I haven't seen this game since I was all of 11 and suffering the Jays losing to Oakland in the ALCS pretty much every year it seemed. They finally put it all together in 1992. What a team. And what a game that was. Thanks for the upload!
hell of a series. my grandmother loved watching the braves. and man they were hot around this time. hell of a linup on both sides. and that atlanta rotation was as good as it's ever been. glavine, smoltz, avery, maddux. man watching this reminds of me grandma...she stayed up laaate to watch this one. for some reason, i was staying at her house when this was on. she made me go to bed, but told me about it the next morning at breakfast before school.
I'll never forget being in the Sky Dome that night and running on to the field immediately after the game. I was able to get some dirt from the mound before security shoved us away. What a party in Toronto that night.
@Energetic Coach right so we can't call slave owners racist because it was a different time? ppl who get offended at people pointing out racism are nothing more than racism apologists. in the 60s you'd be saying segregation was no biggie. in the 30s you'd be saying naziism is no biggie. stop making excuses for racism.
@@MrMikeyboy4 um it's not just me numb nuts. you could ask the only Native American MLB player what he thinks, but you're not gonna like his answer. I guess you'll tell him to grow up too? if Natives stole your land and destroyed your ancestors you wouldn't be too pleased about them now using your culture for shits and gigs. you'd never shut up about how unfair it is. so maybe for one second try imagining what it's like for them.
With Joe Carter being the first baseman here for the final out, and with the big Homer in '93, you could say both of the Blue Jays' World Series wins literally were in Carter's hands.
So without the Phillies choke job in game 4 of that world series, the Jays would have gone to a game 7 against them. I'm glad the Jays won those two years, but they were lucky both times. Atlanta was almost up 2-0 on them , despite being the inferior team.
Omg I was 9 years old when world series happened in 1992... I remember watching baseball games on TV with my Dad! Till this day Baseball games on TV put me to sleep! JAY'S are from my home town Toronto Canada! I cried hearing my national anthem... So proud to be Canadian! There will never ever be another team like the JAY'S that year of '92!
I am a Brewers fan, and that year they had done incredibly well, only to see Toronto take the AL East. It just so happened that I was in Toronto on this particular weekend-it was planned well in advance. Sitting in a hotel lobby watching this game on a big screen with about 40 other people. When Winfield came up to bat in the 10th, I remember saying out loud to no one in particular, "He's due for a hit" because he had hit the ball pretty hard in his last at bat. Wouldn't you know, he did it. Pretty memorable night. The Jays were amazingly good that year.
The Brew Crew won 92 games that year & made that late push for the division crown after the Orioles had already faded from the hunt, but the Jays held on that final weekend. I still remember when the Brewers hammered the Jays 22-2 at the SkyDome in late-August. A lot of folks thought at that time the Jays would fold. But it didn't it happen, & the Jays went on to win their 1st WS title :)
The current Brew Crew could take a lesson from that '92 squad Sal Bando put together. PITCHING. Best in the American League. Really thought Cal Eldred was gonna be a superstar the way he came out the gate that year. But they won with pitching and defense...great middle relief. IIRC, they only had two hitters with more than 10 home runs!
That '92 pitching staff was insane, and maybe one of the finest ever assembled. David Cone, Jimmy Key, Jack Morris, Dave Stieb, David Wells, Al Leiter, Pat Hentgen, Juan Guzman, Duane Ward, Tom Henke, Todd Stottlemyre, Mike Timlin, just to name a few hahaha.
william pavichevich would have been quite a Game 7 too--Glavine vs. Guzman. I wonder though if Cox later regretted the decision to go with a three-man rotation, when Leibrandt had had a great season as the 4th starter. 15-7, 3.36. That's more than good enough to merit being in the rotation. Bringing him in in the exact same situation, same game of the series, as where he had failed the year before was just asking for another meltdown. I don't think it was fair to Leibrandt to do that to him. He should have been the starter in Game 4. (Still available for bullpen duty of course, if necessary, but then they could have had Glavine, Smoltz, and Avery on regular rest for games 5, 6, and 7.
@@ADEAL918 The irony? Cox's first postseason failure was WITH the Jays when Cox went three-man, left off Jim Clancy and pushed Stieb to bug dust in Game 7 (after he'd pitched spectacularly in Games 1 & 4). The benefactor in that Game 7 of the 85 ALCS? Charlie Leibrandt.
Bryce McNeil that's interesting. Just looked up the numbers though, and Clancy's numbers in '85 weren't nearly as good as Leibrandt's in '92. It's weird with Cox. I admire the heck out of the guy for what he did with those Braves teams and his players worshipped him, thought of him like a father. But he did make some pretty objectively idiotic post-season pitching moves that even without 20/20 hindsight I remember thinking "this is going to be a disaster." Particularly in the '99 World Series in Games 1 and 3 when he left his starters in WAY too long and let them blow leads even with a solid bullpen backing them up. Particularly egregious was Game 3 with Glavine where he had just been sick and gave him 7 great innings with a two-run lead, about to get his team back in the series, but he left him in even though he was clearly tiring and he blew the lead in two batters. '05 LDS was another doozy, leaving Kyle Farnsworth in for the 9th in Game 4 after he gave up a grand slam the previous inning, cutting a five-run lead to a run, and then he coughed the rest of it up in the 9th.
@@ADEAL918 Yeah, in Clancy's case, mediocre #s probably scared him off but I would have only reverted to three man if I lost one of the first two home games. KC hadn't faced Clancy yet that year and that usually at least favours the pitcher. I found Cox often got into his own head in a playoff environment and would be working harder to avoid a past mistake than to make the right decision in the there and then. Even as the Jays had victimized Reardon twice, I was absolutely gleeful that Cox kept Leibrandt in because I could see him tiring and felt the Jays were going to capitalize.
@@ADEAL918 Cox also lived and died by the platoon abscess very stubborn and given who the opposing pitcher was he’d always have a lefty or righty heavy lineup. Problem is Braces weren’t that deep and ok important games, especially elimination games he’ll throw out mediocre lineups.
We’re you at the dome watching. They opened it up for us fans. lol. I was there with my twin sons 1 year olds lol. Being there the year after when Joe Carter hit the home run was the only experience better then this lol.
I remember watching this game and the following World Series win when I was a kid, wore everything I had in Blue jays, was very exciting. This is something the jays will never do again in my life time.
