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1982 ALCS

1982 American League Championship Series
Teams
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Milwaukee Brewers (3) Harvey Kuenn 95–67, .586, GA: 1
California Angels (2) Gene Mauch 93–69, .574, GA: 3
Dates October 5–10
MVP Fred Lynn (California)
Umpires Larry Barnett, Bill Kunkel, Rich Garcia, Steve Palermo, Don Denkinger, Al Clark
Broadcast
Television ABC
TV announcers Keith Jackson, Jim Palmer and Earl Weaver
Radio CBS
Radio announcers Ernie Harwell and Denny Matthews
← 1981 ALCS 1983 →
1982 World Series
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Milwaukee Brewers (3) Harvey Kuenn 95–67, .586, GA: 1
California Angels (2) Gene Mauch 93–69, .574, GA: 3

The 1982 American League Championship Series was played between the Milwaukee Brewers and the California Angels from October 5 to 10, 1982. Milwaukee won the series three games to two to advance to the franchise's first World Series, where they would lose to the St. Louis Cardinals, four games to three. The 1982 ALCS was marked by a dramatic comeback by the Brewers, who lost the first two games of the series and were trailing late in the final game.

The series was noteworthy as being the first to feature a matchup between two "expansion" teams (i.e., franchises not included among the sixteen operating in the major leagues for most of the first half of the twentieth century), and for featuring two teams that had never before won a pennant.

Milwaukee won the series, 3–2.

Tuesday, October 5, 1982, at Anaheim Stadium in Anaheim, California

The Angels jumped to a 1–0 lead in the first when Brian Downing scored an unearned run on a sacrifice fly by Don Baylor. Milwaukee came back to take a 3–1 lead with a two-run homer by Gorman Thomas in the second and a run scored by Paul Molitor on a groundout in the third. But the Angels took back the lead for good in their half of the third with a four-run rally highlighted by Baylor’s two-run triple. Baylor capped off a five-RBI game with a two-run single in the fourth, and the Angels got another run in the fifth when eventual series MVP Fred Lynn homered. California starter Tommy John, who lent his name to the famous surgical procedure, settled down after the third and gave the Brewers little over the final six innings on his way to a complete-game victory.

Wednesday, October 6, 1982, at Anaheim Stadium in Anaheim, California


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