1995 World Series

1995 World Series
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–October 28
MVP: Tom Glavine (Atlanta)
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
Umpires: Harry Wendelstedt (NL), Joe Brinkman (AL), Bruce Froemming (NL), Jim McKean (AL), Frank Pulli (NL), John Hirschbeck (AL)
Hall of Famers: Atlanta Braves: none.
Indians: Eddie Murray.
ALCS: Cleveland Indians over Seattle Mariners (4–2)
NLCS: Atlanta Braves over Cincinnati Reds (4–0)
 < 1994 World Series 1996 > 

The 1995 World Series matched the Atlanta Braves against the Cleveland Indians, with the Braves winning in six games to capture its third World Championship in franchise history (along with 1914 in Boston and 1957 in Milwaukee), making them the first franchise to win three crowns in three different cities. The Series 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.

Contents

Background

The 1995 World Series provided the only world championship of the 1990s to the decade's most dominant National League team—the Atlanta Braves. After heartbreaking defeats to the Minnesota Twins and Toronto Blue Jays, the Braves were trying for the third time in five years to capture a title.

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.

After decades of futility, the city of Cleveland finally had a winner in town. The Indians batted over .300 as a team during a shortened regular season in which they won 100 games and won their division by a whopping 30 games. They swept the Boston Red Sox in the opening round, then held off Ken Griffey, Jr. and the red hot Seattle Mariners in the ALCS. Their offense was, and still is, considered one of the best "on paper" lineups of all time. Led by speedsters Kenny Lofton and Omar Vizquel at the top of the lineup, the Indians offense was driven by the middle of the order power of Albert Belle, Manny Ramírez, Eddie Murray and Jim Thome. Off the bench the Indians had Dave Winfield in his last professional season. Cleveland's pitching staff, which was made up of aging veterans such as Orel Hershiser and Dennis Martinez, was seen as their only weak point.

The Series presented an entertaining matchup between the best pitching staff (Atlanta) and the best lineup (Cleveland). The Boston Beaneaters, a forerunner of the Braves, were also National League Champions in 1892, although this was before the World Series was instituted. They defeated the Cleveland Spiders for the title.

Broadcasting

NBC was originally scheduled to televise the entire Series; however, due to the cancellation of the 1994 Series (which had been slated for ABC), coverage ended up being split between the two networks. Game 5 is, to date, the last Major League Baseball game to be telecast by ABC (had there been a Game 7, ABC would've televised it). This was the only World Series to be produced under the "Baseball Network" umbrella (a revenue sharing joint venture between Major League Baseball, ABC and NBC). In July 1995, both networks announced that they would be pulling out of what was supposed to be a six year long venture.

Also during the World Series in 1995, NBC's Hannah Storm not only became the first woman to serve as solo host of a World Series but also became the first woman to preside over a World Series Trophy presentation. Serving as field reporters for the series were Lesley Visser (ABC) and Jim Gray (NBC). John Saunders served as pre-game host for ABC's coverage of the World Series.

On the radio side, CBS was the national broadcaster with Vin Scully and Jeff Torborg on the call.

Summary

NL Atlanta Braves (4) vs. AL Cleveland Indians (2)

Game Date Score Location Time Attendance
1 October 21 Cleveland Indians – 2, Atlanta Braves – 3 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium 2:37 51,876[1]
2 October 22 Cleveland Indians – 3, Atlanta Braves – 4 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium 3:17 51,877[2] 
3 October 24 Atlanta Braves – 6, Cleveland Indians – 7 (11 innings) Jacobs Field 4:09 43,584[3] 
4 October 25 Atlanta Braves – 5, Cleveland Indians – 2 Jacobs Field 3:14 43,578[4] 
5 October 26 Atlanta Braves – 4, Cleveland Indians – 5 Jacobs Field 2:33 43,595[5] 
6 October 28 Cleveland Indians – 0, Atlanta Braves – 1 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium 3:01 51,875[6]

Matchups

Game 1

Saturday, October 21, 1995 at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Cleveland 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 0
Atlanta 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 X 3 3 2
WP: Greg Maddux (1–0)   LP: Orel Hershiser (0–1)
Home runs:
CLE: None
ATL: Fred McGriff (1)

Atlanta ace Greg Maddux pitched a two-hit complete game victory in his first World Series appearance (and just the fifteenth two-hitter in Series history).

