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  1. The 1955 World Series matched the Brooklyn Dodgers against the New York Yankees, with the Dodgers winning the Series in 7 games to capture their first championship in franchise history. It would be the only Series the Dodgers won in Brooklyn (the team relocated to Los Angeles after the 1957 season). The two teams were meeting in a World Series for the fifth time in nine years, with the Yankees ...

  2. 30 de jan. de 2013 · The 1955 World Series matched the Brooklyn Dodgers against the New York Yankees, with the Dodgers winning the Series in 7 games to capture the first championship in franchise history. It would be the only Series the Dodgers won in Brooklyn, as the team would relocate to Los Angeles after the 1957 season. The two teams were meeting in a World ...

  3. The 1955 World Series was the championship series to conclude the 1955 Major League Baseball (MLB) season. The Series matched the National League (NL) pennant winner Brooklyn Dodgers against the American League (AL) pennant winner New York Yankees, with the Dodgers winning the Series in seven games

  4. 26 de abr. de 2024 · Game 7 of the 1955 World Series, Yankee Stadium, Sandy Amoros makes an improbable catch, and turns a decisive double play. MLB owns this content, which is be...

    • 2 min
    • 88
    • Baseball Almanac, Inc.
  5. Brief highlights of the dramatic 2-0 victory by the Brooklyn Dodgers over the New York Yankees in Game 7 of the 1955 World Series. Includes highlights of Roy...

    • 2 min
    • 13,6K
    • Big W's Sports Memories
  6. It is an apt phrase, but one more often figurative than literal. Yet on the night of October 4 in the year 1955, there really was dancing in the streets of Brooklyn, and weeping for pure joy, too. For that was the day the Dodgers at long, long last brought the baseball championship of the world home to Flatbush.

  7. 7 de ago. de 2018 · Wait ’til Next Year! The phrase became a euphemism for a baseball season gone awry and nowhere did it receive greater play than in the 1940s and 1950s with the Brooklyn Dodgers and their long-suffering fans.1 The Dodgers had never won a World Series and in those two decades leading to the 1955 season, they had lost the World Series five times to the archrival New York Yankees — 1941, 1947 ...