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1975 World Series

1975 World Series
1975-World-Series.svg
Teams
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Cincinnati Reds (4) Sparky Anderson 108–54, .667, GA: 20
Boston Red Sox (3) Darrell Johnson 95–65, .594, GA: 4 12
Dates October 11–22
MVP Pete Rose (Cincinnati)
Umpires Art Frantz (AL), Dick Stello (NL), George Maloney (AL), Satch Davidson (NL), Larry Barnett (AL), Nick Colosi (NL)
Hall of Famers Reds: Sparky Anderson (mgr.), Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan, Tony Pérez
Red Sox: Carlton Fisk, Jim Rice (injured), Carl Yastrzemski.
ALCS Boston Red Sox over Oakland A's (3–0)
NLCS Cincinnati Reds over Pittsburgh Pirates (3–0)
Broadcast
Television NBC
TV announcers Curt Gowdy (Games 1, 3, 5, 7), Joe Garagiola (Games 2, 4, 6), (Games 1, 6), Ned Martin (Games 2, 7), Marty Brennaman (Games 3–5) and Tony Kubek
Radio NBC
Radio announcers Joe Garagiola (Games 1, 3, 5, 7), Curt Gowdy (Games 2, 4, 6), Marty Brennaman (Games 1–2, 6–7), Ned Martin (Games 3, 5–6) and (Games 4, 7)
← 1974 World Series 1976 →
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Cincinnati Reds (4) Sparky Anderson 108–54, .667, GA: 20
Boston Red Sox (3) Darrell Johnson 95–65, .594, GA: 4 12

The 1975 World Series of Major League Baseball was played between the Boston Red Sox (AL) and Cincinnati Reds (NL). In 2003, it was ranked by ESPN as the second-greatest World Series ever played. Cincinnati won the series four games to three.

The Cincinnati Reds won the National League West division by 20 games over the Los Angeles Dodgers then defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates, three games to none, in the National League Championship Series. The Boston Red Sox won the American League East division by 4½ games over the Baltimore Orioles then defeated the three-time defending World Series champion Oakland A's, three games to none, in the American League Championship Series.

The Reds won the seventh and deciding game of the series on a ninth-inning RBI single by Joe Morgan. The sixth game of the Series was a 12-inning classic at Boston's Fenway Park. While there are many memorable moments from that game (among them Red Sox pinch hitter Bernie Carbo hitting a game-tying home run in the eighth; Reds reliever Will McEnaney pitching out of a bases loaded, no out jam in the bottom of the ninth; and Boston's Dwight Evans making a spectacular eleventh-inning catch to rob Joe Morgan of a go-ahead home run), it is remembered in Boston for the walk-off home run hit in the bottom of the twelfth by Carlton Fisk. Fisk's home run gave the Sox a 7–6 win to send the series to a deciding seventh game, which the "Big Red Machine" won to clinch the first of back-to-back World Series championships.


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Wikipedia

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