Game 1 Wednesday, October 17, 2001 at
Safeco Field in
Seattle, Washington {{Linescore| The starting date of October 17 was the latest ever for a League Championship Series (the regular season concluded on Sunday, October 7.) The Yankees took a 1–0 lead on a
Chuck Knoblauch single that scored Jorge Posada in the second off
Aaron Sele, then increased it to 3–0 on a
Paul O'Neill two-run home run in the fourth. The Mariners got on the board on a
John Olerud groundout that scored
Edgar Martínez in the fifth off
Andy Pettitte. The score remained 3–1 until the ninth, when the Yankees increased their lead to 4–1 off
Jose Paniagua on a
David Justice single that scored
Alfonso Soriano, who singled and stole second. The Mariners got that run back in the bottom of the inning when
Mariano Rivera threw a wild pitch to
Bret Boone that scored
Ichiro Suzuki, who doubled with one out and went to third on another wild pitch, but Rivera retired Boone and Martínez to end the game. This was the most recent
MLB postseason game played in Seattle until Game 3 of the 2022 ALDS.
Game 3 Saturday, October 20, 2001 at
Yankee Stadium (I) in
Bronx, New York {{Linescore| The Yankees jumped to a 2–0 lead in the first on a
Bernie Williams two-run home run off Jamie Moyer after
David Justice walked. But they did not score again until the eighth on a
David Justice RBI single off
Jose Paniagua.
Orlando Hernández pitched four shutout innings before letting the Mariners load the bases on two walks and a single in the fifth.
Bret Boone's single scored two to tie the game. Next inning,
John Olerud's lead-off home run put the Mariners up 3−2, their first lead in the series. After allowing a single and walk, Hernández was relieved by
Mike Stanton. An error allowed another run to score and put runners on second and third. After
David Bell flied out,
Ichiro Suzuki was intentionally walked to load the bases and
Mark McLemore cleared them with a triple.
Mark Wohlers relieved Stanton and gave up a two-run home run to Boone to make it 9−2. In the seventh inning, with runners on first and third on a walk and error, Bell's single scored Cameron.
Jay Witasick relieved Wohlers and, after getting two outs, allowed an RBI single to Boone. Next inning,
Stan Javier hit a leadoff single, moved to third on two ground outs, and scored on Bell's single off Witasick. In the ninth, Witasick allowed a one-out home run to
Jay Buhner, then a triple to
Al Martin, who scored on Olerud's single.
John Halama retired the Yankees in order to end the game, a 14–3 Mariners win which guaranteed a Game 5. Through the seventh, each team had just one hit:
John Olerud's leadoff single in the fourth off Clemens for the Mariners, and
Tino Martinez's ground-rule double off
Norm Charlton in the sixth for the Yankees. Abbott held New York hitless through the first five, but with eight walks; the Seattle bullpen issued two more walks while the Yankees gave up five total, four by Clemens. New York took a 3–1 series lead with another home game on Monday.
Game 5 Monday, October 22, 2001 at
Yankee Stadium (I) in
Bronx, New York {{Linescore| In the bottom of the third inning, an error by Mariner third baseman
David Bell allowed
Scott Brosius to reach base.
Alfonso Soriano then singled and both men advanced a base on
Chuck Knoblauch's sacrifice bunt.
Derek Jeter's sacrifice fly and
David Justice's double scored a run each, then
Bernie Williams capped the scoring with a two-run home run off
Aaron Sele, all four runs unearned.
Paul O'Neill homered in the fourth to put the Yankees up 5–0. In the sixth, Mariners reliever
John Halama allowed three straight singles to load the bases with no outs.
Joel Piñeiro relieved him and struck out Brosius, but then threw a wild pitch to Soriano to let all three runners move up. Soriano walked to reload the bases before Knoblauch's single, Jeter's walk, and Justice's single scored a run each, and New York led 9–0 with three innings remaining. The Mariners got their only runs in the seventh when they loaded the bases on three singles with one out: a single by Bell scored two, followed by a single by
Ichiro Suzuki scoring another off
Andy Pettitte. In the bottom of the eighth,
Tino Martinez hit a three-run home run off
José Paniagua, and
Mariano Rivera pitched a scoreless ninth, retiring
Mike Cameron for the final out of the series, as the Yankees cruised to a 12–3 win and advanced to a fourth consecutive
World Series. ==Composite linescore==