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Tag: World Series

  • Dodgers historic postseason homers by Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith and Miguel Rojas fetch big bucks at auction

    Talk about easing the blow. The Canadian father-son duo that secured not one, but both home run balls that doomed the Toronto Blue Jays team they rooted for in Game 7 of the World Series turned the evidence into some serious U.S. currency Saturday night.

    Dodgers fans will never forget those baseballs hit by Miguel Rojas in the ninth inning and Will Smith in the 11th flying over the left-field wall and into the first row of seats beyond the Blue Jays’ bullpen.

    John and Matthew Bains — sitting side-by-side — will never forget the balls ending up in their hands. John, 61, caught Rojas’ 387-foot home run in his glove on the fly. Two innings later, Matthew, seated next to his dad, saw Smith’s blast land in the bullpen and bounce directly into his hands.

    Novices they were not. John has been a Blue Jays fan since the team’s inception in 1977 and purposely sits where he does for proximity to home runs. In fact, he caught one during the American League Division Series against the New York Yankees a few weeks earlier.

    Both men brought baseballs into the stadium that they threw back onto the field, giving the Blue Jays faithful the impression the Bains did the honorable thing when, in fact, they did the smart thing for their bank accounts.

    On Saturday night, the balls were sold at auction. Smith’s homer, which provided the Dodgers with the winning run, sold for $168,000 while Rojas’ blast that sent the game into extra innings fetched $156,000.

    A third unforgettable Dodgers home run ball from the 2025 postseason eclipsed the Game 7 balls. The second of Shohei Ohtani’s three home runs against the Milwaukee Brewers in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series sold for $270,000 in the same SCP Auction.

    It was the longest of his three, landing on the Dodger Stadium right-field roof 469 feet from home plate. And it was a key element in what is considered perhaps the greatest performance in baseball history. Ohtani struck out 10 in six innings on the mound in addition to his offensive exploits, sending the Dodgers to the World Series.

    Carlo Mendoza’s story of how he ended up with Ohtani’s ball is no less head-shaking than that of the Bains boys. The 26-year-old Los Angeles man said he was eating nachos in a food court behind the right-field pavilion and saw Ohtani hit the home run on a television monitor. He heard the ball hit the roof, dashed toward the sound and retrieved the ball from under a bush.

    All three balls were authenticated by SCP Auctions through notarized affidavits and lie detector tests. SCP owner David Kohler said Mendoza was so apprehensive about handing over the ball that he insisted meeting Kohler in the parking lot of the Long Beach Police Dept.

    “We authenticated through polygraph and eyewitnesses due diligence,” Kohler said. “From the time we announced we had these baseballs until now, no one else has come forward and said they have the balls. There’s been no contention.”

    Steve Henson

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  • Prince Harry Apologizes to Canada For World Series “Hatgate”: “I Was Under Duress”

    Prince Harry, accompanied by Meghan Markle, came for a baseball game and left with a new controversy. On October 28, the Sussexes attended the fourth game of the World Series, between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays. The couple sat in the front row behind the dugout, all smiles, with Los Angeles team caps on their heads, cheering for their adopted hometown team.

    But Prince Harry made the mistake of wearing a Dodgers cap. As soon as he was spotted wearing the bright blue accessory, some Canadians accused him of betraying his heritage: Canada is a Commonwealth country whose head of state is King Charles III. Arriving in Canada on Wednesday for a two-day visit to commemorate Remembrance Day, celebrated on November 11, Prince Harry was naturally asked about what has jokingly been deemed “hatgate.”

    “Is there anything you’d like to say about wearing that Los Angeles Dodgers cap last week and getting in hot water?” he was asked by CTV News on Thursday.

    “Oh, the Los Angeles Dodgers cap. Well, firstly, I’d like to apologize to Canada for wearing it,” he explained. “Secondly, I was under duress, there wasn’t much choice,” he added with a smile. Invited to the game by the Dodgers’ owner, he thought it was “polite” to do so. Prince Harry confided that there was an additional reason for his choice of headgear. “When you’re missing a lot of hair on top and you’re sitting under floodlights, you’ll take any hat that’s available,” he joked.

    Séraphine Roger

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  • Dodgers celebrate World Series victory



    Dodgers celebrate World Series victory – CBS News










































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    Hundreds of thousands of Dodgers fans celebrated the team’s World Series victory, attending the parade on Monday. The Dodgers became the first team in 25 years to win back-to-back World Series. CBS News’ Carter Evans reports.

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  • Dodgers win back-to-back World Series with epic comeback in game seven

    The Los Angeles Dodgers have rallied to beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in extra innings of a decisive seventh game of the World Series to become Major League Baseball’s first repeat champion in 25 years.

    Los Angeles overcame 3-0 and 4-2 deficits and escaped a bases-loaded jam in the ninth to become the first repeat champion since the 1998-2000 New York Yankees, and the first from the National League since the 1975 and 1976 Cincinnati Reds.

    The Dodgers were down 3-4 in the ninth inning when Miguel Rojas tied the game with a home run, followed by Will Smith hitting a solo home run in the 11th inning for what would be the winning 5-4 scoreline.

    Smith’s hit on a 2-0 slider off Shane Bieber into the Blue Jays’ bullpen in left-field, was the Dodgers’ first lead of the night.

    “You dream of those moments, you know, extra innings, put your team ahead — I’ll remember that forever,” Smith said.

    Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who threw 96 pitches in the Dodgers’ game six win, escaped a bases-loaded jam in the ninth and threw 43 pitches over 2 2/3 innings for his third win of the Series.

    He gave up a lead-off double in the 11th to Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who was sacrificed to third. Addison Barger walked and Alejandro Kirk hit a broken-bat grounder to shortstop Mookie Betts, who started a title-winning 6-4-3 double play that ended baseball’s 150th major league season.

    Los Angeles used all four of its post-season starting pitchers, with Yamamoto joined by Shohei Ohtani, Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell.

    “We’ve got a special group of guys, man,” Smith said.

    “We just never gave up. … Oh man, that was a fight, for seven games.”

    Bo Bichette put Toronto ahead in the third with a three-run homer off Ohtani, the two-way star pitching on three days’ rest after taking the loss in game three.

    Los Angeles closed to 3-2 on sacrifice flies from Teoscar Hernández in the fourth inning off Max Scherzer and Tommy Edman in the sixth inning against Chris Bassitt.

    Andrés Giménez restored Toronto’s two-run lead with an RBI double in the sixth off Glasnow, who relieved after getting the final three outs on three pitches to save game six.

    Max Muncy’s eighth-inning homer off star rookie Trey Yesavage cut the Dodgers’ deficit to one run, and Rojas, inserted into the slumping Dodgers’ lineup in game six to provide some energy, homered on a full-count slider from Jeff Hoffman.

    Toronto put two on with one out in the bottom half against Snell, and Los Angeles turned to Yamamoto.

    He hit Kirk on a hand with a pitch, loading the bases and prompting the Dodgers to play the infield in and the outfield shallow. Daulton Varsho grounded to second, where Rojas stumbled but managed to throw home for a forceout as catcher Smith kept his foot on the plate.

    Ernie Clement then was caught by Andy Pages, who made a jumping, backhand catch on the centre-field warning track as he crashed into left fielder Kiké Hernández.

    Seranthony Domínguez walked Betts with one out in the 10th and Muncy singled for his third hit.

    Hernández walked, loading the bases. Pages grounded to shortstop, where Giménez threw home for a force-out. Guerrero fielded a grounder to the right side and threw to pitcher Seranthony Domínguez covering first, just beating Hernández in a call upheld in a video review.

    The epic night matched the Marlins’ 3-2 win over Cleveland in 1997 as the second-longest World Series game seven, behind only the Washington Senators’ 4-3 victory against the New York Giants in 1924.

    The Dodgers became the ninth team to win games six and seven of a World Series as the away team.

    AP

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  • How did the Dodgers win Game 7 of the World Series? The top 5 plays that changed history forever

    Baseball has a way of immortalizing its most dramatic nights. The nights when time slows, hearts race, and a season’s worth of dreams balance on the edge of a single swing. Saturday night at Rogers Centre was one of those nights — a masterpiece painted in tension and redemption, where the Los Angeles Dodgers completed one of the greatest comebacks in World Series history, outlasting the Toronto Blue Jays 5–4 in 11 innings to capture their third World Series title in six years.

    But how did they do it? Down 3-2 in the series on the road, they were out-hit, out-pitched, out-played and the scoreboard reflected that. Over the course of the seven games, Toronto had a total of 34 runs on 75 hits, compared to just 26 runs and 53 hits for the Dodgers.

    The Blue Jays should have won the series by lengths and bounds, but the story of the series— and perhaps this dynasty — can be told in five unforgettable plays from Game 7. 


    1. Max Muncy’s Home Run That Meant More Than It Seemed

    It was the top of the eighth. The Dodgers trailed 4–2, and Rogers Centre shook like an earthquake. The city, the country, perhaps most of the planet were counting down outs until Toronto were crowned as the new champions of the world. 

