Glad to report that I am indeed a doofus and Kirby Puckett is (very deservedly) in the Hall of Fame.
@matthewhenningervonada991411 ай бұрын
Also, the 1992 nlcs was a world series in itself.
@g00b3r711 ай бұрын
Almost commented this. Great video, gotta have some catharsis after seeing my Twins drop the DS.
@BaseballPlayer011 ай бұрын
Don't crop the 4:3 footage, pls. Can you reupload with the full picture
@twinsfan104011 ай бұрын
Such a great series!!
@DrAnarchy6911 ай бұрын
Yeah I was about to say
@ferdinandfoch781611 ай бұрын
My favorite anecdote from this WS is that after Jack Morris pitched his 9th scoreless inning in game 7, manager Tom Kelly approached him and told him that he would be taken out for the 10th, Morris flat out refused to be removed from the game. In response to Morris's intransigence, Kelly replied "Ah hell, it's only a game" and sent his starter out for the 10th.
@jcarwash3111 ай бұрын
That's great. My favorite is that in game 6 Puckett didn't like facing Leibrandt so he told Chili he was going to bunt. He knew Chili could hit him. Then Chili got all existential about how maybe this moment wasn't made for Chili Davis, but maybe it was made for Kirby Puckett to win the game. Then he hits the walk-off.
@bwellstv492711 ай бұрын
I've also heard Jack Morris told Tom Kelly that if he puts somebody else in there would be 2 pitchers on the mound.
@nicholasherrald286611 ай бұрын
They don't show the video of Kelly and Morris' conversation. There is a clear scene of Morris EMPHATICALLY TELLING Kelly no. What's even more crazy is that when interviewed years later, Morris stated that the Twins didn't even offer him a contract.for the 1992 season in the off season- they just let him walk. THATS insane!!!
@richardlug613911 ай бұрын
@@nicholasherrald2866 I do not think that is correct I think they offered him one they just did not come back with another offer after the Blue Jays offer to meet or beat that offer.
@JoshGibson-fb7mf11 ай бұрын
He would’ve never pitch that many innings against a good lineup
@jonathansoucek139611 ай бұрын
Kirby Puckett was a first ballot hall of famer (2001), but it is a shame that most people have forgotten him because his career was cut short.
@jaimelannister179711 ай бұрын
Well there’s also the domestic violence…
@alexlegge11 ай бұрын
@@jaimelannister1797 Shhhh, we like to forget that he made some pretty gross mistakes. Let's erect more statues of him outside Target Field.
@Kornelli9811 ай бұрын
Best player rver
@Kornelli9811 ай бұрын
Sad that is what you remember
@glennhubbard500811 ай бұрын
Tony Gwynn is the same. But he played 20 years.
@Strathaczar11 ай бұрын
I was at Game 6 in Minneapolis. I'm originally from Iowa, and was living in Charles City at the time and my step-father surprised me with the tickets one day. You can imagine what that would do to a 12 year old baseball fan! So my step-father and I were both watching the series very closely, hoping to god there'd be a Game 6. Anyway, the game was nuts man. Had me on the edge of my seat. It was the loudest thing I think I've ever witnessed. When Kirby Puckett got up and nailed that home run, I couldn't hear myself think. I was yelling to my step dad, and I couldn't even hear what I was saying or feel if my vocal cords were vibrating. It was THAT loud. Greatest sporting experience of my life! I STILL have the program somewhere in my items in Iowa. I need to try and find that the next time I'm there!
@michaeldoran436711 ай бұрын
MASSIVE NON ERECT GIRTHY KOCK FLOPPED ONTO A KITCH TABLE. KOCK SLAMS DOWN AND CAUSES THE PROPERTY TO SHAKE. 23 MILLION DOLLARS OF PROPERTY DAMAGE CAUSED
@thejmc40747 ай бұрын
What a story. Glad you got to experience it.
@johnnypinestead78797 ай бұрын
wow, I was 10 at home in Maine. I had to wait 13 more years to jump in excitment.
@Cory_Springer2 ай бұрын
The Metrodome was loud!
@Strathaczar2 ай бұрын
@@Cory_Springer loudest thing I've ever been to. Has never been beat.
@Itswebbgaming11 ай бұрын
“And we’ll see you tomorrow night!” Still gets me. 😢
@michaelrodriguez278411 ай бұрын
Greatest call in World Series history.
@CubeApril11 ай бұрын
It’s amazing how we see it now, it was widely criticized as the time. But I agree, it’s the perfect call and letting the crowd roar afterwards was pure magic.
