Milwaukee Brewers (AL) vs. St. Louis Cardinals (NL) This was the first World Series since
1968 to not feature a team from
New York,
Pennsylvania,
Maryland,
Ohio, or
California. This was the first postseason meeting between the Brewers and Cardinals. The Cardinals narrowly defeated the Brewers in seven games to win their first title since
1967. This marked the fourth consecutive World Series win by the National League. In St. Louis, the Brewers blew out the Cardinals to take Game 1 as
Mike Caldwell pitched a three-hit complete-game shutout. The Cardinals narrowly won Game 2 after using four different pitchers to even the series going to Milwaukee.
Joaquín Andújar pitched seven solid innings as the Cardinals took Game 3 and the series lead. Then, things went south for the Cardinals again. In Game 4, the Cardinals led 5-1 going into the bottom of the seventh, but the Brewers put up six unanswered runs to take the lead for good and even the series. Caldwell pitched eight solid innings as the Brewers won to take a 3-2 series lead headed back to St. Louis. Game 5 was the last postseason game ever played at
Milwaukee County Stadium, and the most recent World Series game played in Milwaukee to date. In Game 6, the Cardinals blew out the Brewers by a whopping twelve runs to force a Game 7, with
John Stuper pitching a complete game for the Cardinals. The Cardinals’ twelve-run margin of victory in Game 6 was the largest in a World Series game since
Game 6 of the 1968 World Series (which, ironically, was a Cardinals loss), and is tied for the third largest margin of victory in a World Series game overall. In Game 7, the Brewers led 3–1 going into the bottom of the sixth and were eleven outs away from the championship, until Brewers' manager
Harvey Kuenn pulled starting pitcher
Pete Vuckovich after the Cardinals got men on first and third bases. This decision proved to be fatal for the Brewers, as the Cardinals scored three runs to take the lead, and then scored two more unanswered runs in the bottom of the eighth to secure the title. This would be the final postseason appearance by the Brewers as a member of the American League. They would return to the postseason in
2008 as a member of the National League. As of , this remains Milwaukee’s only appearance in the World Series, and was the last appearance by a Milwaukee-based team in the championship round of the four major leagues until the
NBA’s
Milwaukee Bucks made and won the
2021 NBA Finals. The Cardinals’ fifteen-year drought between championships was the longest by the franchise since going 22 years without winning a title from
1946 to
1964. They would return to the World Series
three years later, but lost to their in-state foe in the
Kansas City Royals in seven games after leading the series 3–1 and being two outs away from the championship in Game 6. They would then lose in their next two World Series appearances afterwards. The Cardinals would eventually go on a
Cinderella run to the World Series in
2006 as an 83-win team, where they upset the
Detroit Tigers in five games for their long-awaited tenth championship. The Brewers and Cardinals would meet again in the NLCS in
2011, which the Cardinals also won en route to a World Series title. ==Broadcasting==