I stayed home from school for Game 1 and watched Koufax strike out the 15 Yankees. One of the best decisions - with the help of my parents - I ever made. Koufax won 25 games during the regular season and lost only five. Yankee catcher Yogi Berra later said that he could understand why Koufax won 25 games but couldn't understand how he could've lost five.
Thanks mucho for posting this, it was great. Seeing Podres, after his historic conquering of the Yanks in Brooklyn, meet up with the Yanks at Chavez was a neat piece of history to rewatch.
During a torrid 1963 pennant race the Dodgers were hard pressed by an outstanding St. Louis Cardinals club and went into St. Louis for an important 3 game set vs. the Cards who had just won 19 of 20 games to threaten to close onto the Dodgers. Beginning on September 16th the Dodgers behind the pitching of Johnny Podres and Sandy Koufax took the first two games in steamy humid St. Louis. On September 18th. the Dodgers took on Cardinals Ace and HOF pitcher Bob Gibson. While trailing the Cards 5 to 1, rookie Dick Nen who'd just flew in from minor league Spokane that very day, hit an eighth inning pinch hit homerun to tie the game off relief pitcher Ron Taylor. 4 innings later the Dodgers won to all but seal the pennant. Those Cardinals were an outstanding team and would prove it the next year by winning the World Series against another outstanding Yankees team. But 1963 was all about a great Dodger team for the ages.
Nice. Those two teams won 4 WS during the mid-1960's. If you all find this period of baseball interesting, I recommend "October 1964" which is about the Cardinals, the aging Yankees, and the ascendancy of Black players in MLBaseball. Halberstram is/was a terrific writers of sports themes. In the 1950's, there were a few superstar Black baseball players on only a few teams -- almost token representation. But the new ownership of the Cardinals wanted to win, and they brought in some amazing talent that all came together to build a terrific club (which hadn't been good in almost 30 years). Not just the Cardinals . . . .Dodgers, Giants, Pirates, more NL teams than AL teams, who adopted slower . . . Led to NL having a better brand of baseball, and two+ decades of all-star dominance.
@@yuckyoolOne of my favorite players of all time is Curt Flood (RIP - Curt). I'll see if I can get a retro jersey of his to wear proudly. It saddens me today's players don't recognize and honor the Moses of MLB who got rid of the rule (player reserve claus) that indentured players to a team and were treated as modern day slaves to be bought and sold upon the whim of team owners. He left baseball to live in Spain and psint as he was a talented artist. I'd love to own one of his paintings.
I got to go to game 4 at Dodger Stadium, Koufax vs. Whitey Ford. We sat up in the 3rd deck behind home plate. I saw Mantle hit a homerun half way up the left field pavilion and Frank Howard become the first player to hit a homerun into the second deck at Dodger Stadium. My Dodgers swept the Yankees by only using 4 pitchers. Koufax had 2 complete game wins, Don Drysdale got a complete game win and Johnny Podres pitched won game 2 with 8-2/3 innings and Ed Roebuck pitched 1-1/3 inning. I still have to ticket stub and the program.
How exciting and a keepsake. Pass that along and keep it for old times sake. As I pan the stadium and a sea of white shirts men & women dressed for Sunday in their clothes, that’s how it was then and now no comment. Dressing down as far as we have come also speaks to character.
Keep that ticket! 🎟️ I never went to a world series game but Ill always remember going to the ballpark, and that's going to Fenway Park for me. Those were the days back in the 60's, it would of been cool to see all those legends in the world series. Must of been a Great time to be a baseball fan
I was lucky. I was also able to go to the 4th game of the 1965 World Series game against the Twins at Dodger Stadium, games 1 & 2 against the Oakland A's in 1974 and, it was either the 4th or 5th game, at Dodger Stadium in, I think, 1978 against the Yankees. It was the game where Goose Gossage nailed Ron Cey in the head with a 95 mph fast ball. I still have all the ticket stubs and programs for all those games plus a few playoff games. I still have the program for the 1959 All-Star Game at the LA Coliseum.
And yet, the trio of Koufax, Drysdale, and Osteen would itself get swept against the Orioles three years later. Even with great pitching, you gotta have at least *some* offense -- and the Dodgers would have virtually none in the '66 series.
@@ronmackinnon9374Had a stretch in that series where they went 33 straight innings of not scoring a run, so the reason for the loss is the offense, not the pitching.