The Indians scored in the first inning when Kenny Lofton reached on an error, stole second and third, and scored on an RBI groundout by Carlos Baerga. In the bottom of the second, Fred McGriff launched a tape measure home run on his first ever World Series pitch off Cleveland starter Orel Hershiser to even the score at 1–1. Both starters settled down until the seventh, when Hershiser and the Cleveland bullpen walked the first three Braves to open the inning. The Braves would take a 3–1 lead after Luis Polonia hit into a run-scoring force play and Rafael Belliard bunted a perfect suicide squeeze. The Indians scored a run in the ninth to cut the Braves lead to a single run, but Baerga lifted a pop fly that third baseman Chipper Jones grabbed near the visiting dugout to end the game.

Game 2

Sunday, October 22, 1995 at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Cleveland 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 6 2
Atlanta 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 X 4 8 2
WP: Tom Glavine (1–0)   LP: Dennis Martinez (0–1)   Sv: Mark Wohlers (1)
Home runs:
CLE: Eddie Murray (1)
ATL: Javy López (1)

Atlanta No. 2 starter Tom Glavine got the win in Game 2, aided by a big sixth-inning home run by catcher Javy López, who also picked Manny Ramirez off first base at a crucial moment in the eighth-inning to erase a potential game-tying baserunner. The Indians had taken an early 2–0 lead on an Eddie Murray home run, but the Braves evened the score in the third with a sac fly by Chipper and an RBI single by David Justice. Lopez launched his home run in the sixth inning from Cleveland starter Dennis Martinez. The Atlanta bullpen held off the Indians in the later innings, with Mark Wohlers earning the save. The Braves thus took a 2–0 series lead, their most encouraging World Series start of the decade.

Game 3

Tuesday, October 24, 1995 at Jacobs Field in Cleveland, Ohio

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 R H E
Atlanta 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 6 12 1
Cleveland 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 7 12 2
WP: José Mesa (1–0)   LP: Alejandro Peña (0–1)
Home runs:
ATL: Fred McGriff (2), Ryan Klesko (1)
CLE: None

With the World Series moving to raucous Jacobs Field in Cleveland, the Indians got their first win. The Indians offense got back on track off Atlanta starter John Smoltz. With the Tribe already down 1–0 in the bottom of the first, Lofton singled to center and scored on Omar Vizquel's triple into the right field corner. Omar then scored the go-ahead run when Baerga grounded out. In the third, the Tribe were back at it again when Lofton opened the inning by ripping a double into the right-center field gap. Omar then got a bunt single and Baerga singled to left to drive in Lofton. Albert Belle then rolled a grounder up the middle to score Vizquel to make it 4–1. The Braves got a boost, however, when reliever Brad Clontz induced a double play groundout by Manny Ramírez to escape further damage. Solo Home runs by Fred McGriff and Ryan Klesko brought the Braves closer at 4–3. Cleveland added a run in the seventh on another RBI hit by Baerga scoring Lofton (who would reach base in all six of his plate appearances). With a 5–3 lead going into the eighth, trouble brewed for Cleveland when Nagy and the bullpen gave up the lead. Marquis Grissom led off with a double off the wall. Polonia singled through the right side to drive in Grissom, sending Nagy to the showers. Chipper Jones walked, McGriff hit a deep fly moving the runners up a base, and David Justice reached when Baerga's booted his groundball, subsequently allowing Polonia to score the tying run. The inning was capped off by Mike Devereaux's RBI single giving the Braves a 6–5 lead. The Braves couldn't hold on to their slim lead either as Sandy Alomar, Jr. laced a game-tying double inside the line at first in the bottom of the eighth. The two closers, Mark Wohlers and Jose Mesa then matched zeros for the next two innings. In the eleventh, the Braves went to Alejandro Pena. Baerga immediately smashed a double and after an intentional walk to Belle, veteran Eddie Murray singled to center, scoring pinch runner Álvaro Espinoza and cutting Atlanta's World Series lead in half.

A record eighteen pitchers were used between the Braves and Indians in Games 2 and 3.

Game 4

Wednesday, October 25, 1995 at Jacobs Field in Cleveland, Ohio

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Atlanta 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 5 11 1
Cleveland 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 6 0
WP: Steve Avery (1–0)   LP: Ken Hill (0–1)   Sv: Pedro Borbón, Jr. (1)
Home runs:
ATL: Ryan Klesko (2)
CLE: Albert Belle (1), Manny Ramírez (1)

Braves manager Bobby Cox controversially decided to start beleaguered left-hander Steve Avery in the critical Game 4 instead of coming back with Greg Maddux. Young Braves outfielder Ryan Klesko hit a sixth-inning home run to give Atlanta the lead. Avery was able to deliver six effective innings, only giving up a sixth-inning solo home run to Cleveland slugger Albert Belle. A controversial play happened when Eddie Murray hit a pitch over third base, left-field umpire Jim McKean called it foul while third-base umpire Harry Wendelstedt looked at Jim McKean to make the call. Murray eventually walked and reached second on a balk by Avery, but Hurbert struck out to end the inning. The Braves promptly broke the tie with a three-run seventh, with David Justice plating two of the runs with a single. An RBI double by Javy López gave the Braves an insurance run, making it 5–1. Reliever Pedro Borbón, Jr. saved the 5–2 win after Mark Wohlers ran into trouble, and the Braves were one victory away from a title.