Great, great memories -- I remember it as though it was yesterday. Thanks for the upload. To me, this was by far the most defining moment in Jays' history. Coming into this series they were clearly an outstanding team with lots of talent. And yet, the whole of Toronto was nervous as Hell. Since the late 80's the Blue Jays had been knocking on the door forever, it seemed, only to screw up at the very end -- usually in a ridiculous way. The whole picture changed when when Devon White, Robbie Alomar and Joe Carter were brought on board. Still, 1991's ALCS loss to the Minnesota Twins was tough to swallow. Not to take anything away from the Twins, but to this day I feel the Jays could've, and should've won that series. Alas, by the time the 1992 WS came along, so many in Toronto felt as if there was some curse upon the team. There was talk -- unjust, I grant you -- about the US not wanting the WS Trophy to be won outside the States. Literally everyone was on edge. I even remember my girlfriend telling me at the time that she overheard two old ladies arguing about baseball in a public toilet. One could feel the tension throughout the entire city. We knew our boys were good enough to win it, but there was always this voice at the back of one's mind saying, "Well, yes -- but what if... God forbid!" When the final out closed the deal, the city just erupted! It was like a giant bottle of Champagne, which someone had been shaking for 7 years, until Timlin & Carter blew the cork off. The joy on the streets was indescribable! Total strangers were hugging & kissing each other, and no one knew what to say. Everything was so spontaneous -- maybe because people expected the win, but were afraid to admit it, thus they weren't planning to party. It all makes for a memory that I'd gladly relive from time to time for the rest of my life. Next year's win was also special, but n a different way. In 1993 the Jays had such an incredible line-up, that no one could have seriously hoped to challenge them. Think about it: 1st, 2nd, and 3rd best batting average in the league that year were all Jays -- Olerud, Molitor, and Alomar, respectively. In the 1993 WS Pat Borders was batting 9th in the batting order. That was mind boggling -- the #9 batter being the WS MVP the year before... In 1993 there was simply no doubt in anyone's mind who was going to win it all -- even before Carter's heroics in the bottom of the 9th. But in 1992, it felt more special because many of the players were home-grown, and also there were great contributions from some of the role-players involved. Let me mention a few names, for old time's sake: Dave Stieb, Kelly Gruber, Eddie Zosky, Alfredo Griffin, John Olerud, Candy Maldonado, Tom Henke, Ed Sprague, Pat Borders, Juan Guzman, Many Lee, Rob Ducey, Jeff Kent, David Wells, Greg Meyers, Dwayne Ward, Turner Ward (and George Bell, who by that time wasn't a Jay anymore, but should have been). Some of these guys were at the end of their best years, others were to become all-time greats later on; none of them were born in Canada, but the city nurtured their careers for years. They, along with all other players on the 1992 Blue Jays roster should be made honorary citizens of Toronto. Thanks, and thanks again, for these once-in-a-life-time memories, boys!
@greg oscar True, very true -- so much has changed since then. But I still have hopes to see my city live through a similar experience, if the Leafs win the Stanley Cup (yes, I'm an incurable optimist) within my life time. As for the 4 million viewers, I don't remember what the numbers were exactly. Some time ago I saw an interview with Kelly Gruber, who said that the Yankees, the Red Sox, the Texas Rangers may be called "America's team" from time to time, and yet none of these teams ever had a clue. Back in the Jays' prime years they were truly Canada's team, with the entire nation pinning their hopes on them. It's a fact that all of Canada cheered for the Jays. With that in mind, it wouldn't surprise me if the viewership was even higher than the figure you give. Cheers!
Look at Joe C. So calm and collected....laughing at first, joking with the opposition....I never paid attention at the time to how much he was enjoying the moment. Pretty sure nearly everyone else wasn't. That's impressive.
@@c7lee lol....true, but Joe doesn't get picked off 2nd in a huge game. Seriously, I do think it's good Vlad enjoys the game and the interaction with the other players. I like that baseball has drifted towards these shows of mutual respect. NHL players should really pay attention in my opinion because they have absolutely no respect for each other. Having said that, Vlad does seem to be a little too lackadaisical out there, and far too often. Admiring what he thinks are home runs but bounce of the wall. Not running out plays on the base-paths. He does need to be a bit more aware of his effort level.
Thanks for the upload. I took a trip. Two separate leagues, AL pitchers with no previous MLB at bats, players still look like people. Man, those were the days. Go Blue Jays!
I agree, baseball today isn't what it was 20 years ago. Players played for the fans. There were no outrageous contract demands no bullshit endorsement deals. Players wore the uniform and didnt try to make it a fashion statement with custom cleats, and there were no instant replays, and you can take out a second baseman to break up a double play, mound visits, the list of game changes and rules I can go on forever. Kids watching baseball now will never see get to see how a baseball game is supposed to be played at the mlb level unless they are watching a game on youtube
always found it so classy that even tough Dave Stieb was injured mid-season and never pitched in the playoffs, they let him stay in the dugout and let him be part of the team when they finally won this big one. this was the classic Jays team, who had so many from the first real winning years: Gruber, Key, Stottlemyre, Ward, Henke, Wells, Gaston, Borders. then adding White, Alomar, Carter, Winfield, and Olerud solidified the team. Rogers needs to study what Pat Gillick did to bring the Jays (and
I agree, but it is a shame that Stieb came along a couple of years early. He had ridulous luck; all the near no-hitters. He certainly didn't have the teams that Key had, no disrepect to Key.
Go Jays Go!!! Winning this game and series was MAGICAL as a young Blue Jays fan. To win it again the next year in 93 with Joe Carter's game winning home run was even more INCREDIBLE.
R. Alomar, D. White, J. Olerud, J. Carter, D. Winfield, J. Kent, D. Bell, J. Morris, J. Key, J. Guman, D. Wells, D. Cone, and A. Leiter. This Jays team was incredibly stacked for the present and for the future.
Yeah really a much better lineup than the Braves. In hindsight would have been a big upset if the Braves had won. Then again the Braves were about their starting pitching.
The 1992 Blue Jays were pretty clearly the best team in the majors that season but because of their failures in prior years people were reluctant to consider them the favorites. They were known around baseball as the "Blow Jays" for their tendency to collapse when the pressure was highest. They re-defined their franchise by winning this.
+walterlv01 Alomar's home run in the ALCS off of Eckersley was the one that changed everything in my opinion. To me that one was even bigger than Carter's home run in 93 because in 93 it seemed almost inevitable that the Jays would win against the underdog Phillies and Mitch Williams had been terrible all series. Alomar's HR was off the regular season MVP+Cy young winner on the road to cap a huge comeback.
+walterlv01 That's nonsense F Dann....the Jays were most certainly the favorites in 93. The Phillies were practically considered a Cinderella team. In 92 the Braves may have been slightly favored but it wasn't by much. Saying "nobody" expected it....well...you obviously weren't watching baseball at that time. And yes Thomas you're right. It was the A's that were the Blue Jay's biggest nemesis. I wouldn't say it was "bigger" than Carter's homer.....nothing is more impressive than a homer that walks off a world series.....but it was one of the most important homers in Jays history that's for sure.
doublestrokeroll Go back to 1989, 1990 and if you were to tell people the Blue Jays of all teams were going to become the first team to win back to backs since the 1977-1978 Yankees in the next few years people would have laughed in your face. It wasn't expected.
I was there. I've been watching them since the early 80's. No fucking shit nobody would have predicted back to backs prior to the first one...nobody ever predicts back to backs for ANY world series prior to winning the first one. You're not even making a point. Once we won that first one, and got molitor, Henderson, and Stewart, EVERYBODY new we had a good SHOT at the back to back. It was obviously the best line up in all of baseball prior to the season starting. You're here acting like they were long shots to win it both years which is just complete BS. They were HEAVY favorites over the Phillies and probably an even pick with the Braves. You obviously weren't paying attention or weren't alive back then cause if you were you'd know the Jays were a consistently excellent team from the mid 80's onward. They were a playoff team in 89 and 91. 92 was not a surprise. It was the final fulfillment of all that potential. For fans who had been following them....like me....it was a relief, not a surprise.
@Baseball fan 42 this was when the game was played the right way. None of this bat flipping, players tearing their jerseys off of each other and I can name alot more nonsense that goes on in todays game but dont feel like typing it. The game was played hard nosed and it was all about the game and playing for the fans. Now it's all about the players, ridiculous contract demands, and bullshit endorsement deals. Baseball and the way it was played really went downhill after the 90's.
I remember watching the game outside of A&W Burgers on Yonge St with my friends. We couldn't get inside as it was packed. We stood on the concrete planters and watched without sound. There was a group of 200 maybe 300 people gathered behind us who didn't have a good view, so my friend Kevin and I would update them with the ball count and score.