    Then came Max Muncy — quiet, composed, eyes set on destiny. With one mighty swing, he sent a fastball soaring high of the flashing sign in the second deck. The solo home run barely seemed consequential at the time, trimming the deficit to one. But in hindsight, it was the spark that reignited a dugout on the brink.

    A two-run lead feels safe. A one-run lead feels mortal. That subtle shift in pressure — that breath of belief — changed everything.


    2. Miguel Rojas: The Unlikeliest of Heroes

    There are moments when baseball chooses its heroes, and on this night, it chose Miguel Rojas.

    Down to their final two outs, facing Toronto’s closer Jeff Hoffman, Rojas turned on a 2–2 pitch and launched it deep to left. The ball carried, carried, and then — gone. A game-tying home run that left fans and even Dodgers manager Dave Roberts rubbing their eyes in disbelief.

    But Rojas wasn’t done. In the bottom of the ninth, with the bases loaded and one out, he fielded a screaming grounder and fired home. Catcher Will Smith stretched just far enough, his toe grazing the plate a fraction of a second before the runner’s foot. The call stood. The game lived on.

    Rojas had tied it. Then he had saved it.


    3. Andy Pages’ Collision Catch That Saved the Season

    Moments later, with the Blue Jays threatening again, destiny tested the Dodgers’ resolve. Andy Pages — inserted as a defensive replacement just one batter earlier — sprinted deep into center field on a ball crushed toward the warning track. On a dead sprint, he collided with Kiké Hernández, somehow held onto the ball, as his teammate crashed to the ground in a tangle of limbs and adrenaline.

    It was chaos. It was courage. It was a season-saving catch that sent the game — and a stadium full of gasping fans — into extra innings.


    4. Will Smith’s 11th-Inning Blast Heard Around the World

    The Dodgers’ catcher had been steady all series, but his moment came in the 11th. Facing Shane Bieber, Smith dug in and delivered the swing that will echo through franchise lore — a towering solo home run that gave Los Angeles a 5–4 lead and sent the Dodger dugout into a frenzy.

    It wasn’t just the go-ahead hit. It was the punctuation mark on a relentless belief that this team — no matter how battered, no matter how late — never truly dies.


    5. Yamamoto’s Legendary Finish

    Then came Yoshinobu Yamamoto — the quiet assassin with a will of iron. Less than 24 hours after throwing 96 pitches in a Game 6 masterpiece, he emerged from the bullpen on no rest, chasing something greater than logic: legacy.

    For 2⅔ innings, he bent but never broke. He escaped a bases-loaded jam in the ninth, then induced the game-ending double play in the 11th — a broken-bat roller off Alejandro Kirk’s bat that found the glove of Muncy at third. One throw to second. One turn to first.

    Ballgame.

    The Dodgers poured onto the field as Yamamoto sank to his knees. The legend of Yoshi was complete.


    A Dynasty Defined

    With that final out, the Dodgers didn’t just win a championship — they solidified an era. Three titles in six seasons. Two straight World Series crowns. A team built on resilience, depth, and the unshakable belief that history is theirs to write.

    For Yamamoto, it was a performance that placed him in rarefied air — the first pitcher since Randy Johnson in 2001 to pitch in back-to-back games of a World Series after a six-inning start. He finished 3–0 with a 1.02 ERA, the kind of postseason line that lives forever in highlight reels and barroom debates.

    And for the Dodgers, it was a night of poetic symmetry — one home run to start the comeback, another to finish it, and a cast of heroes that stretched from veterans like Muncy to bench players like Rojas.

    They say dynasties aren’t built in a day. But sometimes, they’re immortalized in one.

    Saturday night in Toronto was that night — when the Dodgers, against all odds, rose once again from the edge of defeat and reminded the world that their era isn’t ending anytime soon.

    Michael Duarte

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  • Key moments from the Dodgers’ wild World Series Game 7 win

    The Dodgers narrowly escape the bottom of the ninth

    Blake Snell allowed two Toronto baserunners, prompting Dodgers manager Dave Roberts to bring in Yoshinobu Yamamoto a day after he threw 96 pitches in a Game 6 victory. Yamamoto hit Alejandro Kirk with a pitch, loading the bases, before the Dodgers escaped with two helter-skelter defensive plays.

    With the infield playing in to prevent the winning run, Rojas fielded Daulton Varsho’s grounder to second base and nearly fell over. He gathered himself and threw home, but the toss briefly pulled Smith off the plate. Smith’s toe barely reconnected with the plate in time to get the forceout, a call confirmed by video review.

    Then center fielder Andy Pages, who had just been inserted off the bench to provide better defense, collided with left fielder Kiké Hernández while catching Ernie Clement’s long fly on the left-center warning track. Pages held on for the final out of the inning despite knocking Hernández to the ground.

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  • Key moments from the Dodgers’ wild World Series Game 7 win

    The Dodgers narrowly escape the bottom of the ninth

    Blake Snell allowed two Toronto baserunners, prompting Dodgers manager Dave Roberts to bring in Yoshinobu Yamamoto a day after he threw 96 pitches in a Game 6 victory. Yamamoto hit Alejandro Kirk with a pitch, loading the bases, before the Dodgers escaped with two helter-skelter defensive plays.

    With the infield playing in to prevent the winning run, Rojas fielded Daulton Varsho’s grounder to second base and nearly fell over. He gathered himself and threw home, but the toss briefly pulled Smith off the plate. Smith’s toe barely reconnected with the plate in time to get the forceout, a call confirmed by video review.

    Then center fielder Andy Pages, who had just been inserted off the bench to provide better defense, collided with left fielder Kiké Hernández while catching Ernie Clement’s long fly on the left-center warning track. Pages held on for the final out of the inning despite knocking Hernández to the ground.

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  • Sydney Sweeney Spotted Sneaking Into Ex-Fiancé Jonathan Davino’s Car Before SCREAMING At Him In Tense Reunion! – Perez Hilton

    Sydney Sweeney and her ex-fiancé just had a very tense reunion…

    It’s been months since the Euphoria star and her ex Jonathan Davino called off their engagement, but tensions are clearly still running hot… On Sunday, TMZ reported the Anyone But You actress hit up eatery Giorgio Baldi in Santa Monica with friends on Saturday night to catch Game 7 of the 2025 World Series… But the night took a sharp turn when she left the establishment and met up with her ex.

    According to the outlet, Syd hopped into an Uber SUV after leaving the hotspot and had the driver chauffeur her just a few blocks away where her ex-fiancé was reportedly parked. There, she exited the Uber and snuck into Jonathan’s rig and the two drove off together.

    But the story doesn’t end there…

    Related: Lily Allen Takes Swipe At David Harbour’s Mistress With Halloween Costume!

    According to a source who was reportedly near Sydney’s residence when the pair arrived there, she got out of the car and screamed at Jonathan:

    “I don’t believe you. Please leave, leave me alone.”

    Yikes!

    It’s not clear what the pair were seemingly arguing about, but in paparazzi photos obtained by TMZ, the Madame Web star can be seen ducking and attempting to shield her face while sneaking into Jonathan’s car. See HERE.

    This isn’t the first time Sydney and Jonathan have been spotted together post-split, but it’s definitely the most tense reunion of theirs we’ve heard of… Back in August, the Christy star told the Wall Street Journal in an interview that she aimed to continue working with her ex through their Fifty-Fifty Films production company despite their split:

    “I’m going to keep all of my personal stuff out of it.”

    This all comes amid reports that Sydney is moving on from the producer with Justin Bieber’s former manager Scooter Braun.

    What are YOUR thoughts on this tense meeting? Be sure to let us know in the comments down below!

    [Images via MEGA/WENN]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Dodgers capture back-to-back World Series championships, first since 2000

    The Los Angeles Dodgers are once again World Series champions.

    The Dodgers beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in extra innings in Game 7, becoming the first team since 2000 to win consecutive World Series titles. The New York Yankees won three championships in a row from 1998 to 2000.

    Saturday’s historic win marks the Boys in Blue’s ninth World Series title, their third since 2020. 

    VIDEOS: Dodgers, Blue Jays benches clear in World Series Game 7

    EXTRA INNINGS

    The 2025 World Series has officially become an all-time classic.

    The Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays have not only extended this series to a winner-take-all Game 7, but that game needed extra innings to find a winner. The Boys in Blue forced the game to go extras after Miguel Rojas’ ninth-inning solo home run to tie the game at 4-4.

    Will Smith blasted a go-ahead solo home run to put the Dodgers ahead 5-4 in the 11th inning. 

    Things got a little hairy for Dodger fans after Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a leadoff double to begin the bottom of the 11th inning. Los Angeles got the first out after Isaiah Kiner-Falefa bunted Guerrero to third. Dodgers’ Yoshinobu Yamamoto, throwing in Game 7 on zero days of rest after pitching on Friday, walked Addison Barger to put the winning run at first, in addition to Guerrero waiting at third.