Game 5

Thursday, October 26, 1995 at Jacobs Field in Cleveland, Ohio

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Atlanta 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 4 7 0
Cleveland 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 X 5 8 1
WP: Orel Hershiser (1–1)   LP: Greg Maddux (1–1)   Sv: José Mesa (1)
Home runs:
ATL: Luis Polonia (1), Ryan Klesko (3)
CLE: Albert Belle (2), Jim Thome (1)

It seemed the perfect situation for Atlanta with Greg Maddux pitching Game 5 with a chance to clinch the title, but Albert Belle slugged a two-run homer in the first inning, and the Braves lineup was held in check by Cleveland veteran Orel Hershiser who went eight innings, only surrendering two runs. Atlanta actually tied the game at 2–2 with a run-scoring infield single by Marquis Grissom in the fifth, but Cleveland got two more runs from Maddux making it 4–2. Jim Thome hit an insurance run in the eighth, which proved necessary as Ryan Klesko homered in his third consecutive game, reducing the gap to 5–4. Klesko became the first person ever to homer in three consecutive World Series road games, by belting homers in Games 3, 4, and 5. The win gave Cleveland the hope of perhaps another Braves World Series collapse and sent the Series back to Atlanta.

As previously mentioned, this game is also the most recent baseball game that ABC televised.

Game 6

Saturday, October 28, 1995 at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Cleveland 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
Atlanta 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 X 1 6 0
WP: Tom Glavine (2–0)   LP: Jim Poole (0–1)   Sv: Mark Wohlers (2)
Home runs:
CLE: None
ATL: David Justice (1)

Controversy struck on the morning of Game 6 when Atlanta newspapers printed stories that right fielder David Justice had ripped the city's fans for not matching their motivation of past seasons. Justice, who had been struggling in the postseason, was vilified before the game, but when his sixth inning home run broke a 0–0 tie, he became a hero. Tom Glavine pitched eight innings of one-hit ball (just the fifth one-hitter in Series history) to help earn him the Series MVP. The lone hit was a bloop-single by catcher Tony Peña in the sixth. Closer Mark Wohlers pitched the ninth inning, preserving the 1–0 shutout and Atlanta's coveted title when Carlos Baerga's fly ball landed in center fielder Marquis Grissom's glove. Carlos Baerga was responsible for making the last out in three of the four Cleveland losses; Games 1, 2 and 6.

In 1995, the Cleveland Indians batted .291 as a team, led the league in runs scored, hits, and stolen bases, and had eight .300 hitters in their starting lineup. However, the Tribe was held to a .179 batting average in the World Series.

After Game 6, then-Executive Committee Chairman Bud Selig presided over the Commissioner's Trophy presentation for the first time. In the previous two World Series (1992 and 1993), American League president Dr. Bobby Brown presided over the trophy presentation. Selig would become Commissioner of Baseball in 1998.

The Braves' victory marked the only time that the city of Atlanta won a world championship in any of the four major professional sports. The NFL's Atlanta Falcons came close, but lost to the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XXXIII during the 1998 season.

mlb.com coverage of Game 6

Composite box

1995 World Series (4–2): Atlanta Braves (N.L.) over Cleveland Indians (A.L.)

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 R H E
Atlanta Braves 1 1 2 1 1 5 6 3 3 0 0 23 47 6
Cleveland Indians 5 2 2 0 0 3 2 2 2 0 1 19 35 6
Total attendance: 286,385   Average attendance: 47,731
Winning player’s share: $206,635   Losing player’s share: $121,946[7]

See also

Notes

References

External links

1995 Major League Baseball Postseason
1995 World Series
American League Championship Series
American League Division Series
Seattle Mariners | New York Yankees
Cleveland Indians | Boston Red Sox
National League Championship Series
National League Division Series
Atlanta Braves | Colorado Rockies
Cincinnati Reds | Los Angeles Dodgers
1995 Major League Baseball season
American League | National League