Thanks for uploading these games. The program intro and tune is pure nostalgia. I was in 9th grade and baseball was life. That was a great Jays team. Great lineup and so much pitching.
Anyone who grew up in this era should remember the American media made it into a big joke that a Canadian team was in the World Series, I'm so glad the Jays won.
+ScreamingSadist Yep, totally. And I doubt I'll forget the headlines afterwards, especially one certain newspaper which had printed on the following headline: "America's Game Needs Work." Man they were pissed - Mitch Williams was reportedly receiving death threats after giving up the 3R-HR to Joe Carter in '93's Game 6. And then the Expos looked like they were poised to win in '94 until the abrupt strike (that was infuriating to watch).
+Sam “Bang Ding Ow” Burns They're doing it again this year as well with the way the american media is shitting on the Jays. It's a disgrace to baseball.
+Lurch Murphy No one is shitting on Canada. You guys need to grow a thicker skin. The Jays are the whiniest team in baseball. They complain about everything.
I was as well, with my old man (Frank), and a good pal named Hugo…. Hugo and I lost my Dad in the craziness on Front street for a couple hours and finally found him at King…. What a night…
@@jordancrombie2676 I was walking down yonge street, high fiving EVERYONE!! I watched the final out on a bar just passed shuter, its not there anymore though.
CBS Saturday Morning Schedule for the 1992-93 Season: Fall 1992: 8:00am: Fievel's American Tails 8:30am: Disney's The Little Mermaid 9:00am: Garfield and Friends 10:00am: Teenage Mutant Ninja 🐢 11:00am: Back to the Future 11:30am: Raw Toonage 12:00pm: The 😉 Live 🌊 🐒 12:30pm: Grimmy Spring 1993: 8:00am: Fievel's American Tails 8:30am: Disney's The Little Mermaid 9:00am: Garfield and Friends 10:00am: Teenage Mutant Ninja 🐢 11:00am: Cyber C.O.P.S. 11:30am: Raw Toonage 12:00pm: The 😉 Live 🌊 🐵 12:30pm: Back to the Future
@@SAVEAMERICA-cf6kf Good eye, you're right! Javy only had 1 at bat all of post that year, but he was 1 of the 25 that Bobby Cox had selected... I stand corrected!
The 92 series was better. The 93 one is *remembered* as better because of Games 4 and 6. But there was really only one dud game in the 92 series (Game 5) and even that was fairly dramatic for the first few innings.
Check out the Jays pitchers coming out of the bullpen to relieve David Cone. Todd Stottlemyre, David Wells, Duane Ward, Tom Henke, Jimmy Key, and Mike Timlin. Not bad.
And they didn't even use Pat Hentgen (a 19 game winner the next year) the whole series. Plus they barely even bothered with an above average reliever like M. Eichhorn. The Jays had enough pitching to make 2 very good teams that year.
We also became impromptu cheerleaders, singing O Canada and Blue Jay song. When Carter caught that ball, I just turned to the crowd and yelled" WE DID IT"! And jumped into the crowd and was body surfed. All I remember was seeing Toronto engulfed in blue and white and Canada flags everywhere. Over a million people on the streets. People riding on the back of police cruisers, the police high fiving complete strangers from their windows. It was one of the best and memorable nights of my life.
My parents got married over this game, and 28 years later, they are still happily married. They got married in a Goodyear blimp after winning a radio show entry. The braves lost, but still was pretty awesome seeing the photos.
It’s crazy to think that Joe Carter caught the ball at first to win the World Series that year and the following year would hit the ball out of Ontario to win the World Series. Joe will forever be a legend in Toronto
this was a victory for Canada, there wasn't a community in the whole country who didn't celebrate that night, other than 1972 I've never seen another victory that compares
1990 World Series ( REDS OCTOBER ) was when I really started watching Baseball ⚾️ I remember those 4yrs 1990-1993 WS so well. Takes me back to a kid becoming a Young man.
What a great game. The Jays were such a disciplined hitting team. Look at how this game starts. Single by White, groundout by Alomar moving the runner to third, and a sacrafice fly by Carter (ignoring the error by Justice). 1 run on just 1 hit. Today's hitters believe its not worth making adjustments just to hit singles and that strikeouts are no worse than getting an out while putting a ball in play. I can't wait for this line of thinking to go away. There are many ways to generate offence that don't require hitting homeruns.
One would think, but...the Jays had 3 all-stars from that year (Alomar, Carter, and Guzman) but the Braves had 4 (Gant, Glavine, Pendleton, and Smoltz). The Braves were slightly favored. Inconsistent offense was always their problem
@@Torontogal1973 I remember thinking when the Raptors were going to Game 6 at the Oracle it was only appropriate that they win their first NBA title on the road just like these Blue Jays won their first WS in Atlanta.
An underrated champion in MLB history, probably because they are in Canada. These guys were so talented and so clutch. Outscored in the 6 game series combined, 17 total runs, and still found ways to win late. Simply dynamic. Overall, best record in the MLB from 1984-1993. Kudos to Pat Gillick who realized that talent alone isn't enough and that you need the clutch gene too.
Baseball in the 90s was so much better than today's baseball, no egos, no bat flips, no showboating, just two very talented teams going at it till the end.
I am watching this tonight April 30th 2022, I can't believe I was only 14 years old when I was watching this game with my buddy while playing Hard Ball on my PC lol.
Charlie Leibrandt has had it rough in the World Series. Poor guy looked like he was about to burst into tears after giving up that two-run double to Dave Winfield.
Gideon deja vu for him after the Puckett homer the previous year. Though he later said that was more devastating than this one in '92. The one silver lining with Leibrandt was that he had already been a part of a World Series winner in '85 with Kansas City so he had his ring already. Leibrandt had a good head on his shoulders and his life certainly wasn't ruined by these games. He retired after one more season due to injury, while his kids were still very young and spent much of his retirement as a dad coaching his sons' teams. Not much to complain about there!
As a young 16yr old FAN of the Braves I WAS DEVASTATED!!! BUT regardless was Happy for the JAYS. DEFINITELY a Classic Game!!! Plus...the Braves ended up doing ALRIGHT DURING THE 90'S, wouldn't you say? 😉😘🙃 Anyways.... Just♥️⚾✌️
Great years with a great GM, coach and players. It would have sucked being on the bottom of that pile. One of the best pile on celebrations in sports history.
Funny seeing all the ex Indians in this series but I was happy to see Carter and Pat Tabler win. Maldanado was an ex Indian but he didn't have as much of an attachment. Carter for the most part WAS the Indians between 85-89 and I was actually happy to see him win, especialy when he won the series in 93
2:44:00 : Watching it live, I thought the ball had gone out of play on the relay and the Braves' winning run would automatically walk in. I had already started focusing on Game 7 LOL
I was at the game, just not in the stadium. I was 15 years old at the time. I just wanted to enjoy the World Series atmosphere so I walked around the stadium and joined with some people in the parking lot who were tailgating and watching the game on a big screen tv. Canadians adorning Canadian ornamentation, while many fellow Americans were carrying American flags and even some were dressed up as "Uncle Sam". Was a good experience.
53:57 - Honestly, I'm only here for this (to see a classic Devon White fly ball catch, the most effortless and consistent move in the history of sports)
I'm a Jays fan born in 1991 - I was technically alive during the Jays championships, but I obviously have zero memories of it happening. It's so great I live in an era where I can watch any game of World Series at the snap of a hand. It must have been great to witness the back-to-back as it happened
one thing is highly noticeable, the 1992 World series Champs Totornto Blue Jays baseball team entire lineup look very healthy , and in very good shape for star athletes . Go Jays !!
