Game 1 Wednesday, October 9, 1996, at
Yankee Stadium (I) in
Bronx, New York {{Linescore| The Yankees struck first in Game 1 when
Tim Raines doubled to lead off the first off
Scott Erickson, moved to third on a groundout, and scored on
Bernie Williams's groundout, but the Orioles tied in the second off
Andy Pettitte when
Rafael Palmeiro drew a leadoff walk, moved to third on a double and scored on
Eddie Murray's ground out. The Yankees retook the lead in the second when
Cecil Fielder drew a leadoff walk, moved two bases on an error and force out, then scored on
Jim Leyritz's groundout, but
Brady Anderson's home run in the third tied the game again. Next inning, Palmeiro's home run put the Orioles up 3–2. In the sixth, inning the Orioles loaded the bases on two walks and a single before
B.J. Surhoff's sacrifice fly put them up 4–2. In the bottom of the seventh, inning
Armando Benitez walked
Darryl Strawberry with the bases loaded to cut Baltimore's lead to 4–3. Next inning, the game would become most notable for the infamous "Jeffrey Maier Incident." Rookie
Derek Jeter hit a fly ball to deep right field off Benítez. Right fielder
Tony Tarasco backed up to the wall, but 12-year-old Yankees fan
Jeffrey Maier reached over the fence and brought the ball into the stands and out of the field of play before Tarasco could attempt to catch the ball for a possible out. Tarasco immediately pointed above and protested that it was
fan interference, but right field umpire
Rich Garcia controversially ruled it a home run and his call was upheld by the other members of the umpiring crew. Baltimore manager Davey Johnson was ejected for arguing the ruling. The game then went into extra innings, where
Bernie Williams ended it in the 11th inning with a
walk-off home run into the left field seats off Baltimore's
Randy Myers.
Game 2 Thursday, October 10, 1996, at
Yankee Stadium (I) in
Bronx, New York {{Linescore| The Yankees struck first in Game 2 on three consecutive leadoff singles in the first off
David Wells, the last of which to
Bernie Williams scored
Derek Jeter and put
Tim Raines at third. Raines scored on
Cecil Fielder's double play to put the Yankees up 2–0, but the Orioles tied the game on
Todd Zeiles' two-run home run in the third after a walk off
David Cone. In the seventh,
Rafael Palmeiro drove a
Jeff Nelson slider high over the right field fence for a two-run home run to put Baltimore up 4–2. Wells allowed two singles in the bottom of the inning and was relieved by
Alan Mills, who allowed an RBI single to Fielder to make it 4–3 Orioles, but in the eighth,
Brady Anderson and Zeile hit back-to-back one-out singles off Nelson, who was relieved by
Graeme Lloyd and
Roberto Alomar's sacrifice fly made it 5–3 Orioles. In the ninth, the Yankees put runners on first and second with one out off
Randy Myers before
Armando Benítez came on to slam the door on the budding rally as the Orioles tied the series 1–1. Cone was wild, walking five batters in six innings of work, while Wells won for the tenth time in 11 career decisions at
Yankee Stadium. The Yankees continued a trend that started in Game 1 by
stranding 11 men on base, bringing their total to 24 for the series.
Game 3 Friday, October 11, 1996, at
Oriole Park at Camden Yards in
Baltimore, Maryland {{Linescore| The Orioles got on the board in the first inning with a
Todd Zeile two-run homer, his second of the series. After that,
Jimmy Key cruised allowing only one more hit through eight innings. Meanwhile,
Mike Mussina pitched well also, allowing just one run in the fourth when
Bernie Williams walked with one out, moved to third on a single and scored on
Cecil Fielder's groundout, but unraveled with two outs in the top of the eighth inning. Jeter started the rally with a double and scored on
Bernie Williams' RBI single to tie the game. Tino Martinez followed by spanking an opposite field double to left. As the relay came in from left field, Todd Zeile caught the ball and then faked a throw towards second. However, the ball slipped out of his hand and straight towards the ground. As the ball trickled away from him and shortstop
Cal Ripken Jr. on the infield, Williams, who had been content to stay at third on the double, alertly scampered home to give the Yankees a 3–2 lead. Mussina then served up a hanging curveball to the next batter
Cecil Fielder, who blasted it into the left field stands making the score 5–2.
John Wetteland earned a save with a perfect ninth to give the Yankees a 2–1 series lead.
Game 4 Saturday, October 12, 1996, at
Oriole Park at Camden Yards in
Baltimore, Maryland {{Linescore| The Yankees struck first on
Bernie Williams's two-run home run in the top of the first off
Rocky Coppinger. The Orioles cut the lead to 2–1 in the bottom of the inning on
Rafael Palmeiro's sacrifice fly with runners on first and third off
Kenny Rogers.
Darryl Strawberry's leadoff home run next inning made it 3–1 Yankees, but
Chris Hoiles's leadoff home run in the third again cut their lead to one.
Paul O'Neill's two-run home in the fourth extended the Yankees' lead to 5–2, but in the bottom of the inning, Rogers allowed a walk and single to put runners on first and third with no outs for the Orioles.
David Weathers in relief allowed an RBI single to
B.J. Surhoff and groundout to Hoiles that again cut the Yankees' lead to one. Weathers and three relieved held Baltimore scoreless for the rest of the game while the Yankees padded their lead in the eighth. Williams hit a one-out double off
Alan Mills, who was relieved by
Jesse Orosco. After
Tino Martinez singled,
Armando Benitez relieved Orosco and allowed an RBI groundout to
Cecil Fielder before Strawberry's second home run of the game made it 8–4 Yankees. The Orioles in the bottom of the inning hit three straight leadoff singles to load the bases with no outs off
Mariano Rivera, who struck out Hoiles and
Brady Anderson, then got
Todd Zeile to pop up to short to end the inning.
John Wetteland retired the Orioles in order in the ninth to give the Yankees a 3–1 series lead.
Game 5 Sunday, October 13, 1996, at
Oriole Park at Camden Yards in
Baltimore, Maryland {{Linescore| The Yankees clinched the series with a six-run third off
Scott Erickson.
Jim Leyritz led off the inning with a home run, then
Derek Jeter and
Wade Boggs hit consecutive one-out singles. Second baseman
Roberto Alomar's error on
Bernie Williams's ground ball let Jeter score and put runners on first and third. After
Tino Martinez hit into a fielder's choice at home,
Cecil Fielder's three-run home run put the Yankees up 5–0.
Darryl Strawberry's home run then made it 6–0. Though Erickson and three relievers held the Yankees scoreless for the rest of the game,
Andy Pettitte pitched shutout innings before
Todd Zeile's home run in the sixth put the Orioles on the board.
Eddie Murray's leadoff home run in the eighth made it 6–2 Yankees. In the ninth,
John Wetteland relieved Pettitte and allowed a two-out two-run home run to
Bobby Bonilla before
Cal Ripken Jr. grounded out to end the series and send the Yankees to the World Series for the first time since 1981. ==Composite box==