Watch Game 7 Sunday on MLB Network

The pressure is at its most intense. The spotlight is at its brightest. It's Game 7, and everything rides on a single contest. Don't miss "Game 7 Sunday" on MLB Network, this week featuring decisive Fall Classic games spanning from 1952 to 2011. Here's the full programming schedule.

11 a.m. ET -- 1952 World Series Game 7, Yankees at Dodgers
The Yankees trailed this Series, three games to two, before edging Brooklyn in Game 6, 3-2, to force Game 7 at Ebbets Field. Mickey Mantle, whose homer in Game 6 proved to be the difference for New York, homered again in Game 7 and drove in two of the Yankees' four runs in a 4-2 victory that clinched their fourth consecutive World Series title and fifth in six years.

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2 p.m. ET -- 1971 World Series Game 7, Pirates at Orioles
Roberto Clemente smashed a solo home run and starter Steve Blass spun a gem in which he gave up one run on four hits over nine innings to help lift Pittsburgh to a World Series title. It was the Pirates' first championship since Bill Mazeroski's walk-off homer won it all for the Bucs in 1960 over the Yankees.

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4 p.m. ET -- "1971 Pirates: Forever Brothers"
You've seen them win the World Series, now watch the entire story of the 1971 Pirates, who reached the pinnacle of baseball after making the postseason for the first time in a decade in '70, when they lost to the Reds in the National League Championship Series.

5 p.m. and 11 p.m. ET -- 1987 World Series Game 7, Cardinals at Twins
Frank Viola tossed eight strong innings, giving up two runs in the second and nothing more, while Kirby Puckett and Dan Gladden each delivered an RBI double to help the Twins win their first World Series title since the franchise moved to Minnesota in 1961.

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8 p.m. ET -- 2011 World Series Game 7, Rangers at Cardinals
Following an epic Game 6 in which the Cardinals mounted a pair of incredible comebacks and won it on a David Freese homer in the 11th inning, St. Louis finished the job with a 6-2 victory over Texas in Game 7. Freese added a two-run double to his already lengthy list of big postseason hits, and Allen Craig homered to back six strong innings by starter Adam Wainwright.

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