    Blue Jays’ Alejandro Kirk then grounded into a double play to end the game and give the Dodgers their ninth World Series championship.

    Yamamoto was named World Series MVP after delivering wins in Games 2, 6 and 7.

    Prior to the Game 7 classic, series was without drama. Game 3 took 18 innings to complete – the longest since 2018 – and Game 7 had a bench-clearing shouting match between players from both teams.

    SERIES AT A GLANCE

    • Game 1: Blue Jays 11, Dodgers 4
    • Game 2: Dodgers 5, Blue Jays 1
    • Game 3: Dodgers 6, Blue Jays 5, Final/18th.
    • Game 4: Blue Jays 6, Dodgers 2
    • Game 5: Blue Jays 6, Dodgers 1
    • Game 6: Dodgers 3, Blue Jays 1
    • Game 7: Dodgers 5, Blue Jays 4. Final/11th.

    HOW BOTH TEAMS GOT HERE

    The Dodgers punched their ticket to the Fall Classic after sweeping the Brewers in the NLCS in four games. Prior to that, the Dodgers beat the Philadelphia Phillies, 3 games to 1, in the best-of-5 division series.

    Before the NLDS win, Los Angeles pulled off a 2-game minisweep of the Cincinnati Reds in the wild card series. The Dodgers secured a spot in the postseason after winning the NL West division.

    The Blue Jays made their first trip to the World Series since 1993 after holding off the Mariners in a winner-take-all Game 7 on Monday, October 20. Prior to that, the Jays beat the New York Yankees in the ALDS in four games.

    Toronto secured a first-round bye and homefield advantage in the World Series after finishing the regular season with a 94-68 record. 

    The Source: This report used information provided by MLB and referenced information from previous FOX 11 reports.

    World SeriesInstastoriesMLBSportsNews

    KJ.Hiramoto@fox.com (KJ Hiramoto)

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  • Los Angeles Dodgers win World Series, defeat Toronto Blue Jays in Game 7 classic

    In a winner-take-all Game 7 for the ages, the Los Angeles Dodgers bested the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in an 11-inning classic in the early morning hours Sunday to become back-to-back World Series champions.

    Down 4-3 with one out at the top of the ninth inning, Dodgers shortstop Miguel Rojas hit a solo home run to tie it up at four runs apiece and send the game into extra innings.

    The Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in Game 7 of the World Series at Rogers Center on Nov. 2, 2025, in Toronto, Canada.

    Mark Blinch / Getty Images


    Then, at the top of the 11th inning, Dodgers catcher Will Smith hit a solo home run to seal the extraordinary comeback victory. 

    The Dodgers became the first repeat champion since the 1998-2000 New York Yankees, and in the process denied the Blue Jays their first title since 1993.

    The Dodgers were down 3-2 in the series, rallying back and winning the final two games in Toronto to quiet a stunned home crowd.  

    L.A. overcame 3-0 and 4-2 deficits and escaped a bases-loaded jam in the ninth.

    Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who threw 96 pitches in the Dodgers’ win on Friday, escaped a bases-loaded jam in the ninth and pitched 2 2/3 innings for his third win of the Series.

    He gave up a leadoff double in the 11th to Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who was sacrificed to third. Addison Barger walked and Alejandro Kirk grounded to shortstop Mookie Betts, who started a title-winning 6-4-3 double play.

    With their ninth title and third in six years, the Dodgers made an argument for their 2020s teams to be considered a dynasty. Dave Roberts, their manager since 2016, boosted the probability he will gain induction to the Hall of Fame.

    Dodgers vs Bllue Jays in Toronto, Canada

    Los Angeles Dodgers hitter Miguel Rojas reacts after his solo home run in the ninth inning during Game 7 of the World Series against Toronto Blue Jays at Roger Centre on Nov. 1, 2025, in Toronto, Canada. 

    Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images


    Bo Bichette put Toronto ahead in the third with a three-run homer off two-way star Shohei Ohtani, who was pitching on three days’ rest after taking the loss in Game 3.

    L.A. closed to 3-2 on sacrifice flies from Teoscar Hernández in the fourth off Max Scherzer and Tommy Edman in the sixth against Chris Bassitt.

    Andrés Giménez restored Toronto’s two-run lead with an RBI double in the sixth off Tyler Glasnow, who relieved after getting the final three outs on three pitches to save Game 6 on Friday.

    Max Muncy’s eighth-inning homer off star rookie Trey Yesavage cut the Dodgers’ deficit to one run, and Rojas, inserted into the lineup in Game 6 to provide some energy, homered on a full-count slider from Jeff Hoffman.

    Toronto put two on with one out in the bottom half against Blake Snell, and Los Angeles turned to Yamamoto.

    He hit Alejandro Kirk on a hand with a pitch, loading the bases and prompting the Dodgers to play the infield in and the outfield shallow. Daulton Varsho grounded to second, where Rojas stumbled but managed to throw home for a forceout as catcher Smith kept his foot on the plate.

    Ernie Clement then flied out to Andy Pages, who made a jumping, backhand catch on the center-field warning track as he crashed into left fielder Kiké Hernández.

    Seranthony Domínguez walked Mookie Betts with one out in the 10th and Muncy singled for his third hit. Hernández walked, loading the bases. Pages grounded to shortstop, where Giménez threw home for a forceout. First baseman Guerrero then threw to pitcher Seranthony Domínguez covering first, just beating Hernández in a call upheld in a video review.

    The epic night matched the Marlins’ 3-2 win over Cleveland in 1997 as the second-longest Series Game 7, behind only the Washington Senators’ 4-3 victory against the New York Giants in 1924.

    The game was expectantly tense, with both benches and bullpens clearing after Dodgers left-hander Justin Wrobleski hit Blue Jays shortstop Andrés Giménez on the right hand with a pitch in the fourth inning.

    After the players returned to their benches and bullpens, the umpires huddled briefly before crew chief Mark Wegner issued a warning to both dugouts.

    Ohtani started the game, but was pulled off the mound after allowing Bo Bichette’s three-run homer in the third inning. Pitching on three days of rest, Ohtani was up to 100.9 mph with his fastball but appeared to run out of steam in the third.

    Ohtani allowed three runs and five hits in 2 1/3 innings before he was replaced by left-hander Justin Wrobleski. Ohtani walked two and struck out three.

    Earlier, Ohtani became the first pitcher to get a hit in a World Series Game 7 since Jesse Orosco of the New York Mets in 1986.

    He singled to center off Toronto’s Max Scherzer to begin the game, moved to second on a ground ball and advanced to third on a fly ball but was left stranded when Mookie Betts grounded out.

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  • Dodgers win Game 7 in 11 innings, become first repeat World Series champions in 25 years

    TORONTO — The weight is over.

    They carried it every day from February all the way into November. They were supposed to do this. They were supposed to win. They were supposed to be the first team to repeat as champions since the New York Yankees in 1998-2000. They were supposed to live up to the hyperbolic evaluations that pegged theirs as the most talented roster in baseball history.

    It took a game-tying home run in the ninth inning (the first in World Series history) by Miguel Rojas, a game-winning home run by Will Smith in the 11th and 2⅔ innings of relief from Game 6 starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Bulldog Mode fully engaged) to make all that come true with a 5-4 victory in Game 7 of the World Series.

    “You dream of those moments, you know, extra innings, put your team ahead – I’ll remember that forever,” Smith said.

    It was a memorable World Series featuring two extra-inning games, shocking momentum shifts and game-saving defensive plays. But the Dodgers didn’t always look like the better team in the matchup. The Blue Jays played better defense overall, took better at-bats consistently and were better in the clutch over the seven games – except when it mattered most.

    The Dodgers absorbed all that – just as they absorbed the injuries and inconsistencies of a long season to get here – and emerged as champions.

    Like almost everything about this season, it didn’t go as planned. The Dodgers even found the limits of what Shohei Ohtani can do.

    Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said the decision to start Ohtani on short rest in Game 7 – a part of the Dodgers’ pre-Series discussions – was finalized after Game 6 on Friday night after a short conversation with Ohtani.

    “Shohei, we don’t have long conversations,” Roberts said with a smile before Game 7.

    It was only the second time in his career Ohtani had started on short rest. He followed a two-inning, rain-shortened start with seven scoreless innings three days later in April 2023 for the Angels.

    The circumstances were far different Saturday night and Ohtani seemed off from the start.

    He struggled with his command. Only half of his first 30 pitches were strikes. The Blue Jays put the first batter on base in each of the first three innings, putting stress on Ohtani.

    He escaped the first two but gave up a three-run home run to Bo Bichette in the third inning.

    Whatever master pitching plan the Dodgers had come up with to cover nine innings, it did not include Ohtani giving up a 110.1 mph laser that traveled 442 feet to straightaway center field for a three-run home run that put their stagnant offense in the trail position.

    The Dodgers did answer back with a run in the fourth inning against Jays starter Max Scherzer but stranded two runners after back-to-back outstanding defensive plays by the Blue Jays – diving catches by Daulton Varsho in center field and Guerrero down the first base line.

