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The 1967 Major League Baseball season was contested from April 10 to October 12, 1967. The St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Boston Red Sox four games to three in the World Series, which was the first World Series appearance for the Red Sox in 21 years. Following the season, the Kansas City Athletics relocated to Oakland.
1966 MLB season changes: Milwaukee Braves relocate from Milwaukee to Atlanta, as the Atlanta Braves; California Angels leave Chavez Ravine Stadium in Los Angeles, California and open Anaheim Stadium in Anaheim, California; St. Louis Cardinals leave Busch Stadium and open Busch Memorial Stadium in May
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The 1967 Series was the first non-exhibition meeting between Major League Baseball teams from St. Louis and Boston since the departures of the Boston Braves and St. Louis Browns following (respectively) the 1952 and 1953 seasons ended regular season meetings between teams from those cities (Braves vs Cardinals, Browns vs Red Sox).
American League; Team W L Pct. GB Home Road; Boston Red Sox: 92: 70 .568 — 49–32 43–38 Detroit Tigers: 91: 71 .562 1 52–29 39–42
The 1967 St. Louis Cardinals season was the team's 86th season in St. Louis, Missouri, its 76th season in the National League, and its first full season at Busch Memorial Stadium. Gussie Busch hired former outfielder Stan Musial as general manager before the season.
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The 1967 New York Yankees season was the 65th season for the Yankees. The team finished ahead of only the Kansas City Athletics (who moved to Oakland after the season ended) in the American League final standings, with a record of 72–90, finishing 20 games behind the Boston Red Sox .