Surprised they didn't mention (after 3:00) that Musial had just completed his final 'farewell' season in '63. (He missed by one year the '64 Cardinals championship.)
13:15 The heat Koufax put on that thing and it was his 130th pitch of the game. Dude was just insane that year. When I looked up his game stats he had at least four 3 hitters that year and two back back if I remember right.
What's satisfying of that 63 World Series for the Dodgers, not only that we swept the Yankees, but the Dodgers never once trailed in either game to the Yankees, great justice for the past World Series battles. As LA, the Dodgers are 12-10 vs the Yankees in the World Series games.
As this and a few other videos on UA-cam successfully illustrate, Major League Baseball in the 1960's was the Golden Age of Baseball. And that's for many reasons. I specialize in the aesthetics of the 60s era, so I'll cover that here: Every team played in great ballparks, whether they were in older, classic ballparks (Phillies' Shibe Park, Reds' Crosley Field, Pirates' Forbes Field, Tigers' namesake Stadium, White Sox' Comiskey Park, Yankee's original namesake Stadium, etc) or in more modern parks (Dodgers' namesake Stadium, Giants' Candlestick Park, Astros' namesake Dome, Angels' Anaheim Stadium, A's Oakland Coliseum, Twins' Metropolitan Stadium, Orioles' Memorial Stadium, etc), they were all great, with the exception of the Cardinals and Senators, who I think were aesthetically better in Busch Stadium I (Sportsmans Park) and Griffith Park, respectively. The dugouts and clubhouses were designed and built to serve the very purpose of a simple area for the players to be in, not virtual apartments like today. The overall look of green seats and steel, simple grandstand construction, and on special occasions, red white and blue bunting, made for a timeless atmosphere that anyone can appreciate. The players also dressed very well. As a comment on a Uni Watch post says, the jersey and pants are trim but not tight. Button down jerseys with short sleeves and true vests reign supreme. The stirrup socks were at the most ideal proportion of stirrup to sanitary sock, allowing for plenty of white (Or yellow in the A's case) while still giving enough space for colorful and creative stripes. It was pre-double knit so every jersey was soft flannel but you still had an injection of powder blue roads. The cap is not quite the exaggerated high peak but isn’t formless either, with green underbrims for reduced glare (The grass is green too) and leather sweatbands with white reeding. No matter what style a team happened to wear, it was almost guaranteed to look like baseball. Teams with classic designs (Yankees, Cubs, Dodgers, Red Sox, Cardinals, etc) and those who experimented with their looks (A's, Pilots, White Sox, Expos, Padres, etc) all looked very elegant, particularly because button-front jerseys and belted pants were still in vogue, giving off a classic, formal vibe, going with the notion of baseball being a gentleman's game. The umpires also looked their best, many times being outfitted in dark navy suits, caps, and black ties and dress shoes, with either white shirts, adding to the aforementioned formal and official vibe. The players not only dressed well, but the equipment they used, consisting of Hillerich and Bradsby made Louisville Slugger or Adirondack natural-colored ash wood bats; Rawlings, Wilson, or Spalding tan leather fielding gloves and mitts; the aforementioned black (Or white in the A's case) leather spikes; simple-construction batting helmets with one earflap, which just seems to scream baseball to me; and catcher's equipment with simple patterns on the chest protector, shin guards (Both of which preferably in team colors), and the steel bars of the mask, were also simple compared to today, but elegant. And that's just the aesthetics of that era-not to mention the caliber of players during that time. But I'll let others cover that. I hope my Heaven is 1960's MLB when my time comes.
Well said lad, I agree with your eloquent paragraphs. I'm 73, but still watch these films-and old hockey of Booby Hull and the Black Hawks-of the days that when player respect was tantamount. Mr Hockey, Gordie Howe in person was known and expected good manners.
Great discussion. I could not agree more, especially the aesthetics. The uniforms were classy and the stirrups and caps perfectly proportioned. Busch Stadium I was beautiful. Drysdale, Koufax, Mays, Aaron,Mccovey, Brock, Marichal, Billy Williams, Ford, Mantle, Kaline, Earl Battey, Gibson, Vada Pinson, Clemente. Just to name a few.
Damn it... I was hoping in that game four the 9th inning they would include Sandy Koufax jumping for joy prematurely thinking he had thrown a third strike to Lopez. I remember distinctly Sandy doing that and saying to myself, "Get back there. You didn't win". I was only nine years old living in Oxnard California but rooting for the Yankees and my hero Mickey Mantle. It was quite a moment seeing Koufax having to walk back to the mound with a look of astonishment and his tail between his legs knowing it wasn't over yet. It was the next pitch to Lopez unfortunately that ended the game making champs of the Dodgers but also made me cry.
