Game 1 {{linescore| . The
ceremonial first pitch was thrown out by
George Brett while
Andy Grammer sang the national anthem.
Matt Harvey started Game1 for the Mets, while
Edinson Vólquez started for the Royals. Vólquez's father had died earlier in the day. He was not aware of his father's death until after he left the game. On the first pitch thrown by Harvey,
Alcides Escobar hit an
inside-the-park home run, the first in a World Series game since
Mule Haas in Game 4 of the
1929 World Series, and the first hit by a leadoff batter since
Patsy Dougherty did it in Game 2 of the
1903 World Series. In the fourth inning, Murphy recorded the Mets' first hit, and later scored their first run on a hit by
Travis d'Arnaud.
Curtis Granderson hit a home run in the fifth inning to give the Mets a 2–1 lead. The Mets took a 3–1 lead in the top of the sixth when
Michael Conforto drove in
Yoenis Céspedes with a
sacrifice fly.
Mike Moustakas then saved a run with a diving stop and throw out to first to end the top of the sixth.
Eric Hosmer reduced the lead to 3–2 with a sacrifice fly, and set a new Royals' postseason
run batted in (RBI) record in the process. A single by Moustakas tied the game at three, but in the top of the eighth,
Wilmer Flores reached on an fielding error by Hosmer, allowing
Juan Lagares to score the go-ahead run and give the Mets a 4–3 lead. In the bottom of the ninth with the Mets two outs away from taking Game 1,
Alex Gordon tied the game for the Royals with a home run to deep center field, as
Jeurys Familia blew his first save in six postseason opportunities and his first since July 30. With the home run, Gordon became the first player since
Scott Brosius in the
2001 World Series, and just the fifth player in history, to tie a World Series game on a home run in the ninth inning. In the bottom of the 11th inning, Granderson robbed the speedy
Jarrod Dyson of a multi-base hit with a running, leaping catch that prevented what probably would have been a lead-off triple. The Mets went on to get out of the inning. In the bottom of the 14th, Escobar reached first on a throwing error by
David Wright, and
Bartolo Colón gave up a base hit to
Ben Zobrist, allowing Escobar to reach third. Hosmer hit a sacrifice fly to Granderson in right field to drive in the winning run. This was the first time in World Series history that the same player scored both the first run of the game on the first pitch, and the last run of the game on the final pitch. The game ended at 12:18a.m.
CDT, lasting five hours and nine minutes. The game tied the record for the longest game by innings in World Series history, shared with Game2 in the
1916 World Series and Game3 in the
2005 World Series. However, the record has since been surpassed by Games3 of the
2018 and
2025 World Series, each of which was 18 innings long. The loss made Colón the oldest player ever to lose a World Series game. With the loss, the Mets fell to 0–5 in Game 1 of the World Series, having lost the first game in all 5 of their appearances, including the two years they won the series (
1969 and
1986).
Game 2 was the winning pitcher in Game2, pitching a complete game. {{linescore| In Game 2,
Jacob deGrom started for the Mets, and
Johnny Cueto started for the Royals. The ceremonial first pitch was thrown out by Medal of Honor recipients Don Ballard,
Charles Hagemeister, and
Roger Donlon while country singer and Missouri native
Sara Evans sang the national anthem. Cueto walked
Curtis Granderson to lead off the fourth and
Daniel Murphy one out later.
Yoenis Céspedes's hit into a forceout at second before
Lucas Duda's RBI
single put the Mets up 1–0. Duda produced the Mets' only other hit in the game in the second and Cueto retired them in order through the ninth. In the fifth inning, deGrom allowed a leadoff walk to
Alex Gordon and subsequent single to
Alex Rios before
Alcides Escobar's RBI single tied the game.
Ben Zobrist's groundout moved the runners up and after
Lorenzo Cain lined out to center,
Eric Hosmer's two-run single put the Royals up 3–1.
Kendrys Morales's single moved Hosmer to third and
Mike Moustakas's single made it 4-1 Royals. The Royals blew the game open in the eighth off of
Jon Niese, who allowed a leadoff single to Moustakas, subsequent single to
Salvador Pérez, and RBI double to Gordon.
Addison Reed relieved Niese and allowed a sacrifice fly to
Paulo Orlando and RBI triple to Escobar to make it 7-1 Kansas City. Cueto walked Murphy with two outs in the ninth before getting Cespedes to fly out to right to finish the
complete game, becoming the first AL pitcher to accomplish this feat in the World Series since
Jack Morris in Game7 of the
1991 World Series, as the Royals defeated the Mets and took a two games to zero lead in the series. Cueto became the first AL pitcher since
Jim Lonborg in the
1967 World Series to throw a World Series complete game while allowing two hits or fewer.
Game 3 sang the National Anthem before Game3. {{linescore| The series shifted to
Citi Field, the home stadium of the Mets, for Game3.
