Watch these four World Series walk-offs on Wednesday

This browser does not support the video element.

This week's edition of #WalkoffWednesday on MLB Network features four World Series classics.

MLB Network will show these four walk-off games throughout the day. Fans got to vote for their favorite World Series walk-offs over the weekend.

Here's a rundown of Wednesday's slate, with the air times for each game.

8 a.m. ET -- 1990 World Series Game 2 (Reds 5, A's 4)

The Reds pulled off a shocking sweep of the defending World Series champion A's in the 1990 Fall Classic, and this thriller in Game 2 at Riverfront Stadium sent them on their way.

After a back-and-forth contest went into extra innings, the A's brought in Dennis Eckersley to pitch the bottom of the 10th. But the Reds knocked three hits in a row off Eckersley, and Joe Oliver's walk-off single sent the Reds to Oakland with a 2-0 series lead.

This browser does not support the video element.

10 a.m. ET -- 1975 World Series Game 3 (Reds 6, Red Sox 5)

The Reds took the pivotal Game 3 of the '75 World Series against Boston on their way to the first championship for the Big Red Machine. And this walk-off win featured plenty of fireworks.

Home runs by Johnny Bench, Dave Concepcion and Cesar Geronimo staked Cincinnati to a big lead early but the Red Sox came back, and Dwight Evans belted a game-tying homer in the ninth inning. The Reds finally prevailed in the bottom of the 10th on Joe Morgan's walk-off drive to center -- after Boston catcher Carlton Fisk got tangled up with Ed Armbrister on a sacrifice bunt, a controversial play that set up the game-winning hit.

This browser does not support the video element.

Noon ET and 11 p.m. ET -- 2001 World Series Game 5 (Yankees 3, D-backs 2)

Though the D-backs struck the final blow in this World Series with their own epic walk-off comeback against Mariano Rivera in Game 7, the Yanks were the ones who pulled off the dramatic win here in Game 5. It was their second straight walk-off win, in fact, and swung a tied series in their favor.

While Derek Jeter was the hero in Game 4, when he became Mr. November, Scott Brosius and Alfonso Soriano came through in Game 5. Brosius tied the game in the bottom of the ninth with a home run off closer Byung-Hyun Kim, and Soriano knocked the walk-off single in the 12th.

This browser does not support the video element.

3 p.m. ET -- 2003 World Series Game 4 (Marlins, 4, Yankees 3)

In the last game of World Series Walk-off Wednesday, the underdog Marlins upset the Bronx Bombers -- winning not just this game, but the entire series for the franchise's second surprise championship.

Florida's Game 4 victory was bookended by a pair of highlight home runs: Miguel Cabrera's memorable homer off Roger Clemens in the first inning and Alex Gonzalez's walk-off against Jeff Weaver in the bottom of the 12th.

More from MLB.com