The reason Koufax got excited was Tracewski dropped the ball on a force play the umpire called Richardson out, and then changed the call to safe when he realized the ball was dropped
My very first Major League Baseball game in person was at the LA Coliseum when the Dodgers played the Cincinnati Reds. June 1960. Sandy Koufax started the game but only lasted two innings. He gave up a grand slam in the first inning and was pulled in the second inning for some reason. I remember this series well. Dodger pitching was phenomenal in those days.
Richardson is safe on 2nd but called out 35:54, But Tracewski dropped the ball. Dodgers defeating the Yanks in 3 games and there's only 2,000 views? Great series.
The Cardinals came up a little short this year in the last season of Stan Musial. The Cards would win the pennant in 1964 and the Dodgers again in 1965, but the Cards would win the pennant again in 1967 and 1968. Growing up in St. Louis my favorite games were when the Cards played the Dodgers snd Giants. The Giants won the pennant in 1962. The Dodger pitching and the hitting of the Giants made tough competition. Sandy Koufax, Juan Marichal, and Bob Gibson were the aces. I remember being in grade school being able to watch some of this series from our classroom. Cards fan
Forgot to mention the Dodgers also won the 1965 pennant as well. THe Giants often came in second place in the 1960s. Just not quire enough pitcing for them.
35:39 Bobby Richardson beats Maury Wills' throw to second base to end the game, but the ump calls him out. After the ball is dropped, the ump reverses his call to "safe," but he should have called Richardson safe in the first place because he beat the throw. You can see Richardson on first base get an excellent jump to 2nd, as he was immediately moving on contact. Great base running.
Nah. He was a loyal dodger. You do realize the Dodgers hated the Yankees right? The Mets are literally the Brooklyn Dodgers of today. They do great and end up losing in the end. Thats what the Dodgers did when they were in Brooklyn. Then they went to LA and Started winning alot more championships. They are pretty much the Yankees of the West coast and National League.
@@ejswrestlingjourney9857 Dodgers as LA, are 12-10 vs the Yankees in the World Series, here they gave them their first ever sweep, and never once had the Yankees lead in either game, and currently the Dodgers have won the last World Series meeting in 81.
I've always wondered why game one is not available in its entirety. Several World Series games are available which predate this classic encounter, showing Koufax at the peak of his powers. Did the Yankee organization have something to do with suppressing it, because they were swept in embarrassing fashion?
Joe D and Stan Musial representing the AL and NL on the ceremonial opening pitch, but Stan has no association with the Dodgers. With all due respect to the great Stan the Man, can think of a half dozen retired Dodger players - Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, Carl Furillo, etc - who would have been better NL/Dodger reps to join Joe D in this ceremony. Seems an easy fix not to have done it.
@@TheBatugan77 Drop dead clown....I don't care if your mammy was retiring, a Dodger should have been there at a Dodger World Series. Musial retired in St Louis. The NL should have had their azz in St Louis paying tribute, if they wanted to honor him. Don't like it? Then make my day and make a bona fide offer to do something about it, azz wipe.
The beginning of the end of the 1947-1962 Dynasty. losses in the series to LA in 63 and StL in 64 were followed by the worst team in the AL in 1966 and no championships until 1977.
@@michaelleroy9281 Was that the year they had a late season game that had a total attendance YankeeStadium of 511 and red barber was fired when he directed the WPIX cameras to pan all the empty seats
Three years later, the Dodgers got a taste of their own medicine when they were swept by the Baltimore Orioles, skipped by former Yankee Hank Bauer. The Dodgers managed only 17 hits in the entire series, and failed to score a single run in the final 33 innings of the series, setting unrecords which stand to this day.
Yes that was a drought, struggled offensively in that World Series, in those 33 straight innings, but Dodgers are 13-8 in the regular season all time vs Orioles, plus got more World Series titles than the Orioles.
Hank Bauer from half of 1961 and the entire seasons of 1962-67 and half of 68 and 69 as manager of the A's twice and the Orioles, Bauer as manager in the 60s, in this span has a win percentage of 52.2%, of a 594-544, and the Dodgers in this exact span, has a better percentage of 54.7 percentage of a 622-516 record, compared to Bauer's teams, and Dodgers have better World Series success in the 60s, Bauer's Orioles only playoff success was in 66.