The Atlanta Braves in the 1990's were much like the Philadelphia 76ers were in the late '70s-early '80s..went to the world championship round of their sport several times, yet, only came away in first place just once. Both had talent-ladened, All-Star rosters, but were for the most part, very disappointing in the little they achieved with it.
The bullpens were the difference in this series. The Blue Jays were solid throughout the series until Game 6 and 3/4 of the Jays wins were as a result of hits off Braves' relievers.
30 years prior, Maldonado's throw would've cost them the game as it would've gone in to the stands (no screens) and cost them the extra base. Little things make all the difference sometimes.
@3:27:18 1B/3B 0 out, run expectancy 1.78 2B/3B 1 out, run expectancy 1.38 After the G3 fielder's choice RBI, you've got a man on 3B 2 outs, and the RE is 0.35 runs. So about a 1/3 chance you tie the game there, and of course they didn't. Otis Nixon bunts for the 3rd out. So small ball handed Toronto a WS. But gotta admit, it would've been awesome if Nixon had gotten a hit on that. @3:33:27 Ed Spraque says holy s*** and the mic pics it up very clearly. I remember this when I was 10 watching the game. I'd never seen a clip, a tape, or even a dramatized retelling of this WS until now, so I wanted to see if that was a real memory. My memory was correct, but for some reason I remembered it being a deeper voice and also coming from a blond guy with a mullet, like Kelly Gruber. Here we are 30 years later in 2022, and that insignificant memory has lived in my neurons for all this time, and I'm typing this to nobody and waiting for laundry to be done.
That ninth inning by Atlanta was incredible...absolutely incredible. Bobby messed up in using Charlie Leibrandt in relief, just like he did in Game Six a year earlier....Overall, you can tell which team has been built for success from 1990-present (they showed marked improvement when Bobby returned in '90).
Who else often falls asleep listening to youtube and ends up waking up to this?
I just did😂
Me me me
Yuh
It's this one or 1995 ALCS game 5
Bro i did just now and im watching it 😂
Born in 1992 in Scarborough ONT, grew up watching this team, still watch them today, nothing like wining it back - back.
JAYS FAN 4EVER !
Wont hold Scarborough against you lol 😘
Let's hope for a 2023 championship
I am 40 . This was one of my first World Series I ever saw . And now I am an absolute sports historian.
U know Karla?
Fell asleep watching a Harry Potter fan theory video, woke up in the 7th inning of game 6 of the 1992 world series. What a ride
Ahh the early 90s. The future seemed so bright and colorful. Just look at us now.
I didn’t see any tranny nuns being invited to the ball park in 92 🤷♂️
I haven't seen this game since I was all of 11 and suffering the Jays losing to Oakland in the ALCS pretty much every year it seemed. They finally put it all together in 1992. What a team. And what a game that was. Thanks for the upload!
I was 12. If it wasn’t the A’s it was the Twins…Good days, good teams.
And the 1993 team was even more stacked!! One of these years, the Jays with get back
@@johnbattalgazi2108I was 14
hell of a series. my grandmother loved watching the braves. and man they were hot around this time. hell of a linup on both sides. and that atlanta rotation was as good as it's ever been. glavine, smoltz, avery, maddux. man watching this reminds of me grandma...she stayed up laaate to watch this one. for some reason, i was staying at her house when this was on. she made me go to bed, but told me about it the next morning at breakfast before school.
You could ALWAYS count on Joe Carter in the clutch. My favourite Blue Jay of all time.
Mine too!!!
that by far is the greatest collection of mullets you will ever see go jays go.
The 93 phillies had some beauts
Kelly Gruber may be the all time mullet champion.
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FR the one guy had a bald mullet. Idek how that's possible.
@@SeanLKearns a bald mullet is called a skullet lol
I'll never forget being in the Sky Dome that night and running on to the field immediately after the game. I was able to get some dirt from the mound before security shoved us away. What a party in Toronto that night.
Was there too. :))
It will NEVER be called "Roger's Centre" to me. Always SkyDome
DUDE ME TOO 🤣 I had cut off sleeves and Jorts and my mullet but who didn’t back then
Man I still get shivers watching that last pitch. What a great day for the Jays and their fans :)
not even the braves racist chants could save them
@Energetic Coach right so we can't call slave owners racist because it was a different time? ppl who get offended at people pointing out racism are nothing more than racism apologists. in the 60s you'd be saying segregation was no biggie. in the 30s you'd be saying naziism is no biggie. stop making excuses for racism.
@@howdareyou41 sorry pal just bc u think it’s offensive doesn’t mean it is. Grow up ❄️
@@MrMikeyboy4 um it's not just me numb nuts. you could ask the only Native American MLB player what he thinks, but you're not gonna like his answer. I guess you'll tell him to grow up too? if Natives stole your land and destroyed your ancestors you wouldn't be too pleased about them now using your culture for shits and gigs. you'd never shut up about how unfair it is. so maybe for one second try imagining what it's like for them.
@@howdareyou41 what do u think the Greeks have done ?
With Joe Carter being the first baseman here for the final out, and with the big Homer in '93, you could say both of the Blue Jays' World Series wins literally were in Carter's hands.
Well Said
He also caught the final out of the 1993 ALCS.
Frank Baratta lool. You mean last forever ?
So without the Phillies choke job in game 4 of that world series, the Jays would have gone to a game 7 against them. I'm glad the Jays won those two years, but they were lucky both times. Atlanta was almost up 2-0 on them , despite being the inferior team.
@@jaredmenard7645 almost only counts in horse shoes and hand grenades
I love my country, love baseball and love Jays. This game still stresses me out even though I know how it ends.
Omg I was 9 years old when world series happened in 1992... I remember watching baseball games on TV with my Dad! Till this day Baseball games on TV put me to sleep! JAY'S are from my home town Toronto Canada! I cried hearing my national anthem... So proud to be Canadian! There will never ever be another team like the JAY'S that year of '92!
I am a Brewers fan, and that year they had done incredibly well, only to see Toronto take the AL East. It just so happened that I was in Toronto on this particular weekend-it was planned well in advance. Sitting in a hotel lobby watching this game on a big screen with about 40 other people. When Winfield came up to bat in the 10th, I remember saying out loud to no one in particular, "He's due for a hit" because he had hit the ball pretty hard in his last at bat. Wouldn't you know, he did it. Pretty memorable night. The Jays were amazingly good that year.
The Brew Crew won 92 games that year & made that late push for the division crown after the Orioles had already faded from the hunt, but the Jays held on that final weekend. I still remember when the Brewers hammered the Jays 22-2 at the SkyDome in late-August. A lot of folks thought at that time the Jays would fold. But it didn't it happen, & the Jays went on to win their 1st WS title :)
The current Brew Crew could take a lesson from that '92 squad Sal Bando put together. PITCHING. Best in the American League. Really thought Cal Eldred was gonna be a superstar the way he came out the gate that year. But they won with pitching and defense...great middle relief. IIRC, they only had two hitters with more than 10 home runs!
Paul Johnson I didn't know they still played baseball in Milwaukee?????
Paul Johnson, Windfield’s hit was actually in the *11th* inning.