    Both benches – and bullpens – emptied in the fourth inning after Justin Wrobleski hit Gimenez with a pitch, adding some menace to the drama.

    The Dodgers crawled within a run in the sixth inning and again on Max Muncy’s solo home run in the eighth.

    Rojas finally got the Dodgers even with one out in the ninth inning when he worked the count full against Blue Jays closer Jeff Hoffman then lined a hanging slider over the wall in left field. It was only the second extra-base hit in 21 postseason games for Rojas, the first since another home run for the Miami Marlins in their 2020 National League Division Series against the Atlanta Braves.

    They escaped a bases-loaded situation in the bottom of the ninth, wasted their own in the top of the 10th and finally took their first lead of the night on Smith’s home run with two outs in the 11th.

    Yamamoto, who threw 96 pitches in the Dodgers’ Game 6 win on Friday, escaped a bases-loaded jam in the ninth and threw 43 pitches to close the win. He gave up a leadoff double in the 11th to Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who was sacrificed to third. Addison Barger walked and Alejandro Kirk hit a broken-bat grounder to shortstop Mookie Betts, who started a title-winning 6-4-3 double play that ended baseball’s 150th major league season, the first that began and ended outside the United States.

    “Yamamoto is the GOAT!” Roberts shouted moments before the Dodgers hoisted the World Series trophy.

    The Dodgers used all four of their postseason starting pitchers in the finale.

    “We’ve got a special group of guys, man,” Smith said. “We just never gave up. … Oh man, that was a fight, for seven games.”

    Including a victory in Game 2 of last year’s World Series against the New York Yankees, Yamamoto is 4-0 with a 1.13 ERA in four Fall Classic appearances.

    With their ninth championship and third in six years, the Dodgers made an argument for their 2020s teams to be considered a dynasty. Roberts, their manager since 2016, boosted the probability he will gain induction to the Hall of Fame.

    The epic night matched the then-Florida Marlins’ 3-2 victory over Cleveland in 1997 as the second-longest Series Game 7, behind only the Washington Senators’ 4-3 victory against the New York Giants in 1924.

    More to come on this story.

    Bill Plunkett

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  • Dodgers Cement Dynasty with Back-to-Back World Series Wins

    A quarter-century after the last repeat champion, Los Angeles reclaims its throne atop Major League Baseball

    For the first time in 25 years, Major League Baseball has a repeat champion—and, fittingly, it’s the team that’s come to define both excellence and expectation. The Los Angeles Dodgers capped off another unforgettable postseason run with a thrilling Game 7 win in Toronto, cementing their place in baseball history and reigniting a dynasty that had long felt inevitable.

    Los Angeles had done it again, becoming the first team since the late-1990s Yankees to win back-to-back World Series titles. For a franchise built on the weight of tradition, heartbreak, and redemption, this was more than a victory; it was validation.

    Throughout the 2025 season, the Dodgers carried the burden of expectation that comes with a $300 million payroll and a star-studded roster headlined by Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman. But unlike superteams of the past, this squad never felt top-heavy. Manager Dave Roberts, once again vindicated after years of second-guessing, crafted a chemistry that transcended the stat sheet.

    Ohtani’s two-way brilliance set the tone all year, from his early-season dominance on the mound to his clutch home runs in October. Betts and Freeman provided the steady leadership that defined the clubhouse, while a new generation, players like Alex Call, Andy Pages, and Tommy Edman, proved the Dodgers’ player-development machine remains the envy of baseball.

    It’s hard to overstate what back-to-back championships mean in today’s game. In an era of parity, short-term contracts, and constant roster churn, consistency of this magnitude feels nearly impossible. Yet the Dodgers, under president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, have made sustained excellence look routine.

    Since 2017, the team has reached the postseason every year, capturing four pennants and now three titles. But this one, the repeat, carries special significance. After years of near-misses and internet think pieces questioning whether L.A. could “win the big one” without a shortened-season asterisk attached, this championship silences any remaining skeptics.

    Talk of a dynasty is no longer premature. Ohtani is signed through the decade, Betts and Freeman are locked in, and a wave of young talent continues to surge through the farm system. Roberts, once a lightning rod for criticism, now joins the ranks of iconic Dodger managers whose names will forever echo through Chavez Ravine.

    As the champagne dries and the parade route snakes down Figueroa, one thing is clear: this isn’t just another championship, it’s the solidification of an era. For the first time since Torre’s Yankees of the late ’90s, baseball has a repeat champion. And for Los Angeles, the city that never stops chasing its next headline, the story couldn’t be sweeter.

    Because in the end, this isn’t just the Dodgers’ year, it’s their dynasty.

    Gary Smith

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  • VIDEOS: Dodgers, Blue Jays benches clear in World Series Game 7

    Things are getting tense in the winner-take-all World Series Game 7.

    In the bottom of the fourth inning of Saturday’s game, Los Angeles Dodgers‘ Justin Wrobleski threw three pitches close to Toronto Blue Jays’ Andrés Giménez. One of the fastballs ended up hitting Giménez on the hand.

    The two began exchanging words and benches started to clear from both teams. 

    Despite moments of tension, no punches were thrown by either team.

    After the incident, the umpires of the game warned both teams to not deliberately throw at opposing hitters.

    This story was reported from Los Angeles.

    The Source: This report used information from the events that unfolded on Game 7 of the 2025 World Series.

    World SeriesNews

    KJ.Hiramoto@fox.com (KJ Hiramoto)

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  • Dodgers repeat as World Series champions after an epic 11-Inning Game 7 thriller of Blue Jays

    For 32 years, the Toronto Blue Jays waited for a night like this — a Game 7 under the lights, the city electric, the air trembling with belief. And when it finally came on a brisk November Saturday, it unfolded like a fever dream. History dangled by a thread. Every pitch, every heartbeat, every sound of leather meeting wood felt like it could tilt the universe.

    And when it was over — when Yoshinobu Yamamoto snapped off one final splitter, when Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s knees buckled and the Dodgers spilled out of the dugout in a tidal wave of blue — it was the Los Angeles Dodgers who stood atop the baseball world once again.

    The defending champions had done it.

    Trailing by three runs early in the game, the Los Angeles Dodgers mounted a comeback for the ages, defeating the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in extra innings of Game 7 of the 2025 World Series, crowning the Dodgers as the first back-to-back champions since the Yankees of 1998-2000.

    But this one — this one might be remembered forever.

    “This was one of the greatest games I’ve ever been a part of,” said a champagne-soaked Dodgers’ manager Dave Roberts after the game. “We’ve just done something that hasn’t been done in decades.”

    But before the celebration in Los Angeles, before the heartbreak in Toronto, before the pandemonium and chaos, there was Bo Bichette.

    In the bottom of the third, with one swing, he turned Toronto’s hope into thunder. Shohei Ohtani, running on fumes and three days’ rest, hung a splitter that spun in the cold light like a balloon, and Bichette crushed it 443 feet into the second deck. Three runs. Three decades of frustration exhaled in a single, defiant roar.

    The Rogers Centre shook like a pressure cooker coming to a boil — the roof quivering, the crowd delirious. Canada believed again.

    “That was right up there with George’s [Springer] homer against Seattle. He went dead center on the first pitch, it was just so fitting,” said Blue Jays manager John Schneider of Bichette’s big homer. “What Bo did this year is nothing short of amazing. In that moment, it felt right.”

    Ohtani, the global icon, looked human — mortal under the weight of the moment. His night ended in the third, three runs down, head bowed, his eyes tracing the ground as Dave Roberts made the walk to get him. The Jays had seized control, and for the first time, the Dodgers looked rattled.

    “Shohei has the weight of the world on his shoulders when it comes to expectations,” said Roberts of his superstar. “He’s the face of baseball, and he’s going to be the MVP in the National League. It’s really special what he’s done. He’s a great person and a great competitor. He just didn’t have it tonight.”

    Max Scherzer, 41 years old and burning with the familiar fire of October, took the mound like a man chasing one more miracle. His gray hair peeked beneath the cap, his eyes — one blue, one brown — still wild as ever.

    Six years ago, he’d won Game 7 for the Nationals. On this night, he came back to write one more chapter.

    For 4⅓ innings, he was everything Toronto needed him to be — gritty, fearless, unrelenting. He scattered four hits, allowed a single run, and left to a standing ovation that could be heard across the skyline. Scherzer pounded his chest, lifted his cap, and disappeared into the dugout, his face streaked with emotion.

    The old warhorse had given them a chance.

    “I thought Max was really good. He was exactly what we thought he would be in a big game,” said Schneider of his starting pitcher. “He’s 41 years old and throwing 96 miles per hour. I thought he was awesome. There’s no one I trusted more than Max in that situation. He gave us exactly what we needed.”

    Tension was inevitable. By the fourth inning, it boiled over.

    After Justin Wrobleski plunked Andrés Giménez on the hands, words turned into shoves, and both benches emptied. The bullpens sprinted across the outfield. The noise was deafening — fury wrapped in adrenaline. No punches, no ejections, but the warning was clear. One more slip, and someone would walk.