No doubt Hank has won more World Series against the Dodgers as a Yankee player, and his only one as Orioles manager, but it's only fitting that Hank got his first World Series loss as a player vs the Dodgers.
The Orioles only used 4 PITCHERS the entire 1966 series! Dave McNally got knocked in the 3rd inning in the opening game and the game was finished by Moe Drabowsky, who allowed no runs, 1 hit while striking out 11 in 6 2/3 innings. 20 year-old Jim Palmer beat Sandy Koufax in game 2 by shutting out the Dodgers on 4 hits. The Dodgers committed 6 errors, including 3 by center fielder Willie Davis. It turned out to be the last game Sandy Koufax ever pitched. Then Wally Bunker and Dave McNally pitched shutouts in games 3 and 4 to complete the sweep. The Orioles pitchers’ ERA was .50 for the series!
I stayed home from school for Game 1 and watched Koufax strike out the 15 Yankees. One of the best decisions - with the help of my parents - I ever made. Koufax won 25 games during the regular season and lost only five. Yankee catcher Yogi Berra later said that he could understand why Koufax won 25 games but couldn't understand how he could've lost five.
Thanks mucho for posting this, it was great. Seeing Podres, after his historic conquering of the Yanks in Brooklyn, meet up with the Yanks at Chavez was a neat piece of history to rewatch.
RIP Scully - 2022😢
Who’s here for the 2024 World Series
Los Angeles Dodgers vs New York Yankees.
Try to add something to the vid instead of just fishing for easy, lame clicks. 😒
It’s a privilege to have an autograph by the “BULL”
Al Ferrara.
Living legend played with Sandy, Mickey.
1963 & 2020, the LA Dodgers won the World Series as the home team,
1963, the only time the LA Dodgers won the World Series at Dodger Stadium.
And in 1978 the Yankees won the World Series at Dodger Stadium
2020 the Dodgers won the World Series at Globe Life Field in Arlington TX
During a torrid 1963 pennant race the Dodgers were hard pressed by an outstanding St. Louis Cardinals club and went into St. Louis for an important 3 game set vs. the Cards who had just won 19 of 20 games to threaten to close onto the Dodgers.
Beginning on September 16th the Dodgers behind the pitching of Johnny Podres and Sandy Koufax took the first two games in steamy humid St. Louis.
On September 18th. the Dodgers took on Cardinals Ace and HOF pitcher Bob Gibson. While trailing the Cards 5 to 1, rookie Dick Nen who'd just flew in from minor league Spokane that very day, hit an eighth inning pinch hit homerun to tie the game off relief pitcher Ron Taylor. 4 innings later the Dodgers won to all but seal the pennant.
Those Cardinals were an outstanding team and would prove it the next year by winning the World Series against another outstanding Yankees team.
But 1963 was all about a great Dodger team for the ages.
Nice. Those two teams won 4 WS during the mid-1960's.
If you all find this period of baseball interesting, I recommend "October 1964" which is about the Cardinals, the aging Yankees, and the ascendancy of Black players in MLBaseball. Halberstram is/was a terrific writers of sports themes.
In the 1950's, there were a few superstar Black baseball players on only a few teams -- almost token representation. But the new ownership of the Cardinals wanted to win, and they brought in some amazing talent that all came together to build a terrific club (which hadn't been good in almost 30 years).
Not just the Cardinals . . . .Dodgers, Giants, Pirates, more NL teams than AL teams, who adopted slower . . .
Led to NL having a better brand of baseball, and two+ decades of all-star dominance.
@@yuckyoolOne of my favorite players of all time is Curt Flood (RIP - Curt). I'll see if I can get a retro jersey of his to wear proudly. It saddens me today's players don't recognize and honor the Moses of MLB who got rid of the rule (player reserve claus) that indentured players to a team and were treated as modern day slaves to be bought and sold upon the whim of team owners.
He left baseball to live in Spain and psint as he was a talented artist. I'd love to own one of his paintings.
Still the only pitcher i ever saw that could get cheers and applause in an opposing ballpark against a rival and during a world series.
