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1995 World Series

1995 World Series
1995-World-Series.svg
Teams
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Atlanta Braves (4) Bobby Cox 90–54, .625, GA: 21
Cleveland Indians (2) Mike Hargrove 100–44, .694, GA: 30
Dates October 21 – 28
MVP Tom Glavine (Atlanta)
Umpires Harry Wendelstedt (NL, crew chief), Jim McKean (AL), Bruce Froemming (NL), John Hirschbeck (AL), Frank Pulli (NL), Joe Brinkman (AL)
Hall of Famers Braves: Bobby Cox (mgr), John Schuerholz (GM), Tom Glavine, Greg Maddux, John Smoltz.
Indians: Eddie Murray.
ALCS Cleveland Indians over Seattle Mariners (4–2)
NLCS Atlanta Braves over Cincinnati Reds (4–0)
Broadcast
Television ABC (Games 1, 4, 5)
NBC (Games 2, 3, 6)
TV announcers Al Michaels, Jim Palmer, Tim McCarver (ABC)
Bob Costas, Joe Morgan, Bob Uecker (NBC)
Radio CBS
Radio announcers Vin Scully, Jeff Torborg
← 1994 World Series 1996 →
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Atlanta Braves (4) Bobby Cox 90–54, .625, GA: 21
Cleveland Indians (2) Mike Hargrove 100–44, .694, GA: 30

The 1995 World Series matched the Atlanta Braves against the Cleveland Indians. The Braves won in six games to capture their third World Series championship in franchise history (along with 1914 in Boston and 1957 in Milwaukee), making them the first team to win three crowns in three different cities. This was also Cleveland's first Series appearance in 41 years and marked the resumption of the Fall Classic after the previous year's Series was canceled due to a players' strike.

The Series was also remarkable in that five of the six games were won by one run, including the clinching sixth game, a 1-0 combined one-hitter by Tom Glavine and Mark Wohlers.

After losing the World Series in 1991 to the Minnesota Twins and in 1992 to the Toronto Blue Jays, the Atlanta Braves were trying to capture a title for the third time in five years.

This World Series, despite being in an odd-numbered year, opened in the NL home because of the omission of the 1994 World Series. Until 2003, the World Series would begin in the AL home in even-numbered (not odd-numbered) years.

The Braves overcame some early inconsistency to win their division by 21 games. In the playoffs, which featured a new first round, the Braves overwhelmed the third-year Colorado Rockies, then swept the Cincinnati Reds in the NLCS (spoiling an all-Ohio World Series in the process; notably, prior to their World Series appearance in 1948, the Indians had spoiled an all-Boston World Series by beating the Red Sox in a one-game playoff). The team relied on clutch hitting and its powerful pitching rotation, which was made up of perennial Cy Young Award winner Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, John Smoltz, and Steve Avery.


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Wikipedia

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