Since 1941 the Dodgers and the Yankees have meant each other 11 times in the World Series. No two teams have played each other more in the fall classic than these iconic franchises. The Yankees have had the decided edge in the series winning 8 out of the 11 match ups. They haven’t met since 1981. From 1949 to 1956 they met 5 times. The Yankees won 4 out of 5. They were the Brooklyn Dodgers during those years making the rivalry extremely heated. Let’s take a brief look at each series and the highlights of each one.
1941: The Yankees won in 5 games winning games 1,3,4, and 5. Joe Dimaggio was the Yankee big name. The most interesting stats of this series are that there were only a combined 3 home runs, the Yankees only struck out 18 times and there were a combined 5 complete games by starting pitchers. They were mostly low scoring tight games with the Yankees sweeping the Dodgers at Ebbets Field to take the series. No game took 3 hours to play and the one that came close, 2:54, there were 11 runs scored.
1947: The Yankees won in 7 games. Again, the home run was not a big weapon with only 5 being hit for the entire series. This was Yogi Berra’s first World Series and he would hit one of those 5 home runs. He would appear in 13 more Series, the most in history. The Yankees won game 7, 5-2, trailing 2-0 after 1.5 innings. They broke back in the bottom of the 2nd to score one run, and added 2 in the fourth to take a 3-2 lead that they never relinquished.
1949: The Yankees won in 5 games in a series that was dominated by pitching in the early going. The Yankees and the Dodgers split the first 2 games by the same score of 1-0. Teams started hitting better as the series went on and Yankees won a slug fest in the 5th game 10-6 to complete a 3 game sweep in Brooklyn for the 2nd time in their first 3 meetings.
1952: Even having the home field advantage for the first time could not help the Dodgers as they lost to the Yankees in 7 games. The Yankees continued to have success in Ebbets field by winning the last two games there 3-2 and 4-2. Mickey Mantle gave the Yankees the lead in the top of the 6th in game 7, hitting a solo home run to make the score 3-2. The Dodgers had 1st and 2nd with one out in the bottom of the 7th but could not score. They never threatened after that, and Yankees had won 4 straight series against the Dodgers.
1953: The Yankees won in 6 games, and it looked like they might sweep the series when they won the first two games. Finally, Ebbets was kind to the Dodgers as they won the next two games to even the series. The Yankees won game 5, 11-7 to take a 3-2 lead in the series. Game 6 was one of the more exciting games in the rivalry, the Yankees had a 3 to 1 lead going into the top of the 9th. After one out with Allie Reynolds pitching Duke Snyder walked. Carl Furillo lit up Reynold for a home run and the Dodgers tied it up 3-3. Reynolds settled down to strike out next two batters to end the inning. Hank Bauer walked to start the bottom of the 9th. After one out, Mickey Mantle hit a swinging bunt down 3rd to put runners on 1st and 2nd. Billy Martin capped off a great World Series performance by driving in the winning run with a single up the middle. Martin had 12 hits in 24 at bats, hitting 2 home runs and driving in 8 runs. It was the Yankees 5th World Series championship in a row.
1955: FINALLY, the Dodgers won, but it was a struggle. The Yankees won the first two games of the series at home and looked like the Dodgers were going down again. This time Ebbets field was their friend as they won the next 3 games, as the offense scored 21 runs. The Yankees won game 6 behind Whitey Ford. In the pivotal game 7 Johnny Podres scattered 8 hits and 2 walks to shutout the Yankees and send the Dodgers to their first World Series win. The Yankees scored 5 runs in the bottom of the 1st in game 6 and never scored another run for 17 innings. Dead bat syndrome even happened in the 50’s
1956: The Yankees bounced back to win the Series in 7 games. This time it was the Dodgers that jumped out to the 2-0 edge in games. The Yankees won the next 3 games in Yankee Stadium highlighted by the perfect game thrown by Don Larson in game 5. The Dodgers forced a game 7 with a tight 1-0 win where Jackie Robinson playing in his last World Series drove in the winning run in the bottom of the 10th. Game 7 was a runaway as Johnny Kucks shutout the Dodgers on 3 hits with the Yankees winning 9-0. This was the series of the journeyman pitcher with both Kucks and Larson winning the big games for the Yankees.
1963: The Dodgers buried the Yankees with strong pitching performances from Sandy Koufax, Johnny Podres and Don Drysdale. For the 4 games the Yankees managed only 4 runs on 22 hits with 5 extra base hits. The Dodger pitchers only walked 5 batters and struck out 37. Koufax won 2 games, and the Dodgers had the sweep. Ron Perranoski pitched 2/3 of an inning to wrap up game 2, to be the only other pitcher to appear for the Dodgers in the 4 games. We all know that will never happen again. One side note, Al Downing, who lost game 2, gave up Hank Aaron’s 715th home run to break Babe Ruth’s long standing home run record.
1977: It was 14 years before the Dodgers and the Yankees would meet again. The Yankees won the series in 6 games with the 6th game being the Reggie Jackson 3 home run game, that catapulted the Yankees to an 8-4 win. It was the ever volatile Billy Martin who was the manager that year. Even though the Yankees would go on the win the pennant again in 78 Martin did not last the year being fired after 94 games.
1978: It was rematch time and the Yankees put it to the Dodgers again 4 games to 2. The Dodgers got off to a hot start winning the first 2 games at Dodger Stadium but the Yankees swept the next 4 games scoring 28 runs. The pivotal game was game 4. Reggie Smith hit a 3 run home run to give the Dodgers a 3-0 lead in the top of the 5th. The Yankees scored 2 in the bottom of the 6th thanks to a botched double play that allowed the 2nd run to score. Thurman Munson doubled home Paul Blair in the bottom of the 8th to tie the game and eventually it went into extra innings. Lou Piniella drove in the winning run with 2 out in the bottom of the 10th as a leadoff walk came back to haunt the Dodgers. The next 2 games were blowouts for the Yankees and they defeated the Dodgers for the 8th time in the World Series.
1981: The Dodgers got to exact revenge on the Yankees winning in 6 games. It was another series where the team that jumped out to the 2-0 lead in games wound up losing the series. The Dodgers won 3 nail biting one run games in Los Angeles. In game 4 the Dodgers trailed 4-0 and 6-3 before scoring 3 runs in the bottom of the 6th to tie the game and 2 in the bottom of the 7th to take the lead that they never relinquished. In game 5, Pedro Guerrero who hit 12 home runs during the regular season, and Steve Yeager who hit 3, hit back to back home runs in the bottom of the 7th to give the Dodgers a 2-1 lead. The Yankees got a runner on first base in the top of the 9th but could not score. The Dodgers blew the Yankees away in Yankee Stadium 9-2 to win the series.
We now have the 12th meeting between these teams in the World Series. It took 43 years to get to number 12. With the star power we will be seeing I think it was worth the wait. In 1981 even though game 5 was tight and the Yankees got a runner on first base in the top of the 9th, Jerry Reuss went on to complete the game. It is a guarantee we will not see that in this series. It will be surprising if any starter goes longer than 7 innings. If history has anything to say about it if I was the Dodgers or Yankees, I would not win those first two games. Four times the team that won the first two games went on to lose the series. This has only happened 10 times in the history of the World Series and has not happened since 1996. I still like the Dodgers to win. It all starts tonight.