New York Yankees The 1927 New York Yankees had perhaps the most feared line-up in the history of baseball. Nicknamed "
Murderers Row," with Babe Ruth at the peak of his considerable powers, hitting .356 with a then-record 60 home runs and 164 RBI that year. He was complemented by future
Hall of Famers
Lou Gehrig at first base, who hit .373 with 47 home runs and a league-leading 175 RBI,
Tony Lazzeri at second base who drove in 102 runs with a .309 average, and center fielder
Earle Combs, who hit .356 and scored 137 runs as the team's leadoff hitter. Left fielder
Bob Meusel also drove in over 100 runs, with a .337 average. The team's pitching staff was led by another Hall of Famer,
Waite Hoyt, who had his best season with a 22–7 record and a league-leading 2.63 ERA to add to his league-leading wins total. Three more pitchers won 18 or more games, rookie
Wilcy Moore (19–7, 2.28),
Herb Pennock (19–8, 3.00) and
Urban Shocker (18–6, 2.84). Moore would have won the ERA title under current rules, but in those days qualification was based on the number of complete games pitched, and he made only 12 starts all year: 13 of his wins and a league-leading 13 saves (figured retroactively) came during his 38 relief appearances. Rounding out the staff were veteran
Dutch Ruether (13–6, 3.38),
George Pipgras (10–3, 4.11) and swingman
Myles Thomas (7–4, 4.87). To no one's surprise, the Yankees ran away with the pennant under the leadership of manager
Miller Huggins. They finished with a record of 110–44, 19 games in front of the second-place Philadelphia Athletics. They were overwhelming favorites to win the World Series.
Pittsburgh Pirates The 1927 Pittsburgh Pirates were by no means a weak team, but they certainly suffer in comparison with their American League rivals. The Pirates went 94–60 for manager
Donie Bush during the regular season, finishing games ahead of the defending World Champions
St. Louis Cardinals. The Pirates also had their share of future Hall of Famers, but they were not quite of the caliber of those of the Yankees. The team's best hitter was right fielder
Paul "Big Poison" Waner, who hit a league-leading .380 and drove in 131 runs, also a league-leading total, and hit a team high 9 home runs. His brother, rookie center fielder
Lloyd "Little Poison" Waner hit .355 and scored a league-leading 133 runs, in spite of his almost complete lack of power (he collected just 25 extra-base hits in over 650 plate appearances). Third baseman
Pie Traynor hit .342 and drove in over 100 runs, joining shortstop
Glenn Wright who also topped the century mark and like Paul also hit 9 home runs. However, Wright and Paul Waner also led the team in home runs with 9 each, underscoring the huge difference in power with their rivals: the Pirates hit 54 home runs as a team, fewer than Babe Ruth by himself, and barely a third as many as the Yankees' 158. Other solid hitters for the Pirates included first baseman
Joe Harris, who hit .326 with 73 RBI, second baseman
George Grantham (.305) and left fielder
Clyde Barnhart (.319). In fact, catcher
Johnny Gooch, who hit .258, was the only regular besides Wright to hit below .300, and back-up outfielder
Kiki Cuyler added his own .309 average in 285 at-bats to the parade, as the Pirates batted .305 as a team—pitchers included. The Pirates' pitching was not as dominant. Two veterans of the 1925 World Championship team,
Lee Meadows and
Ray Kremer both posted 19 wins, with Kremer leading the league with a 2.47 ERA.
Carmen Hill had pitched part of six seasons in the majors before 1927, never winning more than three games. In 1927, he put everything together, winning a team-leading 22 games against 11 losses, with a 3.24 ERA at age 31.
Vic Aldridge went 15–10 as the fourth starter, but his 4.25 ERA was well over the league average. In the bullpen,
Johnny Miljus put together a good season, posting a 1.90 ERA in 76 innings, with an 8–3 record. ==Series Summary==