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1988 NLCS

1988 National League Championship Series
NL-PS 4774.png
Teams
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Los Angeles Dodgers (4) Tommy Lasorda 94–67, .584, GA: 7
New York Mets (3) Davey Johnson 100–60, .625, GA: 15
Dates October 4 – 12
MVP Orel Hershiser (Los Angeles)
Umpires Harry Wendelstedt, John McSherry, Joe West, Dutch Rennert, Bob Davidson, Paul Runge
Broadcast
Television ABC
TV announcers Al Michaels, Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver
Radio CBS
Radio announcers Brent Musburger and Jerry Coleman
← 1987 NLCS 1989 →
1988 World Series
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Los Angeles Dodgers (4) Tommy Lasorda 94–67, .584, GA: 7
New York Mets (3) Davey Johnson 100–60, .625, GA: 15

The 1988 National League Championship Series was played between the National League West champion Los Angeles Dodgers and the National League East champion New York Mets. The Dodgers won the Series four games to three, en route to defeating the Oakland Athletics in five games in the 1988 World Series.

The Mets were heavy favorites when the series began in Los Angeles on October 4. They had beaten the Dodgers ten of eleven times in the regular season, outscoring them 49-18.

The Dodgers had won their fourth NL West title of the 1980s, posting a 94–67 record (.580) during the 1988 regular season and beating out the Cincinnati Reds by seven games. The Mets cruised to the best record in the National League in 1988, with a 100–60 record (.625), easily winning the NL East crown by a full fifteen games over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

The NLCS itself was a see-saw affair, with the two teams splitting the first two games at Dodger Stadium. The Series then shifted to Shea Stadium in New York for Games 3, 4, and 5; the Mets took Game 3 before the Dodgers pulled out close wins in both Game 4 (5–4 in twelve innings) and Game 5 (7–4). Dodgers outfielder Kirk Gibson hit home runs in both games, including the game-winning dinger in the twelfth inning of Game 4. The NLCS then went back to Los Angeles, where the Mets took the sixth game 5–1; however, they went on to be blanked by the Dodgers 6–0 in the deciding seventh game, sending L.A. to the World Series for the first time since 1981.

Dodgers pitcher Orel Hershiser was named the NLCS MVP. He made four outstanding appearances in the Series, garnering the save in Game 4 and hurling a complete game shutout against the Mets in Game 7.


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