@christiangonzales880711 ай бұрын
@@CubeAprilI never knew it was criticized at the time, why was that?
@jaimelannister179711 ай бұрын
@@christiangonzales8807people said it was unenthusiastic and didn’t match the moment
@davidmcmahon580911 ай бұрын
@@christiangonzales8807. Put it this way. If Atlanta had hit that homerun (and ignoring the fact that of course they were the road team), Buck would have gone nuts. Just listen to his calls of other moments that were great for the Braves vs great for the Twins.
@brewii499111 ай бұрын
Such an amazing series. After game 7 even Mark Lemke said, "The only thing better would have been if we stopped after nine innings and cut the trophy in half."
@lawrencemarocco819711 ай бұрын
As one pundit put it, "It may not have been great baseball but it was great theater."
@michaeldoran436711 ай бұрын
EENUS AND ANUS BROTHERS BBQ
@backsgl11 ай бұрын
One more neat bit about Morris’ performance: he’s a Saint Paul guy. This is his hometown team. While he’ll always be remembered as a Tigers legend first, I think there’s something very special in the hometown hero showing up big when it mattered most. I wish Joe Mauer had that kind of opportunity, but alas.
@johnscustomsaws11 ай бұрын
As a lifelong Twins fan growing up playing little league in Minnesota thru the 80s/90s... I can tell you the series was nothing short of the best sporting event in HUMAN HISTORY 💯 ... especially if you were a human from Minnesota
@shaylarz11 ай бұрын
This was the year a 6 year old me, a relatively new resident of Minnesota, discovered and fell in love with baseball. I’ve been a Twins fan ever since. I’m still not entirely sure how baseball entered my life as my family does not care about sports, but I’m so grateful that I did and this was a great year for it to happen.
@JoeyMPLS11 ай бұрын
Same for me (except 7 years old). Die hard Twins fan since, albeit the late 90s were not so great!
@BernieForLifeBFL11 ай бұрын
Appreciate you throwing in the John Gordon call for Kirby's walkoff. His signature line was 'Touch em all' after a Twins player hit a homerun and the only time he said it twice was for the game 6 walkoff.
@jasongray969611 ай бұрын
This series made me love baseball, but realize how it can break your heart. I was allowed to stay up late for the first time ever on school nights to watch this. We lived about 4 hours from Atlanta and my Dad and I would see the Braves at least once a year (oh...they use to give discount coupons at GA welcome rest stops for Braves' games in the late 80s). Part of what makes it great, if you watched in '91, is that the last two games were both so close. The great dramatic end.....P.S. Kent Hrbek is on my 'enemies' list.
@grife300011 ай бұрын
People are naming other "famous moment" series, but the biggest clincher about this series is how bloody competitive it was in almost every game. The cute line about it is "in 5 of 7 games the game was decided in the winning team's last at-bat." Games 3 (12 innings), 4 (9 innings), 6 (11 innings), and 7 (10 innings) were all walkoff wins and game 2 had the go-ahead run in the bottom of the 8th by the Twins.
@CarlSolovox11 ай бұрын
Two other cool facts: It was the first (and I think only?) time that both teams in the WS went from Worst to First in one season. Also: the hometown won each game. I was living in Georgia at the time, and unless you grew up in Atlanta in the 1980's you can't understand what 1991 felt like. The Braves were so bad (like the video explains) that it felt like they ceased to exist. No one talked about them. But then they started not just winning, but winning in miraculous fashion. The 91-93 teams had more comeback victories than any team I've ever seen, or at least it felt that way. Also, there were no Florida Marlins back then, so it wasn't just Georgia that was in a fever dream and tomahawk chopping their brains out: it was the entire South. Unless you were there you just can't understand how electrifying it was to have a team be sooo bad for so long and then suddenly become a freaking dynasty. But you also can't fathom how absolutely crushed we were to make it to extra innings of game 7 in the World Series only to lose. But hey--the dynasty had begun. Great video, thank you.
@johnnypinestead78797 ай бұрын
I like the "1st team to come back from 0-3 to when a 7 game series." Not WS, but who cares. Thats my favorite fact.