    Game 7 was no longer just a contest. It was survival. And the reigning champions would not go down without one last fight. 

    The Dodgers scratched across runs in the fourth and sixth innings, clawing within reach. But every time Los Angeles stirred, Toronto’s defense slammed the door — diving stops, double plays, and perfectly executed pitches with runners on base. The Dodgers stranded ten runners, their bats stuck in a fog of frustration that nearly never lifted.

    In contrast, Toronto thrived in the small moments. In the sixth, Ernie Clement — their unlikely October hero — ripped a single to tie the all-time postseason hits record with 29. He broke it with a leadoff double in the bottom of the eighth, his 30th hit of the 2025 playoffs. Moments later, Giménez doubled to the gap in left-center, plating a critical insurance run. It was the kind of bottom-of-the-order magic that defines champions. The crowd began to dream.

    “There’s a lot of stuff that has to happen in order to win the World Series,” said Schneider of his beloved Blue Jays team. “We did everything we needed to do, it felt like. I think that’s why it stings just a little bit more.”

    Then came the prodigy — 22-year-old Trey Yesavage — summoned from the bullpen in the seventh to preserve the lead. The same rookie who carved up the Dodgers with 12 strikeouts in Game 5 now found himself on the brink of immortality.

    He walked Ohtani to start the inning, but then induced Freddie Freeman into a tailor-made double play, the crowd swelling to its feet as if lifted by the same collective heartbeat. 

    In the eighth, Max Muncy turned on a fastball and sent it screaming into the right-field seats. 4–3. The tension thickened. The Dodgers weren’t done. Would that Blue Jays insurance run prove to be as critical as air in the lungs of a runner chasing the finish line?

    And in the ninth, with one out and Toronto two outs away from a parade, Miguel Rojas — the journeyman, the backup infielder, the man who didn’t even start until Game 6 — took a slider from Jeff Hoffman and launched it into eternity.

    A game-tying home run. The first ever in the ninth inning of a Game 7.

    Rogers Centre fell silent, like a city holding its breath underwater.

    “I was just trying to get on base for Shohei [Ohtani],” said Rojas of his historic game-tying homer. “I put a good swing on a slider and was able to hit it over the wall and give us an opportunity to win the game.”

    The Dodgers bench erupted as new life was breathed into L.A.’s lungs. The crowd gasped and threw their hands over their eyes.

    But the Blue Jays would not yield. They loaded the bases in the bottom of the ninth with one out. Game 1 and Game 5 starter Blake Snell was pulled from the game, for Yoshinobu Yamamoto, pitching on literally no rest.

    “I pitched two days in a row. To be honest, when I was warming up in the bullpen, I was not sure if I could pitch to the best of my ability,” admitted Yamamoto through a translator about doubting if he could come into the game in relief. “I started making a little bit of an adjustment, and then I started thinking I can go in this game and do this.”

    Yamamoto, who threw 96 pitches and got the win in Game 6 to force Saturday’s Game 7 needed a miracle to escape the jam. Luckily for him, miracles are real.

    Daulton Varsho hit a grounder to second base and Rojas snagged it and threw home for the force out. Two outs.

    Clement was next, the postseason’s single greatest hitter, and exactly the man the Blue Jays wanted at the plate. He sent a Yamamoto curveball nearly 400-feet into the deepest part of the park. Dodgers’ outfielders Andy Pages, and Kiké Hernandez collided and fell to the turf.

    Game 7 of the World Series was heading to extra innings for only the sixth time in its 121-year history. Eternal echoes.

    From there, time dissolved.

    The tenth inning arrived like a drumbeat in the dark. Both teams loaded the bases. Both escaped by inches. Every out felt like a lifetime.

    And then, in the eleventh, Will Smith — steady, stoic, almost mechanical in his precision — turned on a Shane Bieber slider and sent it into the left-field seats. 5–4 Dodgers. His teammates erupted, spilling from the dugout, fists raised, their echoes swallowed by the stunned crowd.

    Toronto had one last chance. Guerrero Jr. doubled, a spark of belief. A sacrifice bunt moved him to third. Ninety feet away from tying it again.

    Yamamoto, on no rest, dug deep into reserves few mortals possess. He coaxed a double play — the final two outs of a marathon masterpiece.

    The Dodgers, exhausted and ecstatic, poured onto the field. Players hugged, cried, screamed into the night. Ohtani, tears streaking his face, wrapped his arms around Yamamoto near the mound, they all did. Roberts raised his arms to the heavens.

    “What Yoshi [Yoshinobu Yamamoto] did tonight is unprecedented in modern baseball,” said a relieved Roberts of Yamamoto, the 2025 World Series MVP. “We needed a next-level performance from Yamamoto and we got it. I just trusted him and he came up big again.”

    For the first time in 25 years, Major League Baseball had a repeat champion.

    As the confetti fluttered down and the roar of celebration carried through the cold Toronto air, the Blue Jays lingered in the dugout — their faces drained but proud. They had pushed the giants of baseball to the brink.

    Max Scherzer sat on the top step, cap in hand, staring into the blur of blue and white. Across the field, the Dodgers danced, the kings of baseball once more.

    Some losses last forever. Others become the soil for what’s next.

    On this night, Toronto fell just short. But in the roar of that dome, in the electricity that coursed through a city starved for baseball glory, something changed.

    The Dodgers left as champions. The Blue Jays — as believers.

    Hear from Mookie Betts, Tyler Glasnow and more after the Dodgers beat the Blue Jays in Game 7 to win the 2025 World Series.

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  • Dodgers vs. Blue Jays, Game 7 tonight: How to watch the 2025 MLB World Series without cable

    The World Series is headed to a Game 7 after the Los Angeles Dodgers tied up the series against the Toronto Blue Jays last night, 3-3. The Fall Classic remains on Toronto’s home turf for Game 7 tonight — Saturday, Nov. 1 — at 8PM ET/5PM PT. The World Series odds still favor the Dodgers. The final 2025 MLB World Series game will air on Fox and Fox Deportes.

    Of course, Fox is a “free” over-the-air channel, so any affordable digital antenna will pull in the game if you live close enough to a local affiliate. But if that’s not an option, here’s a full rundown of how to watch the Dodgers vs. Blue Jays World Series, even without cable.

    How to watch the L.A. Dodgers vs. Toronto Blue Jays, Game 7

    You can stream Fox on any live TV streaming service that airs Fox local stations, including DirecTV, Fubo and Hulu + Live TV. MLB World Series games will also be available on Fox’s new streaming platform, Fox One.

    DirecTV gets you access to Fox, plus the CW, ABC, CBS, Fox, ACC Network, Big Ten Network, SEC Network and plenty more local regional sports networks.

    DirecTV also offers unlimited Cloud DVR storage and access to ESPN+’s new streaming tier, ESPN Unlimited. That’s all part of why we named it the best cable TV alternative without a contract.

    The best part is that you can try all this out for free for five days. So if you’re interested in a live TV streaming service but aren’t ready to commit, we recommend starting with DirecTV.

    Try free at DirecTV

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    We named Fubo the best live TV streaming service for sports, and it’s not just because it’s a great place to watch the World Series. Fubo TV gives you access to 100-plus live channels, including Fox and FS1. The cheapest plan starts at $85/month, making the live TV streaming service a significant investment. However, the inclusion of ESPN Unlimited, a $30/month value, is a great deal if you watch sports year-round. Fubo subscribers also get access to unlimited cloud DVR storage.

    Currently, the platform is offering a free trial, allowing you to explore everything it has to offer risk-free.

    Try it free at Fubo

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    Hulu’s live TV tier includes access to live TV channels like Fox, Fox Deportes, ESPN, ABC, NBC, and more. That means you can watch this year’s World Series live as it happens, and enjoy over 95 other channels — not to mention take advantage of all the great shows streaming on Hulu, Disney+ and ESPN Select, all of which are included at no extra charge.

    You’ll also enjoy access to unlimited DVR storage, the ability to stream on multiple devices and more. Right now, you can get your first three months of Hulu + Live TV for $65/month. This special rate ends at 6PM ET/3PM PT on November 5.

    Hulu + Live TV starts at $90/month after this deal ends.

    $65/mo for three months at Hulu

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    Fox One is exactly what it sounds like — a one-stop streaming destination for the entire universe of Fox content, including a ton of sports (Fox Sports, Fox FS1, FS2, Fox Deportes, Big Ten Network), news and opinion (Fox News, Fox Business, Fox Weather) and local Fox stations, too. That means you can watch every World Series game in one place.

    Fox One offers live programming, as well as shows and movies on demand. At launch, the base price for Fox One costs $20 a month, or you can save with an annual subscription for $200. You can also bundle Fox One with ESPN’s newly revamped streaming service for $40/month. 

    $20/month at Fox

    More ways to watch the 2025 World Series

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    How to watch the MLB World Series from Canada:

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    When is the Dodgers vs. Blue Jays game time?