That '92 pitching staff was insane, and maybe one of the finest ever assembled. David Cone, Jimmy Key, Jack Morris, Dave Stieb, David Wells, Al Leiter, Pat Hentgen, Juan Guzman, Duane Ward, Tom Henke, Todd Stottlemyre, Mike Timlin, just to name a few hahaha.
Very Great and Underrated Series.
Game 6 felt like watching a Game 7
william pavichevich would have been quite a Game 7 too--Glavine vs. Guzman. I wonder though if Cox later regretted the decision to go with a three-man rotation, when Leibrandt had had a great season as the 4th starter. 15-7, 3.36. That's more than good enough to merit being in the rotation. Bringing him in in the exact same situation, same game of the series, as where he had failed the year before was just asking for another meltdown. I don't think it was fair to Leibrandt to do that to him. He should have been the starter in Game 4. (Still available for bullpen duty of course, if necessary, but then they could have had Glavine, Smoltz, and Avery on regular rest for games 5, 6, and 7.
@@ADEAL918 The irony? Cox's first postseason failure was WITH the Jays when Cox went three-man, left off Jim Clancy and pushed Stieb to bug dust in Game 7 (after he'd pitched spectacularly in Games 1 & 4). The benefactor in that Game 7 of the 85 ALCS? Charlie Leibrandt.
Bryce McNeil that's interesting. Just looked up the numbers though, and Clancy's numbers in '85 weren't nearly as good as Leibrandt's in '92. It's weird with Cox. I admire the heck out of the guy for what he did with those Braves teams and his players worshipped him, thought of him like a father. But he did make some pretty objectively idiotic post-season pitching moves that even without 20/20 hindsight I remember thinking "this is going to be a disaster." Particularly in the '99 World Series in Games 1 and 3 when he left his starters in WAY too long and let them blow leads even with a solid bullpen backing them up. Particularly egregious was Game 3 with Glavine where he had just been sick and gave him 7 great innings with a two-run lead, about to get his team back in the series, but he left him in even though he was clearly tiring and he blew the lead in two batters. '05 LDS was another doozy, leaving Kyle Farnsworth in for the 9th in Game 4 after he gave up a grand slam the previous inning, cutting a five-run lead to a run, and then he coughed the rest of it up in the 9th.
@@ADEAL918 Yeah, in Clancy's case, mediocre #s probably scared him off but I would have only reverted to three man if I lost one of the first two home games. KC hadn't faced Clancy yet that year and that usually at least favours the pitcher.
I found Cox often got into his own head in a playoff environment and would be working harder to avoid a past mistake than to make the right decision in the there and then. Even as the Jays had victimized Reardon twice, I was absolutely gleeful that Cox kept Leibrandt in because I could see him tiring and felt the Jays were going to capitalize.
@@ADEAL918 Cox also lived and died by the platoon abscess very stubborn and given who the opposing pitcher was he’d always have a lefty or righty heavy lineup. Problem is Braces weren’t that deep and ok important games, especially elimination games he’ll throw out mediocre lineups.
I was 14 & this was the reason I played baseball the next 10yrs. I followed the Jays every game since.
Just enjoyed this game again for the first time since watching it live in '92.... A rush of emotions that frankly surprised me after all these years.
We’re you at the dome watching. They opened it up for us fans. lol. I was there with my twin sons 1 year olds lol. Being there the year after when Joe Carter hit the home run was the only experience better then this lol.
@@AMYV3 I wish... Watched it live on TV. And ya, Carter's home run was legendary as well. Awesome that you were in person for both. Cheers!
I remember watching this game and the following World Series win when I was a kid, wore everything I had in Blue jays, was very exciting. This is something the jays will never do again in my life time.
I will always love those Jays.
Blue Jays The best of all time
@MANCHESTER UNITED stfu who cares
@@fredygonzalez6104 thank you
And i will always hate them with every fiber of my being. I was 12 and still not over it
@M Well why dont you go to one of those countries and if that doesnt work you can always just go fuck yourself
I'm from northern Mexico, what a match in that, I remember it like it was yesterday, great team blue Jays best era ever
Yes it was, thank you from Toronto
Loved watching Key pitch. Beautiful delivery.
Great, great memories -- I remember it as though it was yesterday. Thanks for the upload.
To me, this was by far the most defining moment in Jays' history. Coming into this series they were clearly an outstanding team with lots of talent. And yet, the whole of Toronto was nervous as Hell. Since the late 80's the Blue Jays had been knocking on the door forever, it seemed, only to screw up at the very end -- usually in a ridiculous way. The whole picture changed when when Devon White, Robbie Alomar and Joe Carter were brought on board. Still, 1991's ALCS loss to the Minnesota Twins was tough to swallow. Not to take anything away from the Twins, but to this day I feel the Jays could've, and should've won that series. Alas, by the time the 1992 WS came along, so many in Toronto felt as if there was some curse upon the team. There was talk -- unjust, I grant you -- about the US not wanting the WS Trophy to be won outside the States. Literally everyone was on edge. I even remember my girlfriend telling me at the time that she overheard two old ladies arguing about baseball in a public toilet. One could feel the tension throughout the entire city. We knew our boys were good enough to win it, but there was always this voice at the back of one's mind saying, "Well, yes -- but what if... God forbid!" When the final out closed the deal, the city just erupted! It was like a giant bottle of Champagne, which someone had been shaking for 7 years, until Timlin & Carter blew the cork off. The joy on the streets was indescribable! Total strangers were hugging & kissing each other, and no one knew what to say. Everything was so spontaneous -- maybe because people expected the win, but were afraid to admit it, thus they weren't planning to party. It all makes for a memory that I'd gladly relive from time to time for the rest of my life.
Next year's win was also special, but n a different way. In 1993 the Jays had such an incredible line-up, that no one could have seriously hoped to challenge them. Think about it: 1st, 2nd, and 3rd best batting average in the league that year were all Jays -- Olerud, Molitor, and Alomar, respectively. In the 1993 WS Pat Borders was batting 9th in the batting order. That was mind boggling -- the #9 batter being the WS MVP the year before... In 1993 there was simply no doubt in anyone's mind who was going to win it all -- even before Carter's heroics in the bottom of the 9th. But in 1992, it felt more special because many of the players were home-grown, and also there were great contributions from some of the role-players involved. Let me mention a few names, for old time's sake: Dave Stieb, Kelly Gruber, Eddie Zosky, Alfredo Griffin, John Olerud, Candy Maldonado, Tom Henke, Ed Sprague, Pat Borders, Juan Guzman, Many Lee, Rob Ducey, Jeff Kent, David Wells, Greg Meyers, Dwayne Ward, Turner Ward (and George Bell, who by that time wasn't a Jay anymore, but should have been). Some of these guys were at the end of their best years, others were to become all-time greats later on; none of them were born in Canada, but the city nurtured their careers for years. They, along with all other players on the 1992 Blue Jays roster should be made honorary citizens of Toronto. Thanks, and thanks again, for these once-in-a-life-time memories, boys!
@greg oscar True, very true -- so much has changed since then. But I still have hopes to see my city live through a similar experience, if the Leafs win the Stanley Cup (yes, I'm an incurable optimist) within my life time.
As for the 4 million viewers, I don't remember what the numbers were exactly. Some time ago I saw an interview with Kelly Gruber, who said that the Yankees, the Red Sox, the Texas Rangers may be called "America's team" from time to time, and yet none of these teams ever had a clue. Back in the Jays' prime years they were truly Canada's team, with the entire nation pinning their hopes on them. It's a fact that all of Canada cheered for the Jays. With that in mind, it wouldn't surprise me if the viewership was even higher than the figure you give.