@robertcrist605911 ай бұрын
The sequence starting at 12:18 with the pitcher getting ready, delivering the pitch, falling out of frame, and the runner then coming into frame from the direction the pitcher left was super cool for some reason
@jrodlange809911 ай бұрын
The 91' Twins are and always will be my favorite pro team in any sport ever. So many elements to the series I don't where to begin. One thing the young man brought up in the video which was astute, and largely forgotten, is the fact the Twins got to set their rotation. That, along with literally another half dozen reasons, was the difference in the series. I can vividly remember crapping my pants before Game 6. Steve Avery, at that moment in time, was the Braves starter I feared the most. Once we got through that game I felt pretty good about our chances. Of course, I had no idea the 3-4 hours during Game 7 would be the most excruciating sports hours of my life. Holy smokes what a series.
@TheDanezone11 ай бұрын
As a lifelong Twins fan, so thankful for this Jolly, great job man!
@zackaryhaselius222611 ай бұрын
This series was so insane there were a million other things you could have also added. Mark Lemke would have been WS MVP had Atlanta won. In the fifth inning of game 4, Brian Harper stopped 2 men from scoring with terrific plays at the plate. Lonnie Smith had a 3 game homer streak in the world series. Also his 4 different different team he was in the world series with. Before game 6, Kirby walked into the clubhouse after admittedly having a down series to that point and announced to the team "climb on my back tonight boys!" Game 2 and game 3 started the exact same way with Dan Gladden reaching base with miscommunication on a flyball involving David Justice. In game 7, the 8th inning (top and bottom of the inning) the bases loaded with 1 out, and both sides got a massive, unconventional double play. Terry Pendleton lost 8 straight world series games in the metrodome. The 2013 redsox are the only team since to finish in last, and win it all the next year. They are the only current minnesota based team win a championship. In game 3, the two teams used Almost every player on their teams. And Tom Kelly was forced to pinch hit Closer Rick Augilara eigth the bases loaded and 2 outs in the top of the 12th. And he hit a rocket to CF that was caught.
@kenw222511 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing.
@ztoxtube11 ай бұрын
Well, the Lynx have 4 championships, but yeah the rest of the teams have had so many letdowns. Proud of the Twins' push this year.
@user-kj4mo2ii9k11 ай бұрын
LMAO. WNBA knowledge dropped! I guess that counts as a professional team, albeit one not too many care about. Well played
@billhicks80811 ай бұрын
Aguilera was actually a very decent hitter for a pitcher and had been a starter in the national league so hed had plenty of major league at bats. Kelly had used Rick as a pinch hitter previously throughout the season, though only on nights he wouldn't be expected to pitch.
@asawhitemanidjustliketosay11 ай бұрын
I think the commissioner’s daughter got hit in the head with a foul ball in game 1 or two
@Tallhandsome7711 ай бұрын
I was a 14 yr old kid in northern Minnesota in 91. An amazing time to be a twins fan!
@jimnfl713411 ай бұрын
was the same age, about 30 miles from Minneapolis at the time. AMAZING!
@Tiredashelljoe1075 ай бұрын
Mauer killed it in that series!
@emptyhand77711 ай бұрын
1987 and 1991, I watched every pitch of both series. I was in high school in 87 and college in 91. Now I can't make time to sit through one game. Great memories.
@lindauvonhipple11 ай бұрын
I was 13 & watched every second. I got to watch my Twinkies win 2 magical WS in my childhood. I wish everyone could watch their team take it all in the innocence of youth. They don't need any more for me, but I'll always pull for them for all the kids still dreaming. Thanks for this walk down memory lane. You captured the magic pretty well.
@klownyou111 ай бұрын
Same here I was kinda young for 87 but I still remember it
@jasongallagher684511 ай бұрын
Same 13 yo lol
@stereomois10 ай бұрын
Almost 50 and still waiting. Damn Padres, ha.
@JSR_11 ай бұрын
This World Series was literally the first exposure to baseball I ever had as a kid. I was 7. I've been hooked ever since.
@jkfecke11 ай бұрын
Jack Morris in Game 7 was the greatest performance by a pitcher that I've ever seen.
@robertharrie451311 ай бұрын
I have only been to one World Series game in my life and my wife and I were lucky to attend game 6 in 1991. What a phenomenal game!! It was so loud in the Metrodome that may ears were ringing for several days afterwards. Puckett was clutch!!
@thomasj370111 ай бұрын
I think its pretty obvious that Gant fell off the bag. Its a good thing Herby was there to catch him in fact, could've been injured!
@KingJ6411 ай бұрын
Dude, I was an angsty 17 year old obsessed with baseball. That call was a travesty. It was an ugly outcome to an obvious play. I'll leave it at that.