    Game 7 of the Dodgers vs. Blue Jays World Series is tonight, Nov. 1 at 8PM ET/5PM PT.

    What channel is playing the Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Toronto Blue Jays?

    The 2025 World Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays, will air on Fox and Fox Deportes.

    When is the 2025 World Series?

    Game 7 of the World Series between the Dodgers and Blue Jays is scheduled for Nov. 1, 2025.

    Danica Creahan,Liz Kocan

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  • Dodgers repeat as World Series champions after an epic 11-Inning Game 7 thriller of Blue Jays

    For 32 years, the Toronto Blue Jays waited for a night like this — a Game 7 under the lights, the city electric, the air trembling with belief. And when it finally came on a brisk November Saturday, it unfolded like a fever dream. History dangled by a thread. Every pitch, every heartbeat, every sound of leather meeting wood felt like it could tilt the universe.

    And when it was over — when Yoshinobu Yamamoto snapped off one final curveball, when Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s knees buckled and the Dodgers spilled out of the dugout in a tidal wave of blue — it was the Los Angeles Dodgers who stood atop the baseball world once again.

    The defending champions had done it.

    Trailing by three runs early in the game, the Los Angeles Dodgers mounted a comeback for the ages, defeating the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in extra innings of Game 7 of the 2025 World Series crowning the Dodgers as the first back-to-back champions since the Yankees of 1998-2000.

    But this one — this one might be remembered forever.

    Before the heartbreak, before the chaos, there was Bo Bichette.

    In the bottom of the third, with one swing, he turned Toronto’s hope into thunder. Shohei Ohtani, running on fumes and three days’ rest, hung a splitter that spun in the cold light like a balloon, and Bichette crushed it 443 feet into the second deck. Three runs. Three decades of frustration exhaled in a single, defiant roar.

    The Rogers Centre shook like a pressure cooker coming to a boil — the roof quivering, the crowd delirious. Canada believed again.

    Ohtani, the global icon, looked human — mortal under the weight of the moment. His night ended in the third, three runs down, head bowed, his eyes tracing the ground as Dave Roberts made the walk to get him. The Jays had seized control, and for the first time, the Dodgers looked rattled.

    Max Scherzer, 41 years old and burning with the familiar fire of October, took the mound like a man chasing one more miracle. His gray hair peeked beneath the cap, his eyes — one blue, one brown — still wild as ever.

    Six years ago, he’d won Game 7 for the Nationals. On this night, he came back to write one more chapter.

    For 4⅓ innings, he was everything Toronto needed him to be — gritty, fearless, unrelenting. He scattered four hits, allowed a single run, and left to a standing ovation that could be heard across the skyline. Scherzer pounded his chest, lifted his cap, and disappeared into the dugout, his face streaked with emotion.

    The old warhorse had given them a chance.

    Tension was inevitable. By the fourth inning, it boiled over.

    After Justin Wrobleski plunked Andrés Giménez on the hands, words turned into shoves, and both benches emptied. The bullpens sprinted across the outfield. The noise was deafening — fury wrapped in adrenaline. No punches, no ejections, but the warning was clear. One more slip, and someone would walk.

    Game 7 was no longer just a contest. It was survival. And the reigning champions would not go down without one last fight. 

    The Dodgers scratched across runs in the fourth and sixth innings, clawing within reach. But every time Los Angeles stirred, Toronto’s defense slammed the door — diving stops, double plays, and perfectly executed pitches with runners on base. The Dodgers stranded seven runners, their bats stuck in a fog of frustration that never lifted.

    In contrast, Toronto thrived in the small moments. In the sixth, Ernie Clement — their unlikely October hero — ripped a single to tie the all-time postseason hits record with 29. He broke it with a leadoff double in the bottom of the eighth, his 30th hit of the 2025 playoffs. Moments later, Giménez doubled to the gap in left-center, plating a critical insurance run. It was the kind of bottom-of-the-order magic that defines champions. The crowd began to dream.

    Then came the prodigy — 22-year-old Trey Yesavage — summoned from the bullpen in the seventh to preserve the lead. The same rookie who carved up the Dodgers with 12 strikeouts in Game 5 now found himself on the brink of immortality.

    He walked Ohtani to start the inning, but then induced Freddie Freeman into a tailor-made double play, the crowd swelling to its feet as if lifted by the same collective heartbeat. 

    In the eighth, Max Muncy turned on a fastball and sent it screaming into the right-field seats. 4–3. The tension thickened. The Dodgers weren’t done. Would that Blue Jays insurance run prove to be as critical as air in the lungs of a runner chasing the finish line?

    And in the ninth, with one out and Toronto two outs away from a parade, Miguel Rojas — the journeyman, the backup infielder, the man who didn’t even start until Game 6 — took a slider from Jeff Hoffman and launched it into eternity.

    A game-tying home run. The first ever in the ninth inning of a Game 7.

    Rogers Centre fell silent, like a city holding its breath underwater.

    The Dodgers bench erupted as new life was breathed into L.A.’s lungs. The crowd gasped and threw their hands over their eyes. The Rogers Centre fell silent as the sheeted dead. No player in World Series history had ever hit a game-tying homer in the ninth inning of a Game 7. Rojas stands alone.

    But the Blue Jays would not yield. They loaded the bases in the bottom of the ninth with one out. Game 1 and Game 5 starter Blake Snell was pulled from the game, for Yoshinobu Yamamoto, pitching on literally no rest.

    Yamamoto, who threw 96 pitches and got the win in Game 6 to force Saturday’s Game 7 needed a miracle to escape the jam. Luckily for him, miracles are real.

    Daulton Varsho hit a grounder to second base and Rojas snagged it and threw home for the force out. Two outs.

    Clement was next, the postseason’s single greatest hitter, and exactly the man the Blue Jays wanted at the plate. He sent a Yamamoto curveball nearly 400-feet into the deepest part of the park. Dodgers’ outfielders Andy Pages, and Kiké Hernandez collided and fell to the turf. Three outs. Exhale. Extra innings, eternal echoes

    Game 7 of the World Series was heading to extra innings for only the sixth time in its 121-year history.

    From there, time dissolved.

    In the top of the 10th inning, it was the Dodgers turn to load the bases with one out, and Toronto’s turn to escape the impossible situation.

    The tenth inning arrived like a drumbeat in the dark. Both teams loaded the bases. Both escaped by inches. Every out felt like a lifetime.

    And then, in the eleventh, Will Smith — steady, stoic, almost mechanical in his precision — turned on a Shane Bieber slider and sent it into the left-field seats. 5–4 Dodgers. His teammates erupted, spilling from the dugout, fists raised, their echoes swallowed by the stunned crowd.

    Toronto had one last chance. Guerrero Jr. doubled, a spark of belief. A sacrifice bunt moved him to third. Ninety feet away from tying it again.

    Yamamoto, on no rest, dug deep into reserves few mortals possess. He coaxed a double play — the final two outs of a marathon masterpiece.

    The Dodgers, exhausted and ecstatic, poured onto the field. Players hugged, cried, screamed into the night. Ohtani, tears streaking his face, wrapped his arms around Yamamoto near the mound, they all did. Roberts raised his arms to the heavens.

    For the first time in 25 years, Major League Baseball had a repeat champion.

    When the lights fade

    As the confetti fluttered down and the roar of celebration carried through the cold Toronto air, the Blue Jays lingered in the dugout — their faces drained but proud. They had pushed the giants of baseball to the brink.

    Max Scherzer sat on the top step, cap in hand, staring into the blur of blue and white. Across the field, the Dodgers danced, the kings of baseball once more.

    Some losses last forever. Others become the soil for what’s next.

    On this night, Toronto fell just short. But in the roar of that dome, in the electricity that coursed through a city starved for baseball glory, something changed.

    The Dodgers left as champions. The Blue Jays — as believers.

    Michael Duarte

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  • Dodgers Make Decision About Shohei Ohtani Starting Game 7 of World Series

    The Los Angeles Dodgers signed Shohei Ohtani to a 10-year, $700 million contract in December 2023. At the time, it was the most lucrative contract in sports history.

    All Ohtani did for the Dodgers in his first season was win the National League MVP award, then help the Dodgers capture their first World Series title in a non-pandemic season since 1988.

    More news: Dodgers Dave Roberts Reveals If Shohei Ohtani Will Pitch World Series Game 7

    Now, they’re asking him to do even more.

    Shohei Ohtani will be the Dodgers’ starting pitcher and designated hitter in Game 7 of the World Series on Saturday in Toronto, according to multiple reports Friday.

    Just four days ago, Ohtani pitched into the seventh inning of Game 4 of this World Series, throwing 93 pitches in all. Saturday, he will likely serve as an “opener” — pitching somewhere between two and four innings if the two-way star is able to avoid early trouble.

    Ohtani “is certainly going to be part of the pitching plan,” manager Dave Roberts told Ken Rosenthal after Fox Sports’ telecast of Game 6. “With Shohei, it could be two innings, but it could be four innings. I’m not sure we’re going to slot him. We’re going to have to talk to him first, and where he’s most comfortable.”

