This is an reproduction canvas poster created on a 18 inches x 24 inches canvas material. It is probably the most unique poster you will ever see. The material is a coated polyester fabric canvas which brings out vibrant color and image definition. 

This measures 18 inches x 24 inches and looks awesome.   We have a Reproduction Autographed for sale at a great price.  The real program went for sales for $1000s of dollar. We created a reproduction poster from the original before it went for sale.

This Reproduction Art cover of  Autographed Poster - 1954 World Series Program Giants vs Indians Canvas Art Poster 18"x 24"

  • You will never find quality at this price.  
  • This is shipped rolled inside a durable cylinder tube. You will have to frame it.
  • It comes with 100% money back guaranteed.
The Autographs are from top - down
1. New York Giants - #49 Hoyt Wilhelm
2. New York Giants - #20 Monte Irvin
3. New York Giants - #26 Dusty Rhodes
4. Cleveland Indians - #32 Al Smith
5. New York Giants - #24 Willie Mays
6. New York Giants - #19 Alvin Dark
7. Cleveland Indians - #14 Larry Doby
8. Cleveland Indians - #16 Hal Newhouser
9. Cleveland Indians - #19 Bob Feller

1954 WORLD SERIES

New York Giants (4) vs Cleveland Indians (0) | Baseball Almanac

It was no surprise that a representative from the great city of New York was listed on the ticket stub to the 1954 World Series. However, it was surprising that the name that appeared printed was not that of the New York Yankees. After winning five consecutive Fall Classics, the "Bronx Bombers" had fallen short (despite winning one-hundred three games) and were replaced by the Cleveland Indians who boasted the strongest pitching rotation in all of baseball. Bob Lemon, Early Wynn and Mike Garcia had dominated the American League (.721 winning percentage) and were clearly favored going into the '54 contest. Their opponents, the New York Giants, had rebounded after a fifth place finish in '53 for a five-game lead over the defending National League champion Brooklyn Dodgers. Willie Mays (National League-leading .345, with forty-one home runs and one-hundred ten runs batted in) had returned from the United States Army and Johnny Antonelli (with twenty-one wins) was acquired during the off-season for a formidable 1-2 combination. Still, many had predicted that the Indians would sweep the Series due to the Giants post-season debacles of the past and Cleveland's surprise dethroning of the perennial champion Yankees.

Game 1 was held at the Polo Grounds and the fans in attendance witnessed what is considered by many to be the greatest defensive play in World Series history. With the opener tied at 2-2 (in the eighth) and two Cleveland runners on base, Willie Mays made a spinning, over-the-shoulder catch (of a 460-foot smash from Vic Wertz) in deep centerfield and fired a bullet to the infield that held the runners from tagging up and scoring. Despite a comeback rally later in the game, the Giants held on for the 5-2 win after pinch-hitter Dusty Rhodes (a .341 hitter in part-time duty) hit a three-run, tenth-inning home run off of Bob Lemon.

Rhodes continued to shine in Game 2 with a game-tying pinch single in the fifth inning and another homer in the seventh. Once again, New York emerged as the 3-1 victor, with Cleveland notching its only run on a first-pitch-of-the-game homer by Al Smith. After yielding the opening smash, Antonelli appeared unshaken and pitched effectively the rest of the way. As the Series moved to Cleveland, Manager Al Lopez's Indians hoped for a little luck and a lot of "home field advantage". Unfortunately neither would come in Game 3 as the Giants struck for a first-inning run, then got three in the third as the Series standout, Rhodes, came through with a two-run pinch single with the bases loaded. New York's Ruben Gomez and Hoyt Wilhelm combined on a four-hitter, and the hometown Indians lost, 6-2.

For Game 4, New York prepared to sweep Cleveland and led 7-0 after a mere 4oe innings. Despite his sinking ship, Hank Majeski made a last desperate attempt (in the fifth) with a three-run pinch-homer off of Don Liddle to close within three. The always-steady Antonelli stalled the rally and closed out the Tribe with 1 2/3 innings of hitless relief. For the sixth consecutive season, the World Championship title remained in New York, although this time it was in the hands of the National League. It would stay in the "Big Apple" for the next two years, sharing time in both the American and National League clubhouses. Research by Baseball Almanac.