@thomasj370111 ай бұрын
@KingJ64 I was a bit younger at 12. Kent Hrbek lived in the neighborhood (must stop for trick or treating). I'm just glad he was there to ensure Gant wasn't hurt. I wonder why he fell in the first place? Must've been lost in the moment I guess.
@CubeApril11 ай бұрын
The so called “T-Rex tag” is why I rock a Twins custom jersey with 14 and “T-Rex” on it, to this day.
@donwhiteley329311 ай бұрын
The only worse call in World Series history was Denkinger in '85, but that was an honest mistake. Coble's call was pure stupidity.
@docbradleydc11 ай бұрын
Saved Gant from potential injury. That's Minnesota Nice.
@markbucher760911 ай бұрын
I was stationed in the Netherlands and watched the series on AFN Soesterberg. When Gladden scored in Game 7 to win it, I was outside at 0530 yelling at the top of my lungs. My next door neighbor looked at his wife and said "well we now know the Twins won it". Best sports memory of my life.
@carlosalbertosantiago640411 ай бұрын
What a ride! I wish I was alive to witness that series. What a true back-and-forth contest between these two teams. I loved the 2010s Giants dynasty series wins, but this 1991 series is head and shoulders above those. I hope we get a World Series as exhilarating as this one soon (or at least as crazy as the 2016 one)!
@christianharter143411 ай бұрын
I am a White Sox fan that dated a twins fan for a few years. Even her father who was in attendance couldn’t have described - in detail - the way Jolly does! This was amazing and I felt joyous when watching them win it!
@orestes831211 ай бұрын
"Touch em allllll Kirby Puckett!" Still brings a tear of joy to my eyes!
@Mattyman198711 ай бұрын
Kirby Pucket was put into the Hall of Fame back in 2001. Great video though my guy!
@hardyworld11 ай бұрын
My first memory of watching baseball on tv is watching the 1991 WS (I was 8 at the time). I think that series started my lifelong love of the game and MLB.
@peterharris640911 ай бұрын
That Yankees Diamondbacks series was nuts too
@mrsinister89434 ай бұрын
These were the days. As an 11 yr old in 1991 i remember this series very well. Lemke was on fire and that Kirby walk off hr was epic along with the game 7 pitching duel. Early 90's baseball was just magical.
@silmarian11 ай бұрын
I was 15 when this series happened, and a twins fan, and it was pure magic. Especially that game 7.
@RadioMarkCroom11 ай бұрын
Down memory lane we go ( as Twin Cities radio icon Dark Star used to say). I was livid at management when they traded Frankie V after the '87 Series win but they proved they knew what they were doing by the time that '91 season played out. The Series was as electric as you describe and an hour documentary could be filled with stories and highlights I'm sure. Thanks for the fun review.
@astrostar4911 ай бұрын
I'm just here for the piano outro music at the end. Seriously though, great spotlight on an awesome World Series. Thanks, and cheers.
@FTLnovaKid11 ай бұрын
This World Series was fantastic according to what my family has told me about it and the clips I have seen. I do hope to see a championship during my lifetime as a Twins fan. Or any championship from one of Minnesota’s men’s sports teams. 😅
@PaoloJairo5 ай бұрын
First and best World Series I have ever seen. Basically fell in love with baseball because of this series ❤❤❤ Also kicked off a lifetime of memories watching World Series with my family.
@KingJ6411 ай бұрын
Fantastic Video. I could not agree more. I was 17 and watched every pitch of that series. I lived in Southern California, had TBS, and was rooting for the Braves 100%. I've maintained this ever since. 94 Jays, 2001 Backs, I'd say the Cubs v. Indians was one of the best. I'd say the Giants V Angels was too. However, Morris pitching a 10 inning Shutty. Was all piss and vinegar, and guts. Plus, I met Kirby once and I loved it.he remembered my name. He was a badass, may he rest in peace. The only thing missing, (and I understand the cultural sensitivity and choice not to glorify) was "The Chop". This was after Sid Bream beat a wet noodle arm Barry Bonds to the plate running like a 3 toed Sloth. The Chop was iconic. It was loud and awesome and transcended Baseball and become its own thing. I am sorry if I offended anyone by my joy I took in it, however it gives me goosebumps remembering watching 50,000 Braves Fans doing this in every scoring opp. I wish there was a clip. It was intense and completely original to the year and moment. I loved it and the passion it was used.