Finally, both Frank Howard's and Mantle's home runs. Thanks for uploading. Much ablidged 😉⚾
I got to go to game 4 at Dodger Stadium, Koufax vs. Whitey Ford. We sat up in the 3rd deck behind home plate. I saw Mantle hit a homerun half way up the left field pavilion and Frank Howard become the first player to hit a homerun into the second deck at Dodger Stadium. My Dodgers swept the Yankees by only using 4 pitchers. Koufax had 2 complete game wins, Don Drysdale got a complete game win and Johnny Podres pitched won game 2 with 8-2/3 innings and Ed Roebuck pitched 1-1/3 inning. I still have to ticket stub and the program.
How exciting and a keepsake. Pass that along and keep it for old times sake. As I pan the stadium and a sea of white shirts men & women dressed for Sunday in their clothes, that’s how it was then and now no comment. Dressing down as far as we have come also speaks to character.
@@AllanGonnella Podres went 8 1/3 innings. Perranoski, not Roebuck, closed the game for Podres throwing 2/3 of an inning.
Keep that ticket! 🎟️
I never went to a world series game but Ill always remember going to the ballpark, and that's going to Fenway Park for me. Those were the days back in the 60's, it would of been cool to see all those legends in the world series. Must of been a
Great time to be a baseball fan
I don't know why I named Ed Roebuck? He must have been on my mind for some reason. Of coarse it was Perranoski. He was their closer back then.
I was lucky. I was also able to go to the 4th game of the 1965 World Series game against the Twins at Dodger Stadium, games 1 & 2 against the Oakland A's in 1974 and, it was either the 4th or 5th game, at Dodger Stadium in, I think, 1978 against the Yankees. It was the game where Goose Gossage nailed Ron Cey in the head with a 95 mph fast ball. I still have all the ticket stubs and programs for all those games plus a few playoff games. I still have the program for the 1959 All-Star Game at the LA Coliseum.
Kofax, Podres and Drysdale? No wonder it was a sweep. What a great 1,2,3!
The pitching was a lethal trio, as the Dodgers had the pitching.
And don't forget about Perranoski! 16-3, 37 saves in 1963! What a season in relief.
True!!!!
And yet, the trio of Koufax, Drysdale, and Osteen would itself get swept against the Orioles three years later. Even with great pitching, you gotta have at least *some* offense -- and the Dodgers would have virtually none in the '66 series.
@@ronmackinnon9374Had a stretch in that series where they went 33 straight innings of not scoring a run, so the reason for the loss is the offense, not the pitching.
Surprised they didn't mention (after 3:00) that Musial had just completed his final 'farewell' season in '63. (He missed by one year the '64 Cardinals championship.)
Who's here now that these 2 teams are the 2024 World Series
Shit up!! Just check the dates clickophile.
Brooklyn, in mourning. The rest of the country a little more than a month later.
Sweet vindication all those years Brooklyn got bettered by those damn Yanks and the LA Dodgers swept them with Ford Maris and Mantel Awesome!!!
“We embarrassed Maris, handled Mantle. They used their bats like a prop.” -Don Drysdale singing
Then came 1977 Mr October Reggie Jackson 14 years for revenge
One hell of a dominant series for the dodgers. Maybe this year we will get another Dodgers/Yankees world series.
The Yankees got their revenge in 1977 with Reggie 😅 the next time they met in the World Series
Or maybe the year after that 😜
@@michaelleroy9281That Yanks team was loaded
13:15 The heat Koufax put on that thing and it was his 130th pitch of the game. Dude was just insane that year. When I looked up his game stats he had at least four 3 hitters that year and two back back if I remember right.
This is payback for 1941, 1947, 1949, 1952, & 1956. It was great to see the Dodgers in 4. Too bad that the Dodgers were in L.A. instead of Brooklyn.
And then came 1977 when they met again Mr October Reggie Jackson the one man show the Yankees had to wait 14 years for revenge
@@michaelleroy9281then the Dodgers got revenge in 1981.
What's satisfying of that 63 World Series for the Dodgers, not only that we swept the Yankees, but the Dodgers never once trailed in either game to the Yankees, great justice for the past World Series battles. As LA, the Dodgers are 12-10 vs the Yankees in the World Series games.
But it wasn't payback for 1953?
@@michaelleroy9281
And in the following year Reggie Jackson won it again over the Dodgers, in the most disgusting way!
If it were today, those 3 pitchers would be out of the game after 5 innings
The 1963 L.A. Dodgers did excellent on kicking the Yankees ass. 😀👍⚾️
They were a terrific team but also a nice surprise,
I remember running home from school just in time to watch Koufax strike out Harry Bright.