    More newsDodgers Manager Reveals Disappointing Alex Vesia Update Before World Series

    Max Scherzer is starting Game 7 for the Blue Jays.

    The question of whether or not Ohtani would appear in the game was a matter of when, not if. Now it appears he’ll go first.

    If Ohtani were to be available in the game at all, starting it on the mound always made the most sense. As the only designated two-way player in baseball, Ohtani will be allowed to remain in the game as a designated hitter after he’s thrown his final pitch.

    More news: Dodgers Manager Reveals One Surprise About Shohei Ohtani’s Epic Game

    If Ohtani came in from the bullpen, warming up midgame would be a challenge — particularly if he was needed to pitch in the same inning he appeared as a hitter.

    For all their struggles in the regular season and postseason, the Dodgers’ bullpen has yielded some strong performances in the World Series. Will Klein has thrown five scoreless innings — including the final four in Game 3 alone. Justin Wrobleski has allowed only two of the 11 batters he’s faced to reach; neither has scored.

    More news: Former Dodgers, Mets Infielder Dies

    Clayton Kershaw, Edgardo Henriquez, Roki Sasaki and Jack Dreyer haven’t allowed a run against the Blue Jays either, though some needed ample help from their defense.

    All of them could play a part in Roberts’ pitching plan for Game 7. But Ohtani will come first.

    For more MLB news, visit Newsweek Sports.

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  • Swanson: We won’t forget about Blue Jays’ Trey Yesavage

    LOS ANGELES — “Put me up against two grizzly bears and I’m not afraid,” Trey Yesavage said at the MLB Draft in July 2024.

    Put me up against a $148 million lineup twice and I’m not afraid – Trey Yesavage, probably, before facing the Dodgers’ star-studded lineup in either of his World Series starts.

    The second-youngest pitcher to start in a World Series (22 years and 88 days for Game 1 last week), and a pitcher with poise beyond his years, he’s either too young to know any better or he was built for this.

    Probably the latter.

    But it begs the question: Who the heck is this new kid who made $57,204 in MLB money this season? Who is this dude who really might have spoiled the Dodgers’ plan to further “ruin” baseball with a second consecutive World Series title with their big, fat payroll?

    Who is this newcomer who just shut down the Dodgers and led the Toronto Blue Jays to a 6-1 victory in Game 5 to give them them a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series before it heads back north?

    Let me introduce you to the fellow you won’t soon forget. The one who Dodgers’ hitters might have nightmares about when this series is said and done.

    Because someday, I’ll bet, we’ll all look back on Wednesday not so much as an abject failure by the best lineup money can buy, but as a coronation. A coming-out party. An official introduction to baseball’s next big thing.

    Yesavage might not fear anything, but from now on opposing hitters will probably be very, very afraid of him.

    The 6-foot-4 right-hander is from Pottstown, Pennsylvania. Son of Cheryl and Dave Yesavage – perhaps you spotted them on TV going nuts Wednesday at Dodger Stadium watching their son shine, unfazed, on the biggest of stages? With his electric slider and splitter, he struck out a dozen hitters, more than any rookie pitcher in World Series history, including the former record-holder, Brooklyn Dodger Don Newcombe, who sat down 11 in Game 1 of the 1949 World Series.

    Yesavage’s 35 strikeouts in the postseason are the most by a rookie pitcher in major league history.

    Before he capital-A Arrived this postseason, he was one of the best starters in the country at East Carolina. He landed at No. 11 on MLB Pipeline’s pre-Draft rankings before the Blue Jays selected him No. 20 overall in the 2024 MLB Draft.

    His meteoric ascent through the minor-league ranks this year – with pit stops at all four full-season levels, hitting Class-A, High-A, Double-A and Triple-A, before making his major league debut on Sept. 15 at Tampa Bay – was steeper than the arm angle with which he delivers pitches. And that’s the highest arm slot of any right-hander in the playoffs this year.

    On Wednesday, the young man mowed through the Dodgers’ spectacular but spectacularly slumping lineup, turning his fifth postseason start – and just his eighth major league start – into where-were-you-when baseball history.

    The Dodgers couldn’t touch him. Yesavage notched a ridiculous 46.2 whiff%, recording 23 swings and misses – the most by a pitcher in a World Series game since pitch tracking became a thing in 2008.

    Through just five innings, he had struck out every Dodger at least once – including twisting Shohei Ohtani, the Dodgers’ resident regular history maker, into a pretzel at the plate.

    Deadpanned Blue Jays manager John Schneider: “He was pretty good.”

    Actually, seriously though, Schneider said: “Kind of blown away at what he did.”

    Yeah, pretty good at blowing away the Dodgers too.

    The Dodgers who knew what was at stake Wednesday and had plans to take advantage of the youngster who they had faced in their Game 1 defeat.

    Before the game, first baseman Freddie Freeman told reporters, “we already faced Trey once, so hopefully we can have the same plan. I thought we did a pretty good job against him in Game 1 getting him out after four innings.”

    Unfortunately for Freeman – who struck out three times – and the rest of the Dodgers, Yesavage had his own plans.

    He also was relishing the chance to face them again.

    “I’m able to collect my thoughts and see what adjustments I need to make between outing to outing,” he said. “So it almost makes it – I won’t say easier, but I have a better plan going into the game …”

    And he had this other plan, too: “Walking from the bullpen to the dugout [before the game], I took a moment to look around the stadium, see all the fans I wanted to – I was hoping I would send ’em home upset.”

    No moment too big, no opponent to vicious.

    Mirjam Swanson

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  • Yesavage pitches Blue Jays past Dodgers 6-1 for 3-2 lead in World Series

    Trey Yesavage set a World Series rookie record with 12 strikeouts, and the Toronto Blue Jays opened Game 5 with back-to-back homers in a 6-1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday that moved them within one win of their first championship since 1993.Davis Schneider and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. connected on Blake Snell’s first and third pitches, the first consecutive homers to start a Series game.Yesavage, a precocious 22-year-old right-hander who began his season last April pitching before 327 fans in Class A, took over from there.With a sinking splitter, spinning slider and overpowering fastball that quieted LA bats and a crowd of 52,175, he broke the prior rookie record of 11 strikeouts set by Don Newcombe for the Dodgers in a 1-0 loss to the New York Yankees in the 1949 opener. Getting six Ks each with his splitter and slider, Yesavage became the first Series pitcher with 12 strikeouts and no walks.“I’m kind of blown away by what he did,” Toronto manager John Schneider said.After losing a Game 3 heartbreaker in 18 innings Monday night, the resilient Blue Jays bounced right back with two comfortable wins.Toronto leads 3-2 in the best-of-seven matchup and can dethrone the defending champions back home when the Series resumes Friday night at Rogers Centre. No team has won consecutive titles since the Yankees took three in a row from 1998-2000.“We’ve got to kind of wipe the slate clean and find a way to win Game 6 and pick up the pieces and see where we’re at,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.Yesavage allowed three hits over seven innings and his only run when Kiké Hernández homered on a high fastball to trim the Dodgers’ deficit to 2-1 in the third.Seranthony Domínguez and Jeff Hoffman finished a four-hitter.“When three of my pitches are in the strike zone, or even two, like part of tonight, I mean, I’m in control,” Yesavage said. “Just stay in the strike zone and get ahead.”Yesavage debuted with the Blue Jays on Sept. 15, his fifth level of baseball this year. He went 1-0 in three regular-season starts and is 3-1 in five postseason outings.Yesavage induced 23 swings and misses — most in a Series game since pitch tracking started in 2008, one more than San Francisco’s Tim Lincecum in 2010 Game 5.“Obviously the stuff is incredible, but the maturity to go and handle these moments is unbelievable. It was a special thing to watch today,” teammate Bo Bichette said. “I think he’s ultra confident, but you never hear it in the clubhouse, which I think says something about him. He comes here to work and try to help us win. I can’t say enough good things about his performance.”Snell, a two-time Cy Young Award winner, dropped to 0-2 in the Series, allowing five runs, six hits and four walks over 6 2/3 innings.Roberts shook up his slumping batting order, dropping Mookie Betts as low as third for the first time since 2021 and benching outfielder Andy Pages in favor of Alex Call. It didn’t spark an offense that is hitting .202 in the Series and has solo shots on seven of its eight home runs. Los Angeles has scored just four runs in its last 29 innings.The Dodgers also threw four wild pitches in a span of two innings.“We’ve got to make some adjustments,” Roberts said. “We’ve been in elimination games, a core group of these guys, and we’ve got to find a way to win a game. That’s it.”Davis Schneider, batting first only because regular leadoff hitter George Springer got hurt in Game 3, sent Snell’s first pitch into the left-field bleachers. Guerrero hit the third into the Dodgers’ bullpen for his eighth home run of the postseason.Davis Schneider mimics different stances during the year, including Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton, Bobby Witt Jr. and even the Dodgers’ Will Smith during the World Series. The part-time outfielder and second baseman was in an old stance of his from the minor leagues against Snell.Snell started with three fastballs, then avoided another one for 22 consecutive pitches before striking out Andres Giménez with a heater to end the second.Ernie Clement added a fourth-inning sacrifice fly for a 3-1 lead after right fielder Teoscar Hernández came up short on a sliding catch attempt as Daulton Varsho’s drive bounced into the right-field corner for a leadoff triple.Another run scored on a wild pitch in the seventh by Edgardo Henriquez, who then allowed Bichette’s RBI single. Isiah Kiner-Falefa added a run-scoring single in the eighth off Anthony Banda.“I think we just want to be the toughest outs we can possibly be,” Bichette said. “We’re a team, man, and we’ll do anything we can to win.”