Cheers!
Look at Joe C. So calm and collected....laughing at first, joking with the opposition....I never paid attention at the time to how much he was enjoying the moment. Pretty sure nearly everyone else wasn't. That's impressive.
kinda weird Vlad now gets roasted for doing the same
@@c7lee
lol....true, but Joe doesn't get picked off 2nd in a huge game. Seriously, I do think it's good Vlad enjoys the game and the interaction with the other players. I like that baseball has drifted towards these shows of mutual respect. NHL players should really pay attention in my opinion because they have absolutely no respect for each other.
Having said that, Vlad does seem to be a little too lackadaisical out there, and far too often. Admiring what he thinks are home runs but bounce of the wall. Not running out plays on the base-paths. He does need to be a bit more aware of his effort level.
Thanks for the upload. I took a trip. Two separate leagues, AL pitchers with no previous MLB at bats, players still look like people. Man, those were the days. Go Blue Jays!
I agree, baseball today isn't what it was 20 years ago. Players played for the fans. There were no outrageous contract demands no bullshit endorsement deals. Players wore the uniform and didnt try to make it a fashion statement with custom cleats, and there were no instant replays, and you can take out a second baseman to break up a double play, mound visits, the list of game changes and rules I can go on forever. Kids watching baseball now will never see get to see how a baseball game is supposed to be played at the mlb level unless they are watching a game on youtube
always found it so classy that even tough Dave Stieb was injured mid-season and never pitched in the playoffs, they let him stay in the dugout and let him be part of the team when they finally won this big one. this was the classic Jays team, who had so many from the first real winning years: Gruber, Key, Stottlemyre, Ward, Henke, Wells, Gaston, Borders. then adding White, Alomar, Carter, Winfield, and Olerud solidified the team. Rogers needs to study what Pat Gillick did to bring the Jays (and
Injured players still under contract still travel with the team.
I agree, but it is a shame that Stieb came along a couple of years early.
He had ridulous luck; all the near no-hitters.
He certainly didn't have the teams that Key had, no disrepect to Key.
Same thing has happened with Acuna Jr on ATL 2021 he was a force for their 1st half despite missing the WS run
Rogers doesn't care
I remember! It feels like a 1000 centuries ago, but I still remember. I will always remember.
Go Jays Go!!! Winning this game and series was MAGICAL as a young Blue Jays fan. To win it again the next year in 93 with Joe Carter's game winning home run was even more INCREDIBLE.
R. Alomar, D. White, J. Olerud, J. Carter, D. Winfield, J. Kent, D. Bell, J. Morris, J. Key, J. Guman, D. Wells, D. Cone, and A. Leiter.
This Jays team was incredibly stacked for the present and for the future.
Jeff Kent had already been traded for David Cone but I agree :)
Pat Hentgen (Cy young 1996) too
completely agree with you my friends, let's not forget they won two consecutive years, the best team of all time
Gun to my head 1993 Blue Jays over the 1992 team
Yeah really a much better lineup than the Braves. In hindsight would have been a big upset if the Braves had won. Then again the Braves were about their starting pitching.
The 1992 Blue Jays were pretty clearly the best team in the majors that season but because of their failures in prior years people were reluctant to consider them the favorites. They were known around baseball as the "Blow Jays" for their tendency to collapse when the pressure was highest. They re-defined their franchise by winning this.
+walterlv01 Nobody expected the Blue Jays to win win 1992 and even 1993. The current 2015 edition is just as good as those early 90's teams.
+walterlv01 Alomar's home run in the ALCS off of Eckersley was the one that changed everything in my opinion. To me that one was even bigger than Carter's home run in 93 because in 93 it seemed almost inevitable that the Jays would win against the underdog Phillies and Mitch Williams had been terrible all series. Alomar's HR was off the regular season MVP+Cy young winner on the road to cap a huge comeback.
+walterlv01
That's nonsense F Dann....the Jays were most certainly the favorites in 93. The Phillies were practically considered a Cinderella team. In 92 the Braves may have been slightly favored but it wasn't by much. Saying "nobody" expected it....well...you obviously weren't watching baseball at that time.
And yes Thomas you're right. It was the A's that were the Blue Jay's biggest nemesis. I wouldn't say it was "bigger" than Carter's homer.....nothing is more impressive than a homer that walks off a world series.....but it was one of the most important homers in Jays history that's for sure.
doublestrokeroll Go back to 1989, 1990 and if you were to tell people the Blue Jays of all teams were going to become the first team to win back to backs since the 1977-1978 Yankees in the next few years people would have laughed in your face. It wasn't expected.
I was there. I've been watching them since the early 80's. No fucking shit nobody would have predicted back to backs prior to the first one...nobody ever predicts back to backs for ANY world series prior to winning the first one. You're not even making a point.
Once we won that first one, and got molitor, Henderson, and Stewart, EVERYBODY new we had a good SHOT at the back to back. It was obviously the best line up in all of baseball prior to the season starting.
You're here acting like they were long shots to win it both years which is just complete BS. They were HEAVY favorites over the Phillies and probably an even pick with the Braves.
You obviously weren't paying attention or weren't alive back then cause if you were you'd know the Jays were a consistently excellent team from the mid 80's onward. They were a playoff team in 89 and 91. 92 was not a surprise. It was the final fulfillment of all that potential. For fans who had been following them....like me....it was a relief, not a surprise.
Happy Silver Anniversary of one of the biggest events in Canadian sports
28 years later and still enjoying the memories.
Noooooo no no no
Noooooo no no no
If you got that, you are a true Jays fan from way back.
I’m 11 so I don’t remember that but I remember Joey bats bat flip
@Baseball fan 42 this was when the game was played the right way. None of this bat flipping, players tearing their jerseys off of each other and I can name alot more nonsense that goes on in todays game but dont feel like typing it. The game was played hard nosed and it was all about the game and playing for the fans. Now it's all about the players, ridiculous contract demands, and bullshit endorsement deals. Baseball and the way it was played really went downhill after the 90's.
we went crazy when that final out was recorded and it was one hell of a party downtown
The Braves were in the NLCS. 1991-1993, 1995-1999, WS. 1991-1992, 1995-1996, 1999. Truly the NL team of the ‘90s.
They went to the 1991 1992 1995 1996 1999 world series and only won 1995 sad
The regular season team of the 90’s
And just 1 ring to show for it
Yet baseball’s team of the 90s were the New York Yankees.
Three World Series rings in that decade. Nuff said.
Braves are without a doubt the NL team of the '90s. No other team comes close.
I had no idea Deion Sanders was this good in the World Series. Multiple hits. Throwing out runners at home. Stealing bases. He was playing like an MVP
I remember watching the game outside of A&W Burgers on Yonge St with my friends. We couldn't get inside as it was packed. We stood on the concrete planters and watched without sound. There was a group of 200 maybe 300 people gathered behind us who didn't have a good view, so my friend Kevin and I would update them with the ball count and score.
I was inside. I think it really didn’t matter if you got in or not. The whole city was a party after the win lol
Thanks for uploading these games. The program intro and tune is pure nostalgia. I was in 9th grade and baseball was life. That was a great Jays team. Great lineup and so much pitching.
yes Baseball in early 1990s was lit AF for young American fans
3:33:28
holy ship
@MANCHESTER UNITED Sod off and let us enjoy our baseball. We don't run around posting BASEBALL IS KING on soccer/football videos.