As this and a few other videos on UA-cam successfully illustrate, Major League Baseball in the 1960's was the Golden Age of Baseball. And that's for many reasons. I specialize in the aesthetics of the 60s era, so I'll cover that here:
Every team played in great ballparks, whether they were in older, classic ballparks (Phillies' Shibe Park, Reds' Crosley Field, Pirates' Forbes Field, Tigers' namesake Stadium, White Sox' Comiskey Park, Yankee's original namesake Stadium, etc) or in more modern parks (Dodgers' namesake Stadium, Giants' Candlestick Park, Astros' namesake Dome, Angels' Anaheim Stadium, A's Oakland Coliseum, Twins' Metropolitan Stadium, Orioles' Memorial Stadium, etc), they were all great, with the exception of the Cardinals and Senators, who I think were aesthetically better in Busch Stadium I (Sportsmans Park) and Griffith Park, respectively. The dugouts and clubhouses were designed and built to serve the very purpose of a simple area for the players to be in, not virtual apartments like today. The overall look of green seats and steel, simple grandstand construction, and on special occasions, red white and blue bunting, made for a timeless atmosphere that anyone can appreciate.
The players also dressed very well. As a comment on a Uni Watch post says, the jersey and pants are trim but not tight. Button down jerseys with short sleeves and true vests reign supreme. The stirrup socks were at the most ideal proportion of stirrup to sanitary sock, allowing for plenty of white (Or yellow in the A's case) while still giving enough space for colorful and creative stripes. It was pre-double knit so every jersey was soft flannel but you still had an injection of powder blue roads. The cap is not quite the exaggerated high peak but isn’t formless either, with green underbrims for reduced glare (The grass is green too) and leather sweatbands with white reeding. No matter what style a team happened to wear, it was almost guaranteed to look like baseball.
Teams with classic designs (Yankees, Cubs, Dodgers, Red Sox, Cardinals, etc) and those who experimented with their looks (A's, Pilots, White Sox, Expos, Padres, etc) all looked very elegant, particularly because button-front jerseys and belted pants were still in vogue, giving off a classic, formal vibe, going with the notion of baseball being a gentleman's game.
The umpires also looked their best, many times being outfitted in dark navy suits, caps, and black ties and dress shoes, with either white shirts, adding to the aforementioned formal and official vibe.
The players not only dressed well, but the equipment they used, consisting of Hillerich and Bradsby made Louisville Slugger or Adirondack natural-colored ash wood bats; Rawlings, Wilson, or Spalding tan leather fielding gloves and mitts; the aforementioned black (Or white in the A's case) leather spikes; simple-construction batting helmets with one earflap, which just seems to scream baseball to me; and catcher's equipment with simple patterns on the chest protector, shin guards (Both of which preferably in team colors), and the steel bars of the mask, were also simple compared to today, but elegant.
And that's just the aesthetics of that era-not to mention the caliber of players during that time. But I'll let others cover that. I hope my Heaven is 1960's MLB when my time comes.
Well said lad, I agree with your eloquent paragraphs. I'm 73, but still watch these films-and old hockey of Booby Hull and the Black Hawks-of the days that when player respect was tantamount.
Mr Hockey, Gordie Howe in person was known and expected good manners.
Great discussion. I could not agree more, especially the aesthetics. The uniforms were classy and the stirrups and caps perfectly proportioned. Busch Stadium I was beautiful. Drysdale, Koufax, Mays, Aaron,Mccovey, Brock, Marichal, Billy Williams, Ford, Mantle, Kaline, Earl Battey, Gibson, Vada Pinson, Clemente. Just to name a few.
amazing to see the Monuments right on the field, imagine if they were there today, many injuries
Damn it... I was hoping in that game four the 9th inning they would include Sandy Koufax jumping for joy prematurely thinking he had thrown a third strike to Lopez. I remember distinctly Sandy doing that and saying to myself, "Get back there. You didn't win". I was only nine years old living in Oxnard California but rooting for the Yankees and my hero Mickey Mantle. It was quite a moment seeing Koufax having to walk back to the mound with a look of astonishment and his tail between his legs knowing it wasn't over yet. It was the next pitch to Lopez unfortunately that ended the game making champs of the Dodgers but also made me cry.
The reason Koufax got excited was Tracewski dropped the ball on a force play the umpire called Richardson out, and then changed the call to safe when he realized the ball was dropped
Nobody had their tail between their legs. The Yanks had Dodgers feet jammed up their shit-chutes.
😆🤓🤠
Dodgers stadium is becoming one of the older stadiums in the majors.
