Subway Series | |
Team1: | New York Yankees (AL 1903–present) |
Team2: | New York Mets (NL 1962–present) |
Team3: | New York Giants (NL 1883–1957) |
Team4: | Brooklyn Dodgers (NL 1890–1957) (AA 1884–1889) |
Team1logo: | NewYorkYankees caplogo.svg |
Team2logo: | New York Mets Insignia.svg |
Team3logo: | New York Giants MLB Cap Logo (1949 to 1957).svg |
Team4logo: | Brooklyn Dodgers Cap Logo (1934 to 1936, 1938 to 1955).svg |
Firstmeeting: | October 5, 1921 (World Series) Polo Grounds, Manhattan Yankees 3, Giants 0 October 1, 1941 (World Series) Yankee Stadium (I), Bronx Yankees 3, Dodgers 2 June 16, 1997 (regular season) Yankee Stadium (I), Bronx Mets 6, Yankees 0 |
Mostrecent: | July 24, 2024 Yankee Stadium, Bronx Mets 12, Yankees 3 |
Total: | 194 (84 World Series, 110 regular season) 36 (all World Series, between the Giants and Yankees) 43 (all World Series, between the Dodgers and Yankees) 142 (5 World Series, 137 regular season between the Mets and Yankees) |
Series: | Yankees (over Mets), |
Regularseason: | Yankees (over Mets), |
Postseason: | Yankees (over Giants), Yankees (over Dodgers), Yankees (over Mets), |
Currentstreak: | Mets, 4 (over Yankees) |
Section Header: | Post-season history |
A Subway Series in Major League Baseball (MLB) is one played between teams based in New York City, currently the New York Yankees and New York Mets, and historically the Yankees versus the New York Giants or Brooklyn Dodgers. The venues for games have been accessible via the New York City Subway, hence the name of the series.
The term historically refers to World Series games played between the city's teams. The Yankees have appeared in all Subway Series games as they have been the only American League (AL) team based in the city. Since 1997, the term has also been applied to interleague play during the regular season between the Yankees and Mets.
See main article: article and 1889 World Series.
See also: Dodgers–Giants rivalry. Although organized games between all-stars from New York teams against all-stars from Brooklyn teams date back to the 1850s, the first actual New York-Brooklyn "World Championship Series" occurred in 1889, a full nine years before Brooklyn was incorporated into the City of New York by the Greater New York Act of 1898. At the time, the series would not have been called a Subway Series, since New York's subway did not open until 1904, but it was the first recorded series involving the teams who would later earn the phrase.
The New York Giants squared off against (and defeated) the Brooklyn Bridegrooms, also called the "Trolley Dodgers", of the American Association.[1] The following season, Brooklyn withdrew from the Association and joined the League, setting the stage for many future intra-city competitions.
By the 1920s, the subway had become an important form of public transport in the city and provided a convenient form of travel between the three city ballparks: the Polo Grounds, in upper Manhattan; Yankee Stadium, in the Bronx; and Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. The 155th Street elevated and subway stations, the 161st Street station, and the Prospect Park respectively, served the ballparks. (New York's subway and elevated systems—the IRT, BRT/BMT, and IND—were in competition with each other until 1940.)
In the case of the World Series contests listed, the entire Series could be attended by using the subway. The date of the first usage of the term "Subway Series" is uncertain. The term "Nickel Series" (a nickel was the old subway fare) appeared in newspapers by 1927, and "Subway Series" appeared by 1928.[2] "Subway Series" was clearly already a familiar concept by 1934, as discussed in this article about that year's All-Star Game to be held in New York, discussing the "subway series" possibility for the Giants and Yankees. (Ultimately, no New York team made it to the 1934 post-season.).[3]
See main article: article, 1921 World Series, 1922 World Series, 1923 World Series, 1936 World Series, 1937 World Series, 1951 World Series and Giants–Yankees rivalry. The 1921 and 1922 match-ups were played in a single ballpark, as both the Giants and Yankees then played at the Polo Grounds. The Giants won both of these World Series against the Yankees, the first two Subway Series played. Despite cordial relations just a few years before when the Yankees allowed the Giants to share their home at Hilltop Park for a year in 1911 and the Giants more than returning the favor in kind by sharing Polo Grounds with the Yankees since 1913, the Yankees were issued an eviction notice in mid-1920 ending their lease after the 1922 season. The Yankees opened their new ballpark in 1923. Fortunes changed immediately for the Yankees as they defeated the Giants this time in the third straight year of World Series competition between the two teams. Their new home would host the Yankees' first of 11 Subway World Series victories that year and first of an unprecedented 37 World Series until the stadium closed in 2008.[4]
The venues for the 1923, 1936, 1937, and 1951 World Series - the Polo Grounds and the old Yankee Stadium - were a short walk apart across the Macombs Dam Bridge over the Harlem River.
