverfront Stadium 54,826 2:10
2 Yankees Reds 4 - 3 Sun. Oct. 17 (N)Riverfront Stadium 54,816 2:33
3 Reds Yankees 6 - 2 Tue. Oct. 19 (N)Yankee Stadium 56,667 2:40
4 Reds Yankees 7 - 2 Thu. Oct. 21 (N)Yankee Stadium 56,700 2:36

[edit] Matchups

[edit] Game 1

October 16, 1976 at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio

                                 1  2  3    4  5  6    7  8  9     R  H  E
                                 -  -  -    -  -  -    -  -  -     -  -  -
    New York Yankees             0  1  0    0  0  0    0  0  0     1  5  1
    Cincinnati Reds              1  0  1    0  0  1    2  0  X     5 10  1

    PITCHERS: NYY - Alexander, Lyle (7)
              CIN - Gullett, Borbon (8)

               WP - Gullett
 	      LP - Alexander
             SAVE - none

   HOME RUNS: NYY - none
              CIN - Morgan

  ATTENDANCE: 54,826

Joe Morgan got the Reds off to a booming start with a solo home run off Doyle Alexander. (Alexander had to start because Catfish Hunter had a sore arm and needed another day of rest). Tony Perez had RBI's in the third and sixth innings and Johnny Bench had an RBI triple and then scored on a Sparky Lyle wild pitch in the seventh. The only bad news for the Reds was an injury to starting pitcher Don Gullett, who pulled a calf muscle in the eighth and would be unavailable for the remainder of the Series.

[edit] Game 2

October 17, 1976 at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio

                                 1  2  3    4  5  6    7  8  9     R  H  E
                                 -  -  -    -  -  -    -  -  -     -  -  -
    New York Yankees             0  0  0    1  0  0    2  0  0     3  9  1
    Cincinnati Reds              0  3  0    0  0  0    0  0  1     4 10  0

    PITCHERS: NYY - Hunter
              CIN - Norman, Billingham (7)

               WP - Billingham
 	      LP - Hunter
             SAVE - none

   HOME RUNS: NYY - none
              CIN - none

  ATTENDANCE: 54,816

The Reds rallied for three runs in the second off a rested Catfish Hunter on RBI singles by George Foster and Dave Concepcion and a sacrifice fly by Pete Rose. The Yankees got on the board on an RBI single by Graig Nettles in the fourth. In the seventh, the Yankees tied things up on an RBI double by Fred Stanley and an RBI groundout by Thurman Munson. Meanwhile, Hunter settled into a groove, shutting out the Reds until the ninth. With two outs, Ken Griffey reached second when Stanley threw wildly past first after fielding his slow bouncer. Joe Morgan was walked intentionally and Tony Perez ended the game by driving in Griffey with a single.

The Sunday night contest was the first weekend World Series game to start after dark. MLB commissioner Bowie Kuhn responded to criticism of the scheduling, which was done to accommodate network television, by attending the game without an overcoat despite bitterly cold nighttime weather.

[edit] Game 3

October 19, 1976 at Yankee Stadium in New York, New York

                                 1  2  3    4  5  6    7  8  9     R  H  E
                                 -  -  -    -  -  -    -  -  -     -  -  -
    Cincinnati Reds              0  3  0    1  0  0    0  2  0     6 13  2
    New York Yankees             0  0  0    1  0  0    1  0  0     2  8  0

    PITCHERS: CIN - Zachry, McEnaney (7)
              NYY - Ellis, Jackson (4), Tidrow (8)

               WP - Zachry
	       LP - Ellis
             SAVE - McEnaney

   HOME RUNS: CIN - Driessen
              NYY - Mason

  ATTENDANCE: 56,667

As the Series moved to Yankee Stadium, the Reds struck first with three runs off starter Dock Ellis. An RBI double by George Foster, RBI force-out by Cesar Geronimo, and an RBI single by Dave Concepcion provided the tallies. Dan Driessen smacked a solo homer in the fourth, and Joe Morgan had an RBI double and Foster an RBI single in the eighth. Yankee backup shortstop Jim Mason entered the game as a defensive replacement in the seventh and hit a solo homer, thus becoming the first player to hit a home run in his first and only World Series at-bat (the second being Geoff Blum). Also, in the seventh, Yankee left-handed reliever Grant Jackson provided a defensive gem by catching a hard-hit ground ball off the bat of Johnny Bench behind his back and retiring Bench, thereby robbing him of a base hit.