My very first Major League Baseball game in person was at the LA Coliseum when the Dodgers played the Cincinnati Reds. June 1960. Sandy Koufax started the game but only lasted two innings. He gave up a grand slam in the first inning and was pulled in the second inning for some reason. I remember this series well. Dodger pitching was phenomenal in those days.
Sandy made up for it in this clincher though.
Hard to believe this series was a month before JFK was assassinated. Good times, but then it turned to sadness.
Ur right, everything went to hell!
@@MichaelForte-jn5pn we've not ever been the same.
October 2-6 it was over in less than a week
But you didn't know that was coming on October 6th the day the World Series ended
@@michaelleroy9281 good point
Richardson is safe on 2nd but called out 35:54, But Tracewski dropped the ball. Dodgers defeating the Yanks in 3 games and there's only 2,000 views? Great series.
They swept the series in 4 games.
@@mpaulm The Yankees never once had a lead in the 4 games.
Reading about this now in the book ‘The Last Innocents’. The series meant A LOT to Americans, especially those in the west coast.
how come
is that not the greatest book ever,I confess ive read it 7 times.
Classic viewing.
Two great teams.
Dodgers versus yankees.awesome ball.
The next 4-0 Series sweep against the Yanks would be even more dominant by the Reds in 1976, which made manager Billy Martin cry.
Apparently Mantle asked Roseboro during one of his at bats against Koufax “how the &”&$ do you hit this ^+£¥?” He really shackled them.
A lot of frustrated batters said that about trying to hit Koufax. Willie Stargell said that trying to hit Sandy was like trying eat soup with a fork.
Classic baseball.
Yankees are 2-3 in the World Series in the decade of the 60s.
Dodgers are the opposite, in the decade of the 1960s, Dodgers are 2-1 in the World Series.
@@rumarspencer7302 Those same Dodgers got swept in the World 🌍 Series 3 years later by the Orioles, so they know the other side of this thing
My two favorite baseball teams
RIP Joe Pepitone ⚾
Let's Go Dodgers!
The Cardinals came up a little short this year in the last season of Stan Musial. The Cards would win the pennant in 1964 and the Dodgers again in 1965, but the Cards would win the pennant again in 1967 and 1968. Growing up in St. Louis my favorite games were when the Cards played the Dodgers snd Giants. The Giants won the pennant in 1962. The Dodger pitching and the hitting of the Giants made tough competition. Sandy Koufax, Juan Marichal, and Bob Gibson were the aces. I remember being in grade school being able to watch some of this series from our classroom. Cards fan
Forgot to mention the Dodgers also won the 1965 pennant as well. THe Giants often came in second place in the 1960s. Just not quire enough pitcing for them.
@@larryloveless2967 Yeah, the Giants didn't have Koufax.
14:22 14:29 The Dodgers won their first 5 World Series games at Dodger Stadium 2 in 1963 3 in 1965
The GREATEST Dodgers team EVER!
Nah, 1965 Sandy Koufax was more dominant than he was in 1963
35:39 Bobby Richardson beats Maury Wills' throw to second base to end the game, but the ump calls him out. After the ball is dropped, the ump reverses his call to "safe," but he should have called Richardson safe in the first place because he beat the throw. You can see Richardson on first base get an excellent jump to 2nd, as he was immediately moving on contact. Great base running.
Baseball was played by men NOT WIMPS
Yankees stadium was hard to hit homers to center field. 460 ft??? Only the big boys hit out.
Back when NYC was still pretty. Love the old pre World Trade Center skyline
When is a film or a tape of the 1964 All-Star Game going to surface?
In the free agency environment of 2021, Koufax would have become a Yankee within a short time after this series was over . Just an opinion .
Nah. He was a loyal dodger. You do realize the Dodgers hated the Yankees right? The Mets are literally the Brooklyn Dodgers of today. They do great and end up losing in the end. Thats what the Dodgers did when they were in Brooklyn. Then they went to LA and Started winning alot more championships. They are pretty much the Yankees of the West coast and National League.
@@ejswrestlingjourney9857 Dodgers as LA, are 12-10 vs the Yankees in the World Series, here they gave them their first ever sweep, and never once had the Yankees lead in either game, and currently the Dodgers have won the last World Series meeting in 81.
@@rumarspencer7302 absolutely
@@rumarspencer7302 that’s a strange way of looking at having won two World Series each
@@ejswrestlingjourney9857 when it comes to money, there is no loyalty. Nobody hates anyone enough to turn down the money ask Johnny Damon.