@xjdfghashzkj11 ай бұрын
You deserve more subscribers, brother man. Great stuff you got here
@nevylwinkelman409111 ай бұрын
This is without a doubt the best series. So many firsts happen in this series with it also being the loudest recorded
@stevehoogenakker961911 ай бұрын
I will never forget that night and that series. Puckett and especially Morris.
@AC_28211 ай бұрын
As a lifelong Twins fan that was born in ‘85 I was aware that it was a special series but this is the first deep dive into it that I have seen. Loved the video!
@Deeplycloseted43511 ай бұрын
I remember watching this series. Game 7, 10 shutout innings is insane. Great video.
@patrickaker438011 ай бұрын
I’ll agree. I was 9. I was a sports fan, in the simplest definition. I remember watching this and falling in love with The Braves because of it. I was baseball obsessed after.
@komickaze8511 ай бұрын
I remember reading a book called World Series Classics, which had the top 5 (in the author's opinion) back when I was maybe12 or 13 (back in the late 1990's). 1991, 1975, 1947, 1924 and 1912. It's a bit dated (written by Dan Gutman), but I found it such an amazing read back then. I do think it made some great points and went through each series game by game. Great video, and I hope you put the deek in Game 7 in there. I'll find out in a minute.
@timbober111 ай бұрын
Thank you for this, as a partisan Twins fan this has always been my favorite World Series. There were many legends, Black Jack Morris will always be remembered, but it was a team effort.
@OhioRox11 ай бұрын
Over the spring I had a sick day and sat down to watch this game 7, I would’ve loved to have watched this one live! What a way to cap off a fantastic series.
@dylanowens988025 күн бұрын
The catch by Greg Olson was freaking phenomenal! The toss from his glove to his hand was perfect 👌
@JohnGregory-o8f11 ай бұрын
In World Series history there have been only 2 series where the home team won all games. The first was Twins-Cardinals in 1987, and the second is this series - ‘91 Twins-Braves. Frank Viola was amazing in 87, but Jack Morris’s effort in game 7 of ‘91 was one of the greatest games ever pitched, and certainly the best I’ve ever seen. Great pick for your best series ever.
@swpickle285910 ай бұрын
The home team won all 7 games in the 2001 World Series also when the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the New York Yankees.
@spiked20011 ай бұрын
I remember pretty much everything from that series even though I was a month shy of my 8th birthday. Puckett's catch and blast, Morris' pitching, Larkin's bloop winner, and my school decked out in Twins gear waving Homer Hankies and pennants parading through the neighborhood while teachers blew whistles. Then watching the big parade at school on tv. One the most fun times of my life.
@Pranaynaynay11 ай бұрын
16:55 that line is ingrained in my head as one of Joe Buck's best calls ever. Had no idea presumably his dad made the same call here. hell of a callback by joe buck
@shoukatsukai11 ай бұрын
Fun fact: In the 4th Inning of 2011 WS Game 6, the FOX broadcast brought up the question "How many World Series Game 6's ended up as a walk off win?" Tim Mccarver talked with Joe Buck how he remembered one: his father Jack made the "We will see you tomorrow night" call in 1991. Sure enough, when David Freese hit that walk off, Joe Buck paid tribute to his father by making the same call.
@TMC1982Part211 ай бұрын
That's correct, Jack Buck was calling the 1991 World Series on CBS television alongside Tim McCarver, who would 20 years later, be in the booth with Jack's son Joe on Fox, when David Freese hit his walk off home run in the World Series.
@alexlegge11 ай бұрын
Yeah, Joe has now done *two* famous spin-offs of daddy Jack’s legendary call: -“And we’ll see you later tonight!” (2004 ALCS) -“And we will see you tomorrow night!” (2011 WS) He still hasn’t nailed it though. In my mind, the contraction “we’ll” rolls off the tongue way better than “we will.” And “tomorrow night” feels so much more poetic than “later tonight.” Perhaps this old Twins fan is a little biased.
@natedoseck682411 ай бұрын
brian harper was my coach during club ball. wonderful coach and even better person!
@ConsummateGamer11 ай бұрын
Loved this. I was fortunate to be in attendance at both Games 6 & 7 of this series. Minnesota sports teams seem to live under some sort of ongoing curse (Vikings & Timberwolves are great examples) but if that is the cost for having played in/won this series... it was probably worth it.
