Game 1 {{Linescore| The opener was played on a bright Saturday afternoon at
Royals Stadium and pitted Yankee ace
Jim "Catfish" Hunter against left-hander and ex-Yankee
Larry Gura. The Yankees got off to a quick start, scoring two in the first aided by a pair of
George Brett throwing errors. Hunter was in top form and went the distance, not going to a three-ball count the entire game. While the Royals were able to halve that margin going into the ninth,
Roy White's two-run double in the top of the frame gave the Yanks two insurance runs that were the final scoring in a tidy 4–1 win.
Game 2 {{Linescore| Five Yankee errors helped key the Royals series-tying win. Lefty
Paul Splittorff was solid with innings of work in relief of Brooklyn native
Dennis Leonard, while Yankee reliever
Dick Tidrow was ineffective and permitted three more Kansas City runs to score in the eighth after relieving starter
Ed Figueroa with one out in the sixth. The series, now tied at one, moved to New York and newly remodelled
Yankee Stadium for the remaining three games.
Game 3 {{Linescore| The first Yankee post-season home game since 1964 started ominously for the Bombers, as the Royals tagged righty
Dock Ellis for three runs in the first. He settled down immediately after though and went eight solid innings, aided by several double plays and two base runners caught stealing. The Yankees narrowed the margin to one in the fourth on a
Chris Chambliss two-run homer off
Andy Hassler and then tacked on three more in the sixth, as Kansas City manager
Whitey Herzog carted in four relievers in that inning alone.
Sparky Lyle got the save by pitching a scoreless ninth inning, as the Bronx Bombers took a two games to one lead.
Game 4 {{Linescore| Hoping to wrap up the series in four games, Yankee manager
Billy Martin brought back Catfish Hunter on three days' rest while the Royals did the same, bringing back Larry Gura. Neither fared well, as Gura gave up six hits and two runs in two innings, while Hunter lasted three and surrendered five runs on five hits. Though the Yankees' bullpen was able to hold Kansas City to only two runs over six innings, winning pitcher
Doug Bird only gave up one in , while lefty
Steve Mingori pitched and allowed only one tally, picking up the save. The Yankee offense was highlighted by
Graig Nettles' two homers and three RBI. The series was then knotted at two, with a deciding Game 5 to be played the next night.
Game 5 {{Linescore| The deciding game was a fitting ending to a thrilling series, as both teams fought tooth and nail to bring home the AL flag. It culminated in a moment of sheer, unbridled joy for the winners and stunned disbelief for the losers. The Yankees started Ed Figueroa on three days rest, as the Royals did likewise, starting Dennis Leonard. The Royals jumped out on top in the first, as Brett doubled and scored on
John Mayberry's two-run homer. The Yankees quickly countered in their half, with
Mickey Rivers tripling and scoring on Roy White's infield single. White went to third after
Thurman Munson singled. Herzog removed Leonard and brought in Game 2 winner Paul Splittorff, who limited the damage by allowing only Chambliss' sacrifice fly. The Royals countered with one in the second, but the Yanks jumped ahead in the third, as they tacked on two; one on a Munson single and the other on a Chambliss' ground out. The Yanks added on in the sixth, scoring twice; once on a Munson single and a second time on a Brett throwing error. Figueroa held that lead going into the eighth. After
Al Cowens led off with a single, Billy Martin brought in lefty
Grant Jackson. He allowed a single to pinch hitter
Jim Wohlford. Brett then stunned the sell-out crowd of 56,821 by planting Jackson's second pitch just over the short right-field wall, tying the game at six. In the top of the ninth,
Buck Martinez singled with two outs off
Dick Tidrow.
Al Cowens followed with a walk. Wohlford batted for a second time and hit a slow bouncer that
Graig Nettles fielded and threw to second to force out Cowens, but
ABC's cameras and replays showed Cowens was clearly safe. All this was a prelude to the bottom of the ninth inning, when, at 11:43 pm, Chris Chambliss turned on Kansas City reliever
Mark Littell's first pitch and sent it over the right center field wall. Thousands of fans vaulted over the dugouts and walls and celebrated the Yankees' first pennant in 12 years. Chambliss reached second, then dodged hordes of spectators in trying to reach third. He then proceeded to make a beeline towards the safety of the clubhouse, as the area around home plate and much of the field was covered with celebrating fans. Some time later, Chambliss was escorted back out onto the field to touch home, but the plate had been stolen. He touched the area where the plate had been. He was later informed by the umpires that given the circumstances of the situation, they would have counted the run regardless. ==Composite box==