See main article: article, 1941 World Series, 1947 World Series, 1949 World Series, 1952 World Series, 1953 World Series, 1955 World Series, 1956 World Series and Dodgers–Yankees rivalry. The term was used again in 1941 when the Dodgers made their first World Series appearance since . Multiple Hall of Famers took part in these contests between the "Bronx Bombers" and "Dem Bums from Brooklyn" and the games involved numerous achievements including Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier as the first African-American baseball player in the World Series and Don Larsen's performance in pitching the only perfect game in post-season history. The seven matchups between the Yankees and the Dodgers between 1941 and 1956 cemented the term as being mostly associated with the New York vs. Brooklyn contests, during the time when New York City was retroactively dubbed by historians as "The Capital of Baseball".[5] Despite Brooklyn's repeated success at winning the National League pennant, it was only able to win one World Series (1955) against the Yankees, the only time the Dodgers won a championship when in Brooklyn.
All-New York match-ups in World Series play:
Year | Winning team | Manager | Games | Losing team | Manager | Ref. | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | New York Giants | 53 | align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | [6] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | New York Giants | 40(1) | align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | [7] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 42 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | New York Giants | [8] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 42 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | New York Giants | [9] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 41 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | New York Giants | [10] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 41 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | Brooklyn Dodgers | [11] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 43 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | Brooklyn Dodgers | [12] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 41 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | Brooklyn Dodgers | [13] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 42 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | New York Giants | [14] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 43 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | Brooklyn Dodgers | [15] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 42 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | Brooklyn Dodgers | [16] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | Brooklyn Dodgers | 43 | align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | [17] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 43 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | Brooklyn Dodgers | [18] | ||||||
align=left style="background:#fcc;" | New York Yankees | align=left | 41 | align=left style="background:#d0e7ff;" | New York Mets | align=left | [19] |
In addition to the five World Series played between the Yankees and Giants before 1940, the two teams also played exhibition series against each other from time to time. The match-ups were known as the "City Series" and were sometimes played in October while other teams played in the World Series. However, after 1940, this became difficult because the Yankees would routinely appear in the World Series. In the 17 years from 1941 to 1957 (after which the Giants and Dodgers left New York City for California), the Yankees appeared in the World Series 12 times, failing to reach the Series only in 1944, 1945, 1946, 1948, and 1954.
The first and only game that featured the Dodgers, Giants, and Yankees was the 1944 Tri-Cornered Baseball Game. The game was a World War II fundraiser, which saw the three teams play in a round-robin format in which each team batted and fielded during six innings and rested for the other three.
Before New York's two National League teams left the city, the Yankees and Giants (from 19461950, 1955) and Yankees and Dodgers (19511954, 1957) played an annual midseason exhibition game called the Mayor's Trophy Game to benefit sandlot baseball in New York City. The proceeds raised by the Yankees were given to leagues in Manhattan and the Bronx, while proceeds raised by the Dodgers went to leagues on Long Island and Staten Island. The annual charity event was discontinued following the 1957 season, when the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles and the Giants moved to San Francisco, leaving the Yankees as the only major league team in the city.
The game was revived in 1963, after the National League returned to New York with the expansion New York Mets in 1962. These games were played primarily to benefit sandlot baseball in the city, with proceeds going to the city's Amateur Baseball Federation. After dwindling interest and public bickering between the owners of both teams, the Mayor's Trophy Game was discontinued following the 1983 season. It was revived again as a pre-Opening Day series titled the "Mayor's Challenge" and held in 1989.