@JohnDyer-jc9xc10 ай бұрын
As a young guy and always watching baseball a sport I dearly love and miss terribly, I went through my childhood watching pretty much only the Reds,and the braves as both teams were the only teams covered locally by a couple of the TV stations were i live. I have very fond memories of rooting on the two teams I watched and followed the most. Other than the year I followed one of the best teams to my recollection The Red Sox in the early to middle 90s I had my two teams The Reds, and The Braves, watching those teams battle it out in person as a kid, even witnessing on one occasion in Cincinnati, my late father take off after a Brett Butler foul ball diving in the isle and catching the foul ball, this was captured by many cameras and on TV as well that ball set in my families restaurant for many years as a reminder of a very good time spent with my late father, boy I sure do miss those times , it was a time of great wholesome baseball experiences.
@Reclining_Spuds11 ай бұрын
1991? You are 100% correct. Then for both teams to come from worst to first? Amazing! Edit: btw: 1975 was close.
@patrickdoring714911 ай бұрын
I was 8 years old when this Series happened. It was the first time my parents let me stay up late to see the end of each game. Though not a Twins fan (and definitely not a Braves fan, lol), no other Series comes close to that one.
@ritchie90911 ай бұрын
When i started watching this video because of the title, I wasn't expecting to see this series as the subject. I was a 12 year old. The twins became a part time favorite of mine after the 87 series. THe braves were my favorite though (Thank you TBS) I had been watching them since I was like 8. Dale Murphy was my favorite, but this was my first time seeing the braves have a playoff run.
@NightRogue7711 ай бұрын
I wasn’t QUITE yet in high school - I lost SOOOO much sleep all the way through to the end of that WS, sneaking under my covers nearly every night to listen to the legendary voice of Skip Carey, gritting my teeth through anxiety filled comeback win night after night as we clawed our way towards the end of the regular season 😁…. And while it took me until my later years to appreciate just how legendary that series was, it still was never anything but fond memories, even the memory of being rounded up by the red dog squad of the GBI because my mother listened (for once) to the pleas of the two boys, and straight up spider-womaned up the side of a building with a group of men who then came down and opened the door, allowing us to watch the parade from the roof. (they let us go :D) Aaaaaand then we just happened to be a few hundred feet away from the shooting that happened later at Underground…. I loved every minute of it and it’s one of the most glorious memories of my childhood
@derksforeal796011 ай бұрын
Great vid! Watched game seven in 2020 when mlb vault was showcasing games. That was a great series, the vault. Jm should look into highlighting past games and maybe even streaming the “greatest games” of our sport and doing a live commentary to give it a modern feel. Too many great games and series are forgotten sadly. You guys are now the ambassadors for the next generation and they need to know where it comes from to understand where it is going.
@SwingStateStories10 ай бұрын
Dude - super well done. Baseball is my favorite sport for the very reasons you so amazingly outlined in this video: the drama, the intrigue, and the fact that there is no other game on earth where those little intangibles can all of a sudden become the way you win a championship.
@Rodanguirus10 ай бұрын
Admittedly I come from a place of bias as a Tigers fan, but I'm going to give a shoutout to the 1968 World Series. Tigers over Cardinals in 7. The Detroit riots happened the year prior, the Tigers had a few games rescheduled, and gassed from multiple double-headers, fell 1 game short of the AL pennant. It was the year of the pitcher. Gibson of the Cards and McLain of the Tigers were the MVPs and Cy Youngs. McLain had over 30 wins, Gibson had been doing unreal things for years and continued right into the World Series, with 17 strikeouts. But the Tigers #2 pitcher Mickey Lolich came out of nowhere, winning Games 2, 5, and 7 (all complete games), hitting an HR in the process. You have the Tigers' clutch decision to move Mickey Stanley to SS for the first time ever in his career, the tightening to a two-man pitching rotation mid-series, the Tigers reversing a 3-1 deficit, a wild triple in Game 7, a monster throw from outfield to home to tag out a Cards runner...it had everything.
@Jesseyoutuber10 ай бұрын
So nice to see someone acknowledge how incredible the 91 WS truly was. Game 6 and 7 ... Just wow.
@samkaufman188911 ай бұрын
@JollyOlive: I love your content and I love how you don’t even try to hide how deeply you love the Game. Respect, brother.
@JBullock5427 күн бұрын
Thanks for uploading this, man! I’ve heard the talk about it, but didn’t know too much about it. I needed more context, along with footage itself, and you did a great job of that! After watching this, I fully agree this is the greatest World Series ever. My top 5 would be: 1991 2001 2016 2011 2017
@frederickd.provoncha867110 ай бұрын
I absolutely 100% agree that the 1991 WS was the best one in recent decades. When I saw the title of this video I was wondering, hoping that this was going to be about the 1991 Series and you did not disappoint. Great great choice, in fact, it is the only right choice. Every game was close, every game had drama, every game was a nail-biter. It was thrilling to watch.
