Game 1 {{Linescore| With Yankee ace
Ron Guidry unavailable at least until Game 3, the Dodgers pounded 20-game winner
Ed Figueroa. Figueroa left after two innings, allowing home runs to
Dusty Baker and
Davey Lopes. Lopes would add a three-run
shot in the fourth off
Ken Clay to make it 6–0. Another Dodger run crossed the plate in the fifth;
Ron Cey scoring on a Clay wild pitch. The Yankees tried to claw back in the seventh as
Reggie Jackson homered and
Bucky Dent singled in two runs, but the Dodgers bounced back with three of their own, two coming on a
Bill North double. The Dodgers would cruise to an easy Game 1 win from there.
Game 2 {{Linescore|
Ron Cey drove in all the Dodgers' runs with a single in the fourth and a three-run homer in the sixth off Yankee starter
Catfish Hunter.
Reggie Jackson would try to keep pace by batting in all three of the Yankee runs with a two-run double and RBI groundout, but this game would be remembered for one memorable Jackson at-bat. Rookie
Bob Welch was brought in to pitch the ninth to save the game for
Burt Hooton. The previous reliever, Terry Forster, had allowed
Bucky Dent and
Paul Blair to reach base between outs, bringing up Jackson. Welch ran the count to 3–2. Jackson fouled off several pitches before Welch finally got a fastball by him, sending the
Dodger Stadium crowd into a frenzy. In post-game interviews, Jackson initially blamed his striking out on
Bucky Dent running from second with the 3–2 pitch and distracting him from focusing on Welch. In later interviews, however, Jackson gave Welch credit.
Game 3 {{Linescore| With the Yankees desperately needing a win, ace
Ron Guidry provided a victory aided by the stunning defense of third baseman
Graig Nettles. Guidry pitched a complete game, even though he allowed eight hits, walked seven, and struck out only four. Nettles' defense saved at least four runs. The Yankees got on the board in the first off
Don Sutton on a
Roy White homer and added a run in the second on an RBI forceout by
Bucky Dent. In the third, the Dodgers began to come back against Guidry, who clearly did not have his best stuff.
Bill North led off with a walk, stole second, then went to third on a
Steve Yeager groundout.
Davey Lopes hit a hard liner Nettles snared to turn a certain extra-base hit into a key out and temporarily save a run.
Bill Russell followed with an infield single to score North and drive in the Dodgers' only run. The next batter,
Reggie Smith, hit a hard ground ball to third. Nettles made a diving stop to save another extra-base hit and probable run, and threw Smith out at first to end the inning. In the fifth, the Dodgers had runners on first and second with two outs when Smith came up to bat. Nettles knocked down Smith's sharply hit ground ball down the third base line. Smith reached first, but no runs scored.
Steve Garvey, the next batter up, hit another hard ground ball down the third base line, and Nettles made a backhanded stop and forced Smith at second base to end the inning. The Dodgers loaded the bases again with two outs in the sixth inning, but Nettles again made a great stop on a ball hit by
Davey Lopes, and threw to second to complete the inning-ending force play. The Yankees would later add three more runs.
Thurman Munson and
Reggie Jackson had RBI singles in the rally that put the game out of reach.
Game 4 {{Linescore| Starters
Ed Figueroa and
Tommy John were locked in a scoreless duel before
Reggie Smith struck with a three-run homer in the top of the fifth inning. John continued his shutout through the fifth, but, in the Yankees' half of the sixth, they scored.