Mayor's Trophy Game (Giants vs. Yankees) | |||||||||
Season | Date | Location | Visiting team | Runs | Home team | Attendance | Series | Cumulative record | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
July 1 | Polo Grounds | Yankees | 30 | Giants | 27,486 | Yankees 100 | Yankees 10 | ||
August 5 | Yankee Stadium | Giants | 23 | Yankees | 25,067 | Yankees 20 | |||
June 12 | Polo Grounds | Yankees | 70 | Giants | 39,970 | Yankees 101 | Yankees 30 | ||
August 18 | Yankee Stadium | Giants | 41 | Yankees | 22,184 | Yankees 31 | |||
August 16 | Polo Grounds | Yankees | 42 (11) | Giants | 17,091 | Yankees 201 | Yankees 41 | ||
June 27 | Yankee Stadium | Giants | 35 | Yankees | 37,547 | Yankees 301 | Yankees 51 | ||
June 26 | Polo Grounds | Yankees | 94 | Giants | 12,864 | Yankees 401 | Yankees 61 | ||
June 27 | Yankee Stadium | Giants | 14 | Yankees | 19,193 | Yankees 501 | Yankees 71 | ||
Mayor's Trophy Game (Dodgers vs. Yankees) | |||||||||
Season | Date | Location | Visiting team | Runs | Home team | Attendance | Record | ||
June 25 | Yankee Stadium | Dodgers | 34 (10) | Yankees | 71,289 | Yankees 10 | |||
July 21 | Yankee Stadium | Dodgers | 35 | Yankees | 48,263 | Yankees 20 | |||
June 29 | Yankee Stadium | Dodgers | 90 | Yankees | 56,136 | Yankees 21 | |||
June 14 | Yankee Stadium | Dodgers | 21 | Yankees | 28,084 | Tied 22 | |||
May 23 | Ebbets Field | Yankees | 107 | Dodgers | 30,000 | Yankees 32 | |||
Mayor's Trophy Game (Mets vs. Yankees) | |||||||||
Season | Date | Location | Visiting team | Runs | Home team | Attendance | Record | ||
June 20 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 62 | Yankees | 50,742 | Mets 100 | |||
August 24 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 64 | Mets | 55,396 | Tied 110 | |||
May 3 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 21 (10) | Yankees | 22,881 | Mets 210 | |||
June 27 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 52 | Mets | 56,367 | Tied 220 | |||
July 12 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 40 | Yankees | 31,852 | Mets 320 | |||
May 27 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 34 | Mets | 35,198 | Mets 420 | |||
September 29 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 67 | Mets | 32,720 | Mets 520 | |||
August 17 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 49 | Yankees | 43,987 | Mets 530 | |||
September 8 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 21 | Mets | 48,872 | Mets 540 | |||
August 24 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 12 | Yankees | 52,308 | Tied 550 | |||
May 10 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 48 | Mets | — | Mets 650 | |||
May 30 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 94 | Mets | 35,894 | Tied 660 | |||
May 15 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 94 | Mets | — | Yankees 760 | |||
June 14 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 48 | Yankees | 36,361 | Yankees 860 | |||
June 23 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 46 | Mets | 15,510 | Yankees 870 | |||
April 27 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 34 (11) | Yankees | 9,792 | Yankees 970 | |||
April 16 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 11 (5) | Mets | 13,719 | Yankees 971 | |||
May 27 | Yankee Stadium | Mets | 41 | Yankees | 41,614 | Yankees 981 | |||
April 21 | Shea Stadium | Yankees | 41 | Mets | 20,471 | Yankees 1081 |
See also: Mets–Yankees rivalry.
In modern usage, the term "Subway Series" generally refers to a series played between the two current New York baseball teams, the New York Yankees and the New York Mets. Their stadiums remain directly accessible by subway: Yankee Stadium via the 161st Street–Yankee Stadium station, and Citi Field via the Mets–Willets Point station.[20] [21]
There are several other New York City-based teams that play each other and are accessible via the city's public transport, such as the Knicks and Nets in the NBA, and the Rangers and Islanders in the NHL: the Knicks and Rangers via 34th Street–Penn Station, the Nets via Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center, and the Islanders via Elmont-UBS Arena and Belmont Park on the Long Island Railroad. That being said, the term, "Subway Series" is only generally applied to Major League Baseball.