@joevanweedler11 ай бұрын
thank you for this trip down memory lane. i was 4 years old when this happened and have fuzzy memories of watching baseball and celebrating, but not really understanding what was going on. also enjoyed the appreciation of kirby puckett. truly a one of a kind player and one of my childhood heroes.
@daveerhardt187911 ай бұрын
What wasn't stated is that both teams won their home games and lost their road games. Great series and video.
@lesgobrandon944411 ай бұрын
In 87 I had a t shirt that said "4 in the dome is better than 3 in the Busch"
@someguy74243 ай бұрын
@@lesgobrandon9444Brilliant!
@ThiKu11 ай бұрын
Brought me right back to 1991 and age 11. As a Blue Jays fan the next two years were so special largely because of this series! That Jack Morris performance pops in my head sporadically and I barely watch baseball anymore. It was very special.
@mhub357611 ай бұрын
When I saw the title of the video I was like, "If he is calling a WS the greatest ever and its not 1991 then he's utterly CRACKED!" So good job! Of course I'm probably a bit biased since I'm a Twins fan. But objectively speaking NOTHING will ever top Black Jack Morris' 10 inning 1-0 game 7 shutout. Again, TEN INNING 1-0 GAME 7 SHUTOUT!!!
@kootybear7 ай бұрын
Born and raised in southern MN and was 10 in 87 and 14 in 91. I fell asleep during both game 7s only to be woken up by yelling and screaming. It may be that I am a MN fan, but the 91 series is the best Ive watched. I have watched virtually every series since but 91 is still the best just based off the teams and the drama the games had. I have the 91 series on DVD and its nice to go back and watch it in all its glory.
@joshuamarrone732Ай бұрын
I was born during this world series it will go down as probably the greatest series in MN sports history. Brings a tear to my eyes!
@christopherTYJ11 ай бұрын
Spot on! I believe Baseball Weekly (is it still around?) called it the best ever. So great it was, that it was exhausting! 😊
@TheMickey189211 ай бұрын
Excellent recap!! Thank you
@daleahlquist344011 ай бұрын
I was there for 3 of the 4 Twins home games. Sat next to a Braves fan. When Gene Larkin got the game winning hit, time stood still. I didn't even hear the noise. It was, as G.K. Chesterton said, "a moment filled with eternity."
@chadlewis407911 ай бұрын
It's hard to describe just how improbable the Atlanta Braves' rise was. I grew up Georgia assuming that the World Series was an annual event in which the Braves weren't invited -- that only professional teams could consider. And then, suddenly, in a single season, they broke through.
@firmlygrasp727011 ай бұрын
The MLB power pros music is the chefs kiss on a great video. Good stuff Jolly!
@staringatthesun86111 ай бұрын
This is the greatest World Series of _modern times_ . But the greatest World Series EVER is the 1924 World Series, in my opinion. Between the Washington Senators and the New York Giants. Four of the games were decided by 1 run, one by 2 runs (with the bases being loaded as the game ended), one by 3 runs (with the tying run at the plate), and one by 4 runs (though it was a 1-run game in the 8th inning). Games 1 and 2 each featured 9th inning comebacks, while Game 7 featured the Senators trailing 3-1 in the 8th inning and tying it, and proceeding to win it 4-3 in the 12th (the longest Game 7 in World Series history). Walter Johnson, perhaps the greatest pitcher who ever lived, entered Game 7 in relief as an 18-year veteran. One ONE DAY of rest after a complete game loss in Game 5, he pitched 4 shutout innings of relief -- the 9th through 12th innings -- escaping multiple jams. And he won 4-3, defeating a Giants team that had just won its fourth consecutive pennant. It's the only title the Senators won during their time in Washington.....and the funniest part is, that team went on to become the Minnesota Twins.
@rrb4kids111 ай бұрын
I was just out of the military in Sept of 91, moved back home to minnesota and witnessed this WS... For me it was my first as I was going through basic training in 87 and I didn't get to see any of that game. Nail biter the whole way through. Great vid!
@mafatchu56911 ай бұрын
What a great video. Thank you
@mjm8145 ай бұрын
10:50 “anything that can baseball will baseball” 😂
@bookerlo19776 ай бұрын
I agree with you wholeheartedly. 1991 was the best world series in recent memory.