Classic series.
I've always wondered why game one is not available in its entirety. Several World Series games are available which predate this classic encounter, showing Koufax at the peak of his powers. Did the Yankee organization have something to do with suppressing it, because they were swept in embarrassing fashion?
8:47 How in the hell big were the baseballs back then?
69,000 fans!
Joe D and Stan Musial representing the AL and NL on the ceremonial opening pitch, but Stan has no association with the Dodgers. With all due respect to the great Stan the Man, can think of a half dozen retired Dodger players - Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, Carl Furillo, etc - who would have been better NL/Dodger reps to join Joe D in this ceremony. Seems an easy fix not to have done it.
Stan was retiring.
Be quiet.
@@TheBatugan77 Drop dead clown....I don't care if your mammy was retiring, a Dodger should have been there at a Dodger World Series. Musial retired in St Louis. The NL should have had their azz in St Louis paying tribute, if they wanted to honor him. Don't like it? Then make my day and make a bona fide offer to do something about it, azz wipe.
Narrated by Vin Scully.
Whatever happened to the ‘Loas Angeles Dodgers’?
Vin Scully
The beginning of the end of the 1947-1962 Dynasty. losses in the series to LA in 63 and StL in 64 were followed by the worst team in the AL in 1966 and no championships until 1977.
Yankees won 20 titles
From 1920s TO 1960s
No other team will match that
Not even the same Yankees
Trivia the Yankees although they were last, they were the first last place team to win 70 games or more in 1966
@@michaelleroy9281 Was that the year they had a late season game that had a total attendance YankeeStadium of 511 and red barber was fired when he directed the WPIX cameras to pan all the empty seats
0:53 name that tune
Three years later, the Dodgers got a taste of their own medicine when they were swept by the Baltimore Orioles, skipped by former Yankee Hank Bauer. The Dodgers managed only 17 hits in the entire series, and failed to score a single run in the final 33 innings of the series, setting unrecords which stand to this day.
Yes that was a drought, struggled offensively in that World Series, in those 33 straight innings, but Dodgers are 13-8 in the regular season all time vs Orioles, plus got more World Series titles than the Orioles.
Hank Bauer from half of 1961 and the entire seasons of 1962-67 and half of 68 and 69 as manager of the A's twice and the Orioles, Bauer as manager in the 60s, in this span has a win percentage of 52.2%, of a 594-544, and the Dodgers in this exact span, has a better percentage of 54.7 percentage of a 622-516 record, compared to Bauer's teams, and Dodgers have better World Series success in the 60s, Bauer's Orioles only playoff success was in 66.
No doubt Hank has won more World Series against the Dodgers as a Yankee player, and his only one as Orioles manager, but it's only fitting that Hank got his first World Series loss as a player vs the Dodgers.
The Orioles only used 4 PITCHERS the entire 1966 series! Dave McNally got knocked in the 3rd inning in the opening game and the game was finished by Moe Drabowsky, who allowed no runs, 1 hit while striking out 11 in 6 2/3 innings. 20 year-old Jim Palmer beat Sandy Koufax in game 2 by shutting out the Dodgers on 4 hits. The Dodgers committed 6 errors, including 3 by center fielder Willie Davis. It turned out to be the last game Sandy Koufax ever pitched. Then Wally Bunker and Dave McNally pitched shutouts in games 3 and 4 to complete the sweep. The Orioles pitchers’ ERA was .50 for the series!
Who's Chávez Ravine???🤔🤔🤔🤔
That's the nickname of the area where Dodger Stadium is located at(it's also the nickname for Dodger Stadium).
"this is khelly chlarkson"
It was called Chavez Ravine when the Angels played there ( 1962-1965)
Someone correct me if I’m wrong but I think it was the only time the Yankees were ever swept in the WS
It was the first time the Yankees were swept. The Yankees were swept by the Reds in 1976
@@FrankLPizza Right On 👍🏼
I’m not exactly sure but Vin Scully I believe it is said it at the very end, and the Yankees got swept by the Reds in the 1976 World Series
The Yankees got swept in 1922 by the New York Giants.....
@FrankLPizza the Yankees got swept in 1922 by the New York Giants
RR 90 09
14 years later Reggie Jackson himself kicked the Dodgers ass again when they met again in the World Series
These are Dodgers highlights. Yankees had none!
Claude Osteen not podres