With the departure of the Dodgers and Giants in the 1950s, New York was left without a crosstown rivalry. Even with the Mets joining MLB they were placed in the National League opposite of the Yankees. When interleague play was introduced in 1997 the teams finally got to play one another in a competitive fashion. The rivalry has included heated moments such as the Roger Clemens and Mike Piazza feud. Currently the Yankees lead the "Subway Series" with the Mets 84–65 all time, as of June 26, 2024.[22]
The Mets and Yankees first met in a regular season game on June 16, 1997, with the introduction of interleague play. The Mets won the game 6–0. The Yankees took the next two games to win the series, all three being played at Yankee Stadium. 1999 marked the first year of this rendition of the Subway Series to be two three-game series, three hosted by the Mets and three hosted by the Yankees. The Mets won the series for the first time in 2004, four games to two. The Yankees lead the series all time with 11 series wins to the Mets 3 series wins with there being 10 ties. The Yankees lead in head-to-head wins 75-52, counting postseason.[23]
The first two series in the rivalry were only one three-game series hosted by one team, alternating each year. From 1999 to 2012 the series was changed to two three-game series, with each team hosting three games. This format changed in 2013 to two series of two games hosted by each team, except in years that the AL East and NL east play each year when it goes back to a three-game series.[24]
The Mets and Yankees have played each other in games that live on as classics. The Yankees beat the Mets in the 2000 World Series 4 games to 1. This series included the infamous Mike Piazza and Roger Clemens incident. Clemens, of the Yankees, threw part of a broken bat at Piazza, of the Mets, after a hit. On June 12, 2009 Luis Castillo of the Mets dropped a popup hit by Alex Rodriguez giving the Yankees a win in the series. On May 19, 2006 David Wright, the Mets' third baseman, had a walkoff hit off Yankees' star reliever Mariano Rivera to cap off a Mets comeback.[25]
See main article: article and 2000 World Series. The first Subway Series in New York since 1956 was the 2000 World Series between the New York Yankees and the New York Mets.[26] The Yankees won four games to one and celebrated their 26th championship in front of Mets fans at Shea Stadium.
During the 2000 World Series, the city decorated some of the trains that ran on the train (which went to Shea Stadium in Queens, home of the Mets) and train (which went to the old Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, home of the Yankees). The 7 trains were blue and orange and featured the Mets version of the "NY" logo, and the 4 trains were white with blue pinstripes and featured the Yankees version of the "NY" logo. Also, after each game in the series the city offered free subway rides home for attendees of the game. Yankee fans displayed signs that read "Yankees in 4 and not in 7", predicting that the Yankees would easily dispatch the Mets in a Series sweep as opposed to a difficult, full-length Series. The signs had the 4 in a dark green circle designating the number 4 train, and the 7 in a purple circle designating the number 7 train.
Team | World Series Titles | League pennants | Division titles | Wild Card Berths | Playoff Appearances | World Series Appearances | All-time Regular Season record | Win Percentage | Seasons played |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brooklyn Dodgers[27] | 1 | 13 | — | — | 9 | 9 | 5,6935,365133 | 74 | |
New York Giants[28] | 5 | 17 | — | — | 14 | 14 | 6,0674,898157 | 75 | |
New York Mets[29] | 2 | 5 | 6 | 5 | 11 | 5 | 4,8165,1488 | 63 | |
New York Yankees[30] | 27 | 41 | 21 | 9 | 59 | 41 | 10,7788,14888 | 122 | |
Combined | 35 | 76 | 27 | 14 | 93 | 69 | 27,35423,559386 | 142 in NY 334 total | |
Note: Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants last season in New York was 1957.
Pennants won by all teams include pennants won before the modern World Series.
As of October 30, 2024.
NYM vs. NYY | Mets wins | Yankees wins | Mets runs | Yankees runs |
---|---|---|---|---|
Regular season | 64 | 80 | 648 | 687 |
World Series | 1 | 4 | 16 | 19 |
Total | 65 | 84 | 664 | 706 |