Reggie Jackson finally got the Yankees on the board with a one-out RBI single. With
Thurman Munson on second and Jackson on first,
Lou Piniella hit a low, soft liner that shortstop
Bill Russell fumbled (some claim intentionally). Russell recovered the ball, then stepped on second to force Jackson, then his attempted throw to first to complete the double play struck a "confused" Jackson in the right hip and caromed into foul territory. Munson scored, partially because first baseman
Steve Garvey stopped to yell at the first-base umpire over the non-interference call before retrieving the ball. The Dodgers' protests went for naught but would not have been necessary if Russell had made the proper play. Thinking Russell was going to catch Piniella's liner, Munson retreated towards second and was
on second base when Russell picked up the ball. Munson then turned to third and Russell stepped on second to force Jackson and threw to first. The inning would have been over if Russell had tagged Munson (out #2) and stepped on second (out #3) to force Jackson
or Russell steps on second to force Jackson (out #2) and gets Munson in a rundown between second and third (out #3); the score would have remained 3–1, instead the score was then 3–2. But of course, Russell had no reason to the think his throw would not reach first base. Later review of the play clearly showed Jackson had stopped midway between first and second when Russell had made his throw to first. As the ball carried very close to Jackson's immediate right, Jackson had moved his hips to the right just as the ball sailed past, deflecting the ball down the first base line. While Jackson continued to deny it, Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda, along with other eyewitnesses, steadfastly believed the Yankees outfielder purposefully interfered in the play. The Yankees tied it in the eighth when Munson doubled home
Paul Blair. The score remained tied until the bottom of the tenth inning. Dodgers rookie and Game 2 hero
Bob Welch walked
Roy White with one out. After Welch retired Munson, Jackson strode to the plate for his first confrontation with Welch since Game 2. This time, Jackson got the better end by singling White to second.
Lou Piniella then lined a single to center, scoring White and tying the series. The bungled Russell/Jackson play changed the game and the entire Series; instead of the Dodgers going up 3–1 in games, the Series was then tied and the momentum shifted to the Yankees who outscored the Dodgers 19–4 in the final two games.
Game 5 {{Linescore| The Yankees took one step closer to a repeat World Series championship on the strength of an unexpected complete game victory by young
Jim Beattie. Beattie scattered nine Dodgers hits and was buoyed by an 18-hit Yankees performance, including a World Series-record 16 singles. Early on, the Dodgers tried to run to take advantage of a sore-shouldered
Thurman Munson behind the plate.
Davey Lopes led off the game with a single, stole second, and scored on a
Reggie Smith single. The Dodgers stretched their lead to 2–0 in the third when Lopes scored again on a double by
Bill Russell. But, that would be it as Beattie settled down and shut out the Dodgers the rest of the way. In the bottom of the third, after a leadoff walk and single,
Roy White's RBI single cut the Dodgers' lead to 2–1. After a double steal, Munson's two-run single put the Yankees up 3–2. One out later,
Lou Piniella's RBI single made it 4–2 Yankees and knocked starter
Burt Hooton out of the game. Next inning, after two one-out singles,
Mickey Rivers's RBI single and White's sacrifice fly made it 6–2 Yankees.
Charlie Hough relieved
Lance Rautzhan and allowed an RBI single to Munson. In the seventh, with runners on second and third and two outs, a strike three wild pitch by Hough to Rivers allowed a run to score and Rivers to reach first. White's RBI single made it 9–2 Yankees, then Munson's two-run double increased their lead to 11–2. They scored one more run in the eighth on
Bucky Dent's RBI double off Hough as their 12–2 win gave them a 3–2 series lead heading back to Los Angeles.
Game 6 {{Linescore| Game 6 turned out to be the
Bucky Dent–
Brian Doyle show.
Davey Lopes gave the Dodgers home crowd a ray of hope with a leadoff home run off
Catfish Hunter. Dent and Doyle put the Yankees ahead in the second; Doyle with an RBI double, Dent with an RBI single and an additional run scoring on an error on the play. Lopes had an RBI single in the third to cut it to 3–2 through the fifth inning, but that would be it for the Dodgers. Sutton pitched well until the sixth inning. It was Hunter's first World Series victory since game 3 in 1974. Dent and Doyle pushed the score to 5–2 in the sixth with RBI singles and
Reggie Jackson put the final nail in the Dodgers coffin with a tremendous two-run blast in the seventh inning to get revenge against his Game 2 nemesis,
Bob Welch. Dent would be named World Series MVP, batting .417 with ten hits, seven RBI, and three runs scored. Doyle would make a claim for the MVP himself with a .438 average, seven hits, two RBI, and four runs. While Lopes had a monster series with three homers and seven RBIs and
Bill Russell had 11 hits, the Dodgers power hitters lack of production and the Dodgers shoddy defense was their downfall.
Steve Garvey (5–for–24, no RBIs) was no factor, and neither were
Dusty Baker (5–for–21, one RBI) or
Ron Cey (no RBIs after Game 2) and the Dodgers defense committed seven errors.
Thurman Munson caught the final out of the game on a foul pop by Cey. This would be the final post-season game for Thurman Munson before his
death during the 1979 season. ==Composite box==