@MANCHESTER UNITED why are you even on a baseball video
@MANCHESTER UNITED all kids love Manchester you gotta be like 12 years old
MANCHESTER UNITED what’s your point ? You don’t have one ... that’s a useless comment bro ? Lol 😂
Anyone who grew up in this era should remember the American media made it into a big joke that a Canadian team was in the World Series, I'm so glad the Jays won.
+ScreamingSadist Yep, totally. And I doubt I'll forget the headlines afterwards, especially one certain newspaper which had printed on the following headline: "America's Game Needs Work." Man they were pissed - Mitch Williams was reportedly receiving death threats after giving up the 3R-HR to Joe Carter in '93's Game 6. And then the Expos looked like they were poised to win in '94 until the abrupt strike (that was infuriating to watch).
+Sam “Bang Ding Ow” Burns They're doing it again this year as well with the way the american media is shitting on the Jays. It's a disgrace to baseball.
+Lurch Murphy lol we gonna wreck Kansas
+Lurch Murphy No one is shitting on Canada. You guys need to grow a thicker skin. The Jays are the whiniest team in baseball. They complain about everything.
Nowthisispodracing You keep telling yourself that.
I was at Skydome that night watching it on the Jumbotron. Those were the days.
I was as well, with my old man (Frank), and a good pal named Hugo….
Hugo and I lost my Dad in the craziness on Front street for a couple hours and finally found him at King….
What a night…
@@jordancrombie2676 I was walking down yonge street, high fiving EVERYONE!! I watched the final out on a bar just passed shuter, its not there anymore though.
I was there too. With my one year old twin sons. Lol. Fans to this day I have been going since the days of $4 tickets at the exhibition stadium lol
@@simbiant4 my old stomping ground’s. The underground arcade and the chess tables lol
That game was epic, so good to end the WS on a tight save.
CBS Saturday Morning Schedule for the 1992-93 Season:
Fall 1992:
8:00am: Fievel's American Tails
8:30am: Disney's The Little Mermaid
9:00am: Garfield and Friends
10:00am: Teenage Mutant Ninja 🐢
11:00am: Back to the Future
11:30am: Raw Toonage
12:00pm: The 😉 Live 🌊 🐒
12:30pm: Grimmy
Spring 1993:
8:00am: Fievel's American Tails
8:30am: Disney's The Little Mermaid
9:00am: Garfield and Friends
10:00am: Teenage Mutant Ninja 🐢
11:00am: Cyber C.O.P.S.
11:30am: Raw Toonage
12:00pm: The 😉 Live 🌊 🐵
12:30pm: Back to the Future
My question is: Who was going to catch for the Braves had the game reached the 12th inning? Bobby Cox literally had no position players left
Probably wasn't planning on it happening at that point.
@@SAVEAMERICA-cf6kf Good eye, you're right! Javy only had 1 at bat all of post that year, but he was 1 of the 25 that Bobby Cox had selected... I stand corrected!
Relief pitching the weak link
He was.
It's the best game in history, I think maybe I'm wrong but in that game I even cried and it motivated me to be a baseball player.
I really like Toronto's '92 team, but, my heart lies in the spectacular '93 series.
The 92 series was better. The 93 one is *remembered* as better because of Games 4 and 6. But there was really only one dud game in the 92 series (Game 5) and even that was fairly dramatic for the first few innings.
93 had Curt Schilling, who was phenomenal. With a better bullpen, the Phils win that.
Check out the Jays pitchers coming out of the bullpen to relieve David Cone. Todd Stottlemyre, David Wells, Duane Ward, Tom Henke, Jimmy Key, and Mike Timlin. Not bad.
And almost every one would become a Yankee
And they didn't even use Pat Hentgen (a 19 game winner the next year) the whole series. Plus they barely even bothered with an above average reliever like M. Eichhorn. The Jays had enough pitching to make 2 very good teams that year.
Key and Sottlemyre were starters they must have just used out of the bullpen for certain cases in the postseason.
Ryan Doyle Key started game 4 and wouldn’t start again. So he was used in the bullpen this game.
The lack of a display bothers me but it's 1992, what are you going to do?
What an incredible production
We also became impromptu cheerleaders, singing O Canada and Blue Jay song. When Carter caught that ball, I just turned to the crowd and yelled" WE DID IT"! And jumped into the crowd and was body surfed. All I remember was seeing Toronto engulfed in blue and white and Canada flags everywhere. Over a million people on the streets. People riding on the back of police cruisers, the police high fiving complete strangers from their windows. It was one of the best and memorable nights of my life.
My parents got married over this game, and 28 years later, they are still happily married. They got married in a Goodyear blimp after winning a radio show entry. The braves lost, but still was pretty awesome seeing the photos.
Dave Winfields last at bat as a Blue Jay.
+MARILYN19481 And, with that ring, he can look back on that moment with great pride.
It’s crazy to think that Joe Carter caught the ball at first to win the World Series that year and the following year would hit the ball out of Ontario to win the World Series. Joe will forever be a legend in Toronto
this was a victory for Canada, there wasn't a community in the whole country who didn't celebrate that night, other than 1972 I've never seen another victory that compares
I saw this series in Puerto Rico, during the semester I was there in the "Study Overseas" program. WAPA, Channel 4, aired the series.
25yrs ago today Oct 24, 2017. Blue Jays first WS!
1990 World Series ( REDS OCTOBER ) was when I really started watching Baseball ⚾️
I remember those 4yrs 1990-1993 WS so well.
Takes me back to a kid becoming a Young man.
What a great game.
The Jays were such a disciplined hitting team. Look at how this game starts. Single by White, groundout by Alomar moving the runner to third, and a sacrafice fly by Carter (ignoring the error by Justice). 1 run on just 1 hit. Today's hitters believe its not worth making adjustments just to hit singles and that strikeouts are no worse than getting an out while putting a ball in play. I can't wait for this line of thinking to go away. There are many ways to generate offence that don't require hitting homeruns.
A homerun is one run on one hit though.
Toronto basically had an all-star team
One would think, but...the Jays had 3 all-stars from that year (Alomar, Carter, and Guzman) but the Braves had 4 (Gant, Glavine, Pendleton, and Smoltz). The Braves were slightly favored. Inconsistent offense was always their problem
@@Jay45414 gant was injured for this series though? And Sanders was hobbled
@@lucasbrush61brush56 I believe so. I still believe that they were better than the Jays that year. Why did Cox end it with a squeeze attempt?
probably tried the squeeze because that was Otis Nixon's specialty
Mam did they ever. And never again
And 27 years later the Raptors wie the NBA Championship!
Blue Jays weren't done, back to back Championships.
@@Torontogal1973 I remember thinking when the Raptors were going to Game 6 at the Oracle it was only appropriate that they win their first NBA title on the road just like these Blue Jays won their first WS in Atlanta.
Toronto won the MLS cup in 2017....no one ever mentions that
And 2091 the Jays finally make the playoffs again
And 25 years later the Toronto FC win the MLS Championship!
3:33:29 "Holy shit!" lol
This was such a satisfying win for me and the Blue Jays. Especially against Braves and both of our ex-managers Williams and Cox
An underrated champion in MLB history, probably because they are in Canada. These guys were so talented and so clutch. Outscored in the 6 game series combined, 17 total runs, and still found ways to win late. Simply dynamic. Overall, best record in the MLB from 1984-1993. Kudos to Pat Gillick who realized that talent alone isn't enough and that you need the clutch gene too.
Baseball in the 90s was so much better than today's baseball, no egos, no bat flips, no showboating, just two very talented teams going at it till the end.