[edit] Game 4

October 21, 1976 at Yankee Stadium in New York, New York

                                 1  2  3    4  5  6    7  8  9     R  H  E
                                 -  -  -    -  -  -    -  -  -     -  -  -
    Cincinnati Reds              0  0  0    3  0  0    0  0  4     7  9  2
    New York Yankees             1  0  0    0  1  0    0  0  0     2  8  0

    PITCHERS: CIN - Nolan, McEnaney (7)
              NYY - Figueroa, Tidrow (9), Lyle (9)

               WP - Nolan
	       LP - Figueroa
             SAVE - McEnaney

   HOME RUNS: CIN - Bench (2)
  ATTENDANCE: 56,700

The Yankees got on the board in the first (which would be their only lead in this Series) on a Thurman Munson single and a Chris Chambliss double. Munson would collect four hits in the game. In the fourth, Joe Morgan singled, stole second, and came home on a George Foster single. Johnny Bench followed with his first home run to give the Reds a 3-1 lead that they never relinquished. Bench would later add to his heroics with a three-run shot in the ninth, followed by consecutive doubles by Cesar Geronimo and Dave Concepcion. Bench's performance earned him the Series MVP, while fellow catcher Munson had a fine Series himself with nine hits and a .529 average.

[edit] Composite Box

1976 World Series (4-0): Cincinnati Reds (N.L.) over New York Yankees (A.L.)

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Cincinnati Reds 161 401 225 22425
New York Yankees 110 210 300 8302
Total Attendance: 223,009   Average Attendance: 55,752
Winning Player’s Share: – $26,366,   Losing Player’s Share – $19,935 * Includes Playoffs and World Series

[edit] Quote(s)

This could be it, George Foster, Geromino, Foster makes the catch, that's it the Cincinnati Reds win the World Series in 4 straight, it was a sweep, the final score Cincinnati 7, the New York Yankees 2! - NBC's Joe Garagiola calling the final out of the 1976 World Series.
I got news for ya, Sugar Bear. We are going to be World Champions again. We are now going to be World Champions again! - Sparky Anderson to Alex Grammas after Johnny Bench's second Game 4 homer.
It got late real early. - Yogi Berra

[edit] Trivia

  • The Cincinnati Reds became the only team to sweep an entire multi-tier postseason. No other team in history has swept both the playoffs and the world series.
  • Yankee's backup shortstop Jim Mason entered the third game as a defensive replacement in the 5th inning and homered in his turn at bat in the 7th. It was the only homer of the series for the Yankees and the only WS at bat of Mason's career thus making him the first, and still only man to hit a home run in his lone career Series at-bat.
  • The 1975-76 Reds were the first (and through 2007, the only) National League team to repeat since the 1921-22 New York Giants. The 1907-08 Chicago Cubs are the only other National League to repeat as champions.
  • Reds manager Sparky Anderson, using crafty psychology, maintained a cautious stance throughout the Series, praising the Yankees and expressing fears about their strengths, even as his "Big Red Machine" was stifling the Yanks in every game.
  • The Reds' total dominance was not only reflected by the sweep, but by the combined scores of the games, 22-8, and the fact that the Yankees only led once the entire series, and that lead lasted from the bottom of the first inning of Game 4 until the Reds scored three in the top of the fourth of that game: a total of 2 2/3 innings over 36 combined innings.
  • This World Series marked the first time that Robert Merrill sang the National Anthem prior to a World Series game. His rendition of the anthem prior to Game 3 was followed by Joe DiMaggio's tossing of the ceremonial first pitch.
  • This was the last of 30 consecutive World Series telecasts by NBC, which had aired the game since 1947; under Major League Baseball's new television contract, Series coverage would now alternate between NBC and ABC each year. It was also the last time that local announcers for the participating teams (Rizzuto and Brennaman, in this case) would be regularly featured on the network telecast.
  • This was the first of 22 consecutive World Series to be broadcast by CBS Radio.

[edit] References

  • Neft, David S., and Richard M. Cohen. The World Series. 1st ed. New York: St Martins, 1990. (Neft and Cohen 361-364)
  • Reichler, Joseph, ed. (1982). The Baseball Encyclopedia (5th ed.), p. 2200. MacMillian Publishing. ISBN 0-02-579010-2.
  • Forman, Sean L.. 1976 World Series. Baseball-Reference.com - Major League Statistics and Information.. Retrieved on 2007-12-09.

[edit] External links

ja:1976年のワールドシリーズ
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