Yordano Ventura started for the Royals and
Noah Syndergaard started for the Mets. The ceremonial first pitch was thrown by
Mike Piazza to catcher
Kevin Plawecki while New York native
Billy Joel sang the national anthem. With no
designated hitter (DH) in NL parks, the Mets started
Michael Conforto, their DH for Game2, in the outfield instead of
Juan Lagares, and the Royals did not start
Kendrys Morales, their regular DH. Zobrist scored for the Royals in the first inning on a
force play. In the bottom of the first inning, Wright hit a two-run homer that also scored Granderson. For the Royals,
Alex Ríos drove
Salvador Pérez home in the second inning, and scored on a
passed ball by d'Arnaud, giving the Royals a 3–2 lead. After a Syndergaard single, Granderson hit a two-run home run just over the right field wall in the third inning, and the Mets took a 4–3 lead. The Mets added a run in the fourth inning on an RBI single by Conforto, and four more in the sixth inning, including an RBI single by
Juan Uribe, in his first at bat since September 20. The Royals made a few uncharacteristic mistakes in this game, the first coming in the fourth inning when pitcher Yordano Ventura forgot to cover the base on a ground ball to the first baseman, and the second in the sixth inning when Royals pitcher
Franklin Morales triple-clutched Granderson's ground ball, allowing all runners to be safe, which led to a 2-run single by Wright. In the fifth inning, Royals player
Raúl A. Mondesí made his Major League Baseball debut,
pinch hitting for
Danny Duffy. Mondesí became the first player ever to make his MLB debut in the World Series.
Game 4 hit his eighth double of the postseason, tying a postseason record previously set by
Albert Pujols and
David Freese of the
2011 St. Louis Cardinals. The starting pitchers for Game4 were
Chris Young of the Royals and
Steven Matz of the Mets. Conforto scored the game's first run with a home run in the third inning, and Flores scored later in the inning on a Granderson sacrifice fly, when right-fielder Ríos did not make an immediate throw home (thinking his catch was the third out of the inning). The Royals cut the deficit to 2–1 in the top of the fifth when Pérez doubled and was then driven in by Gordon. However, in the bottom of the fifth, Conforto hit another home run, becoming the first rookie to hit two home runs in a World Series game since
Andruw Jones in 1996. In the sixth inning, Zobrist hit his eighth double of the postseason, tying a postseason record previously set by
Albert Pujols and
David Freese of the
2011 St. Louis Cardinals.
Lorenzo Cain drove in Zobrist in to make it a 3–2 game. Davis pitched a perfect eighth, but got into some trouble with one out in the ninth when Murphy hit a hard grounder that Moustakas could not field cleanly, and then Céspedes got a base hit to bring the winning run to the plate in Duda. However, Duda hit a soft
line drive that was caught by Moustakas, who then doubled off Céspedes at first to end the game. Céspedes had started running thinking the ball would hit the ground.
Game 5 {{linescore| Vólquez returned to the Dominican Republic for his father's funeral the day after Game1, but he returned in time to start Game5. Harvey started for the Mets.
New York City Fire Department firefighter Frank Pizarro sang the national anthem, New York native
Tony Bennett performed "
America the Beautiful", and the first pitches were thrown by
Cleon Jones,
Mookie Wilson, and
Darryl Strawberry. Granderson led off the first inning with a home run for the Mets, and scored the Mets' second run in the sixth inning. The Mets had a chance to break the game open in that sixth inning as they loaded the bases with no outs, but had to settle for one run after Céspedes lined a foul ball off his leg and was injured, leaving the game after popping up for the first out of the inning. Duda hit a sacrifice fly before d'Arnaud grounded out to end the inning. Harvey pitched eight shutout innings for the Mets, and convinced Collins to keep him in the game for the ninth. He then gave up a leadoff walk to Cain in the ninth inning, and the Royals got a run when Hosmer drove Cain in with a double, prompting Collins to call upon Familia to relieve Harvey. After a groundout by Moustakas advanced Hosmer to third base with one out, Pérez hit a ground ball to third baseman
David Wright. Wright, after checking Hosmer at third, threw to first base for the second out; however, Hosmer broke for home as soon as the ball was thrown. Duda, who fielded the out at first, threw wide at home attempting to throw Hosmer out, and the latter scored the tying run. This resulted in Familia blowing his third save of the postseason and the series; his eight save opportunities tied the postseason record set in 2002 by
Robb Nen. In the top of the 12th inning, with
Addison Reed pitching for the Mets, Pérez hit a single for the Royals.
Pinch running for Pérez, Dyson stole a base and scored on a single by
pinch hitter Christian Colón. Colón scored on a hit by Escobar. The Royals loaded the bases, and Cain drove home three more runs with a double off of Bartolo Colón. Davis pitched a shutout inning for the Royals to complete the series and win the championship. With Game 5 having crept well past midnight eastern time, Flores struck out looking to end the game, series, and baseball season, with the Royals winning and ending their 30-year World Series title drought. Pérez, who batted 8-for-22 (.364) in the series, and caught every inning for the Royals with the exception of the final inning of the series, won the
World Series Most Valuable Player Award. He became the first catcher to win the award since
Pat Borders won it in the
1992 World Series, and the second Venezuelan player, following
Pablo Sandoval, who won it in the
2012 World Series. Paulo Orlando made history as the first Brazilian player to win the World Series and the third South American to do so, the first was the Venezuelan player
Luis Aparicio and the second was the Colombian player
Edgar Rentería.
Composite line score was named the
Most Valuable Player of the series. 2015 World Series
(4–1):
Kansas City Royals (AL) beat
New York Mets (NL). {{linescore| ==Broadcasting==