Back to back was freaking history!!!!:)
I was only a pre-teen when this happened, but that World Series intro music still gives me goosebumps!
I feel asleep watching this and ended but waking up to the end.
Me too, I was 11. I passed out in around the 8th and woke up just Timlin took the mound.
What a great Jays team that was.
The Braves were better...but that's baseball
@@Jay45414 - As Tim McCarrver said, the Jays in '92 were an even BETTER team than Minnesota in '91, yet the Braves lost to Minnesota too!
The best
@@Jay45414 Uh no.
Some good foreshadowing from the commentators at 17:24
Hell of a game which I was 8 but will always remember this cause Braves bullpen and Otis Nixon was my favorite player
I am watching this tonight April 30th 2022, I can't believe I was only 14 years old when I was watching this game with my buddy while playing Hard Ball on my PC lol.
Charlie Leibrandt has had it rough in the World Series. Poor guy looked like he was about to burst into tears after giving up that two-run double to Dave Winfield.
Gideon deja vu for him after the Puckett homer the previous year. Though he later said that was more devastating than this one in '92. The one silver lining with Leibrandt was that he had already been a part of a World Series winner in '85 with Kansas City so he had his ring already. Leibrandt had a good head on his shoulders and his life certainly wasn't ruined by these games. He retired after one more season due to injury, while his kids were still very young and spent much of his retirement as a dad coaching his sons' teams. Not much to complain about there!
I will always love the 92 Jays for winning Canada’s first WS and shutting down the obnoxious Braves chop.
Yeah, didn't Jane Fonda used to be a liberal?
@@rickmccloy4201 Hanoi Jane?
@@turtle19dad That's the one. Until she changed it to 'Ted Turner' Jane, as all her movies were already in colour.
@@rickmccloy4201 it was good to see her lose then.
I was 10 when this happened. We live in a small southern Ontario town and I remember outright house erupted! 2983 was the same thing...great memories!
As a young 16yr old FAN of the Braves I WAS DEVASTATED!!! BUT regardless was Happy for the JAYS. DEFINITELY a Classic Game!!!
Plus...the Braves ended up doing ALRIGHT DURING THE 90'S, wouldn't you say? 😉😘🙃
Anyways....
Just♥️⚾✌️
Great years with a great GM, coach and players. It would have sucked being on the bottom of that pile. One of the best pile on celebrations in sports history.
Funny seeing all the ex Indians in this series but I was happy to see Carter and Pat Tabler win. Maldanado was an ex Indian but he didn't have as much of an attachment. Carter for the most part WAS the Indians between 85-89 and I was actually happy to see him win, especialy when he won the series in 93
2:44:00 : Watching it live, I thought the ball had gone out of play on the relay and the Braves' winning run would automatically walk in. I had already started focusing on Game 7 LOL
I was at the game, just not in the stadium. I was 15 years old at the time. I just wanted to enjoy the World Series atmosphere so I walked around the stadium and joined with some people in the parking lot who were tailgating and watching the game on a big screen tv. Canadians adorning Canadian ornamentation, while many fellow Americans were carrying American flags and even some were dressed up as "Uncle Sam". Was a good experience.
Baseball had so much momentum and then the strike of 94 just killed it, start all over again. These early 90 series were all classics
The first WS that I ever saw was the 95’ fall classic... I had no idea this GM 6 was so good... I ❤️ Baseball ⚾️ #mets
3:25:35 ruled an error, but there isn't a chance that even a major leaguer could field that one
53:57 - Honestly, I'm only here for this (to see a classic Devon White fly ball catch, the most effortless and consistent move in the history of sports)
Wow.... this was 30 years ago and I was 16. I was in love with a girl and the blue jays. This was beautiful time.👍🏽🙂
I'm a Jays fan born in 1991 - I was technically alive during the Jays championships, but I obviously have zero memories of it happening. It's so great I live in an era where I can watch any game of World Series at the snap of a hand.
It must have been great to witness the back-to-back as it happened
one thing is highly noticeable, the 1992 World series Champs Totornto Blue Jays baseball team entire lineup look very healthy , and in very good shape for star athletes . Go Jays !!
The Atlanta Braves in the 1990's were much like the Philadelphia 76ers were in the late '70s-early '80s..went to the world championship round of their sport several times, yet, only came away in first place just once. Both had talent-ladened, All-Star rosters, but were for the most part, very disappointing in the little they achieved with it.
They were built for the long haul--great regular season records, but failed to perform in the playoffs.
Funny thing about the Braves now is since 2000 began the Braves home record in the playoffs is 7-15. The New Millenium hasnt been good to the Braves
There is not one other team in MLB that even stood a chance against the 92-93' Blue jays. They had too much talent and were almost unbeatable.
kodiak disagree on 92, Atlanta was Favored to Win this WS.
However, Agree with you on 93.
I'm Sorry, You stated Not 1 other team.
Ok, than my Bad.
I watched it live from Guelph, Ontario!
And????
@@thefrase7884 Well it was just amazing. It really didn’t seem real, that a Canadian team could win the World Series! ⚾️
Thank you, Dave Winfield.
compared to other baseball games on UA-cam, this one sure has an extremely high amount of commercial interruptions
The bullpens were the difference in this series. The Blue Jays were solid throughout the series until Game 6 and 3/4 of the Jays wins were as a result of hits off Braves' relievers.
Joe Carter is so excited here and he has no idea what is to come almost a year later, something even better and more exciting!
3:20:05
The moment when Mr. May became Mr. October for this game
Dave Winfield was able to forget about his 1 for 22 performance in the 1981 World Series with his game-winning hit here in this Series.
Fun fact; Dave Winfield was also on a team that lost a World Series to the Braves; the 1995 Cleveland Indians.
Best game I ever saw
30 years prior, Maldonado's throw would've cost them the game as it would've gone in to the stands (no screens) and cost them the extra base. Little things make all the difference sometimes.
Braves acted like they already won the World Series after beating the Pirates. Way to go Jays!!
Daniel Rause so did the warriors
Any team would have celebrated a win like that in game 7. Had nothing to do with them losing the WS.
Daniel Rause on paper the Braves were the better team but the Jays had a whole country behind them
the first one was so sweet
I'm wondering why there is a double sound/echo on everything, like the ball hitting the bat or glove
@3:27:18
1B/3B 0 out, run expectancy 1.78
2B/3B 1 out, run expectancy 1.38
After the G3 fielder's choice RBI, you've got a man on 3B 2 outs, and the RE is 0.35 runs. So about a 1/3 chance you tie the game there, and of course they didn't. Otis Nixon bunts for the 3rd out. So small ball handed Toronto a WS. But gotta admit, it would've been awesome if Nixon had gotten a hit on that.
@3:33:27 Ed Spraque says holy s*** and the mic pics it up very clearly. I remember this when I was 10 watching the game. I'd never seen a clip, a tape, or even a dramatized retelling of this WS until now, so I wanted to see if that was a real memory. My memory was correct, but for some reason I remembered it being a deeper voice and also coming from a blond guy with a mullet, like Kelly Gruber. Here we are 30 years later in 2022, and that insignificant memory has lived in my neurons for all this time, and I'm typing this to nobody and waiting for laundry to be done.
That ninth inning by Atlanta was incredible...absolutely incredible. Bobby messed up in using Charlie Leibrandt in relief, just like he did in Game Six a year earlier....Overall, you can tell which team has been built for success from 1990-present (they showed marked improvement when Bobby returned in '90).
Leibrandt had no charisma
I think there’s a video in this ad
92 - 93 Best Jays forever!