    Trey Yesavage set a World Series rookie record with 12 strikeouts, and the Toronto Blue Jays opened Game 5 with back-to-back homers in a 6-1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday that moved them within one win of their first championship since 1993.

    Davis Schneider and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. connected on Blake Snell’s first and third pitches, the first consecutive homers to start a Series game.

    Yesavage, a precocious 22-year-old right-hander who began his season last April pitching before 327 fans in Class A, took over from there.

    With a sinking splitter, spinning slider and overpowering fastball that quieted LA bats and a crowd of 52,175, he broke the prior rookie record of 11 strikeouts set by Don Newcombe for the Dodgers in a 1-0 loss to the New York Yankees in the 1949 opener. Getting six Ks each with his splitter and slider, Yesavage became the first Series pitcher with 12 strikeouts and no walks.

    “I’m kind of blown away by what he did,” Toronto manager John Schneider said.

    After losing a Game 3 heartbreaker in 18 innings Monday night, the resilient Blue Jays bounced right back with two comfortable wins.

    Toronto leads 3-2 in the best-of-seven matchup and can dethrone the defending champions back home when the Series resumes Friday night at Rogers Centre. No team has won consecutive titles since the Yankees took three in a row from 1998-2000.

    “We’ve got to kind of wipe the slate clean and find a way to win Game 6 and pick up the pieces and see where we’re at,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.

    Yesavage allowed three hits over seven innings and his only run when Kiké Hernández homered on a high fastball to trim the Dodgers’ deficit to 2-1 in the third.

    Seranthony Domínguez and Jeff Hoffman finished a four-hitter.

    “When three of my pitches are in the strike zone, or even two, like part of tonight, I mean, I’m in control,” Yesavage said. “Just stay in the strike zone and get ahead.”

    Yesavage debuted with the Blue Jays on Sept. 15, his fifth level of baseball this year. He went 1-0 in three regular-season starts and is 3-1 in five postseason outings.

    Yesavage induced 23 swings and misses — most in a Series game since pitch tracking started in 2008, one more than San Francisco’s Tim Lincecum in 2010 Game 5.

    “Obviously the stuff is incredible, but the maturity to go and handle these moments is unbelievable. It was a special thing to watch today,” teammate Bo Bichette said. “I think he’s ultra confident, but you never hear it in the clubhouse, which I think says something about him. He comes here to work and try to help us win. I can’t say enough good things about his performance.”

    Snell, a two-time Cy Young Award winner, dropped to 0-2 in the Series, allowing five runs, six hits and four walks over 6 2/3 innings.

    Roberts shook up his slumping batting order, dropping Mookie Betts as low as third for the first time since 2021 and benching outfielder Andy Pages in favor of Alex Call. It didn’t spark an offense that is hitting .202 in the Series and has solo shots on seven of its eight home runs. Los Angeles has scored just four runs in its last 29 innings.

    The Dodgers also threw four wild pitches in a span of two innings.

    “We’ve got to make some adjustments,” Roberts said. “We’ve been in elimination games, a core group of these guys, and we’ve got to find a way to win a game. That’s it.”

    Davis Schneider, batting first only because regular leadoff hitter George Springer got hurt in Game 3, sent Snell’s first pitch into the left-field bleachers. Guerrero hit the third into the Dodgers’ bullpen for his eighth home run of the postseason.

    Davis Schneider mimics different stances during the year, including Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton, Bobby Witt Jr. and even the Dodgers’ Will Smith during the World Series. The part-time outfielder and second baseman was in an old stance of his from the minor leagues against Snell.

    Snell started with three fastballs, then avoided another one for 22 consecutive pitches before striking out Andres Giménez with a heater to end the second.

    Ernie Clement added a fourth-inning sacrifice fly for a 3-1 lead after right fielder Teoscar Hernández came up short on a sliding catch attempt as Daulton Varsho’s drive bounced into the right-field corner for a leadoff triple.

    Another run scored on a wild pitch in the seventh by Edgardo Henriquez, who then allowed Bichette’s RBI single. Isiah Kiner-Falefa added a run-scoring single in the eighth off Anthony Banda.

    “I think we just want to be the toughest outs we can possibly be,” Bichette said. “We’re a team, man, and we’ll do anything we can to win.”

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  • Blake Snell blames bad luck after latest World Series letdown puts Dodgers on brink of defeat

    By BETH HARRIS

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Blake Snell thinks bad luck had about as much to do with his Game 5 struggles as the Toronto Blue Jays.

    “Luck plays in baseball, too,” he said.

    The two-time Cy Young Award winner gave up two home runs on his first three pitches, then faltered again late in a 6-1 loss Wednesday night that put the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers on the brink of a Fall Classic defeat.

    The Blue Jays took a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series and can steal the title away from LA with a win Friday in Game 6 in Toronto.

    Snell allowed back-to-back homers to Davis Schneider and Vladimir Guerrero Jr., the first back-to-back leadoff homers ever in a Series game. Each of the first three pitches were fastballs, and Snell’s next 22 pitches after that were offspeed.

    “First pitch of the game, 97 (mph) fastball up and in, he hits it 98, it goes out,” Snell said of Schneider. “Pretty unlucky. Vlad, yeah, that’s just a bad pitch.”

    He said he didn’t think he was giving away any cues on the type of pitch he was going to throw.

    “I just think they’re ambushing a fastball,” he said. “They just read swings and they’re ambushing, as they should and as I thought they would.”

    Snell overcame the early trouble only to give up a leadoff triple to Daulton Varsho in the fourth on a ball hit 75.6 mph.

    “I’m not one to make excuses or anything close to that, but that’s pretty unlucky,” he said.

    Snell couldn’t finish the seventh inning. He left runners on first and third after a walk, a single and two wild pitches, and the Blue Jays leading 3-1. Still, the sellout crowd of 52,175 stood to applaud.

    “Yeah, just frustrated,” he said. “I felt good, I felt strong. I’ve been training to be ready for this and be strong. I trust me.”

    Edgardo Henriquez replaced Snell and walked Guerrero. Addison Barger, who singled and moved up on Snell’s pair of wild pitches, scored on Henriquez’s wild pitch, making it 4-1.

    “Against a really good pitcher like him, you have to be ready to hit. He’s going to come after you, he’s going to challenge you,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. “There’s a time to grind ’em and there’s a time to be ready to hit. Just pretty cool it worked out the way it did.”

    Snell gave up five runs and six hits in 6 2/3 innings, struck out seven and walked four on 116 pitches.

    “He gave us everything he had,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “I think that early on they were just on the fastball, and you got to sort of adjust if that’s the case.”

    Snell began strongly in his first postseason with the Dodgers, who signed him to a $182 million, five-year deal last winter. Snell had an 0.86 ERA in his first three starts.

    In the NL Division Series, Snell allowed one hit in six shutout innings and struck out nine as the Dodgers beat the Philadelphia Phillies 4-3 to take a 2-0 series lead.

    The left-hander nicknamed “Snellzilla” was stellar in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series, a 2-1 win over the Milwaukee Brewers. He allowed one baserunner in eight shutout innings and struck out 10 while facing the minimum, something no one had done in the postseason since Don Larsen’s World Series perfect game in 1956.

    The Dodgers went on to sweep the Brewers in four games and go into the World Series with a shot of momentum.

    Then Snell got shelled in Game 1, losing 11-4. He gave up five home runs, including three of the nine Toronto had in the sixth inning. Before that, Snell had allowed just two runs in 21 innings and struck out 27 batters.

    On Wednesday, Snell got no help from a stone-cold Dodgers’ offense that managed just one run and four hits. Shohei Ohtani was hitless with a strikeout. Will Smith and Mookie Betts struck out twice, while Freddie Freeman had three strikeouts.

    “We all know what we’re capable of, and we haven’t done it for two games,” Freeman said. “They just outplayed us.”

    The defense let Snell down, too.

    Betts and Tommy Edman faltered in the first couple innings on potential ground-ball double plays, forcing Snell to work longer.

    “Blake pitched a heck of a ball game,” Roberts said. “But, yeah, giving up bases and not converting outs when you have an opportunity to convert outs, that came back to bite us.”

    ___

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

    The Associated Press

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