Game 1 (right) and
Whitey Ford, starting aces of the 1963 World Series {{Linescore|
Sandy Koufax started it off with a record 15-
strikeout performance in Game 1 to outduel the Yankees' ace left-hander
Whitey Ford. The 15 strikeouts bested fellow Dodgers pitcher
Carl Erskine's mark in
1953 by one, and would be surpassed by
Bob Gibson in
1968 with 17. Koufax also tied a World Series record when he fanned the first five Yankees he faced.
Clete Boyer was the only Yankees regular not to strike out.
Mickey Mantle,
Tom Tresh and
Tony Kubek each struck out twice, and
Bobby Richardson struck out three times—his only three-strikeout game in 1448 regular season or World Series games. Koufax also struck out three pinch-hitters, including
Harry Bright to end the game. Ford set the Dodgers down in order in the first inning, but got into trouble in the second inning. With one out, right fielder
Frank Howard doubled into left center field. A single by first baseman
Bill Skowron plated Howard to give the Dodgers a 1–0 lead. Second baseman
Dick Tracewski's single preceded a three-run home run by catcher
John Roseboro to give the Dodgers a 4–0 lead. The Dodgers upped the lead to 5-0 when Skowron singled home
Willie Davis with two outs in the third inning against Ford, who went just five innings. The Yankees scored twice in the eighth inning when
Tony Kubek singled with one out and
Tom Tresh homered with two outs to cut the lead to 5–2.
Game 2 {{Linescore|
Willie Davis doubled in two runs in the first inning (after
Maury Wills and Jim Gilliam singled), former Yankee
Bill Skowron homered in the fourth, and
Tommy Davis had two triples, including an RBI triple in the eighth after a second Davis double, to lead the Dodger offense. Yankee starter
Al Downing, who would take the loss, went only five innings and charged with three runs.
Ralph Terry, in relief, allowed Davis's RBI triple. Dodger manager
Walt Alston went with #3 starter
Johnny Podres over #2 starter
Don Drysdale because he was left-handed and Yankee Stadium was favorable to left-handed pitchers. Podres delivered a six-hitter through innings; ace reliever
Ron Perranoski, also a left-hander, got the last two outs and the save, and the Dodgers headed home with 2–0 Series lead. Yankees right fielder
Roger Maris left the game in the third after hurting his left arm running into the right field foul wall while chasing down Tommy Davis's first triple and would miss the final two games of the series. He was replaced by
Héctor López, who actually doubled and
Elson Howard singled him home in the eighth for the Yankees' only run that game.
Game 3 {{Linescore| Don Drysdale pitched a masterful three-hitter at
Dodger Stadium in his complete-game win. Manager
Walter Alston called Drysdale's performance "one of the greatest pitched games I ever saw."
Jim Bouton, making his first World Series start, dueled Drysdale throughout, permitting only four hits in seven innings for a losing cause. The lone run of the game came in the bottom of the first on a
Jim Gilliam walk, a wild pitch and a two-out single by Tommy Davis. Gilliam almost scored again in the eighth off
Hal Reniff, but was caught in an attempt to steal third. The final out came on
Joe Pepitone's drive that backed Dodger right fielder
Ron Fairly up against the bullpen gate to make the catch of a ball that would have been a home run in
Yankee Stadium.
Tony Kubek had two of the Yankees' three hits, but none of the hits were extra-base hits.
Game 4 {{Linescore| Aces were on the mound again in a game 1 rematch between
Whitey Ford and
Sandy Koufax. This time, it was a pitcher's duel. The Dodgers scored first in the bottom of the fifth on a monumental
Frank Howard home run into the second (Loge) level at
Dodger Stadium. The Yankees tied it on a Mickey Mantle home run in the top of the seventh. But in the bottom of the inning, Gilliam hit a high hopper to Yankee third baseman
Clete Boyer; Boyer leaped to make the grab, and fired an accurate throw to first base. But first baseman
Joe Pepitone lost Boyer's peg in the white-shirted crowd background; the ball struck Pepitone in the arm and rolled down the right field line, allowing Gilliam to scamper all the way to third base. He then scored a moment later on Willie Davis' sacrifice fly. Sandy Koufax went on to hold the Yankees for the final two innings for a 2–1 victory and the Dodgers' third world championship. To date, this is the only time the Dodgers have won the deciding game of a World Series at home. (The Dodgers won the
2020 World Series in Game 6 while they were designated as the home team, but the game was played at a neutral site, Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, as a result of the COVID-19 global pandemic.) The
World Series Most Valuable Player Award went to
Sandy Koufax, who started two of the four games and had two complete game victories. He struck out 23 batters and only surrendered three earned runs, recording an ERA of 1.50. When the award was given to Koufax at a luncheon in New York City, he was presented with a new car—while the luncheon was taking place, a New York City police officer put a parking violation ticket on the car's windshield. ==Composite line score==