@darrellmccullough922211 ай бұрын
born and raised in northern minnesota..i watched every minute on the edge of my chair,even sweeter was my sister was a braves fan
@distemic11 ай бұрын
I grew up in minnesota. 87 was my first sports memory when I was 6. I loved 91. I have an 8x10 of gladden at home plate and Greg olsons head stand signed by Dan. My parents wouldn’t let me stay up and watch game 7 so my dad recorded it for me. I still have the tape. Jack signed it for me at their annual winter meet and greet tour in 2020
@josephippolito378811 ай бұрын
Long time Jon Bois fans like myself knew that the Lonnie Smith baserunning blunder was going to be mentioned. I can still hear Jon banging his table telling Lonnie to keep running.
@bakermob2911 ай бұрын
I’ll never forget that series. I grew (and still am) I big Tiger fan. I wanted Jack Morris to win and I grew up playing against Steve Avery and it was crazy to see a guy I played against pitching in the World Series. There were so many individual performances that won and lost it for their teams. Jack pitched the best game 7 we will ever see. Deservingly finally made it into the HOF. 👏👏👏👏👏
@campbellj2011 ай бұрын
I absolutely loved this magical season! Lifelong Twins fan that has since relocated. When I heard the announcer say "touch em all Kirby Puckett" It immediately took me back. For years after that, WCCO would play that line when Twins games would come on. As an odd clash, my stepdad's family lived in Atlanta, so they didn't share our enthusiasm.
@sporer_11 ай бұрын
I know this sounds like a troll, but Greg legit pronounced it Gag-knee... he apparently didn't appreciate his French heritage like Eric and hockey's Simon!
@thomasdimarcantonio9566 ай бұрын
I think for best World Series in our lifetime, the argument is between 2014 and 2016. Both were wild series and a joy to watch. Though I will say, if Alex Gordon went home on that final play it could’ve been the most exciting finish we’ve ever seen.
@thoughtfulstargazer11 ай бұрын
Game 6 will forever live on in the memories of everyone who was there that night. Touch'em all Kirby Puckett, touch'em all.
@shaylarz11 ай бұрын
“And we’ll see you tomorrow night” still gives me goosebumps after all these years.
@matthewfake175610 ай бұрын
This is the first of your videos I've seen. VERY good stuff. Kirby Puckett is my All-Time favorite player and it was fun to watch this. I encourage everyone to fine game 7 and watch it...the whole thing. It was, by far, the best World Series game ever. Jack Morris was amazing.
@phatshotsgaming757811 ай бұрын
It’s Jolly time
@MatthiaGryffine11 ай бұрын
I'm still waiting for this 90s Braves team to get featured in a Secret Base "Collapse" video. There has never been another team that deserves such an "honour"
@zachcoggins901811 ай бұрын
The current version of the Braves will be one in 10-15 years. I really hope we can get a couple titles before that happens (unlikely with Philly in the way and our top guys playing like scrubs in the playoffs).
@danashton58411 ай бұрын
Crazy you only have 86k subs my man best baseball content on yt keep up the great work man shits awesome
@ThePryzedOne26 күн бұрын
I really enjoy your videos.
@mixmyclips10 ай бұрын
Nice job! I lived it and you summarized the best moment in MN sports very well! We don't have much to hang our hats on... so this was and still is big for us!
@rodellis283611 ай бұрын
Here to relive it one more time. Thanks for posting!
@RobbbbC11 ай бұрын
I was turning 8 during this series, and it is one of my earliest baseball memories. Great video.
@johnmercury22724 ай бұрын
I moved to Minnesota from the UK where football (soccer) is the national sport but after watching the Twins win in '87 I became a diehard Twins fan. 😄
@sergiogutierrez185921 күн бұрын
This was a great world series. I still remember watching it when I was a kid.
@RedlineR1S11 ай бұрын
I was 8 and I got to go to every game in Minneapolis of the ‘91 series. We sat on the field in the 3rd base box. Pretty lucky that my dad worked for Topps for 40 years. All I really remember was the sound. It’s as so loud.
@JasonLawrenceJones11 ай бұрын
That would be amazing! My Grandpa had season tickets for 2 different spots on the lower level for every year that I can remember from my childhood. He had seats right behind first base (13th row) and center field (first row) right above the 408 sign on the fence. I didn't get to see any of the playoff games that year, but I did get be there for any other game that I wanted to attend. Your dad and my grandpa probably crossed paths at some point.