1976 Major League Baseball season


The 1976 Major League Baseball season ended with the Cincinnati Reds winning their second consecutive World Series championship.
This was the last season of the expansion era until 1993 in which the American League and the National League had the same number of teams.
A lockout occurred during March 1–17, but it did not impact the regular season.
The [1976 Major League Baseball MLB All-Star Game|All-Star Game|All-Star Game], held at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia, was a 7–1 victory for the NL over the AL.
The Reds won the 1976 World Series by sweeping the New York Yankees in four games; the Reds remain the only team to go undefeated in the postseason since the advent of the divisional era in 1969. It was the Reds' last title until Lou Piniella led the team to a championship in. This was the second time that the Yankees were swept in a World Series, the first having been by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 1963 World Series.

Postseason

Bracket



Events

July–October

Television coverage

This was the first season of MLB's new national TV rights agreements with ABC and NBC. ABC won the rights to show Monday Night Baseball, the All-Star Game and both League Championship Series in even-numbered years, and World Series in odd-numbered years. NBC continued to air the weekend Game of the Week, as well as All-Star Game and both League Championship Series in odd-numbered years, and World Series in even-numbered years.
This was the final year NBC used radio announcers of the two competing teams in the World Series as part of the television broadcast team. Starting in 1978 when NBC had the World Series again, they used their standard broadcast team of Joe Garagiola and Tony Kubek with no team announcers as part of the coverage.