Why the Dodgers can win the 2025 World Series

imagn-26817902.jpg


The stage is set. In a matchup that represents teams from two different countries, the 2025 World Series will feature the defending champion Dodgers against the Toronto Blue Jays, a team that clinched their first World Series appearance in 32 years.

The Dodgers were the overwhelming favorite against the Cincinnati Reds in the Wild Card series, but were considered the underdog by regular season record against both the Philadelphia Phillies and Milwaukee Brewers in the NLDS and NLCS. Orion Kerkering threw the series and his team’s season away with an errant throw home in Game 4 of the Division Series, and the Brewers could muster up just one single run against the Dodgers in every game of the NLCS. The NL pennant stays within the NL West for a third year in a row, and the Dodgers now embark on the final act of their mission of becoming the first repeat champions in a quarter century.

The Toronto Blue Jays are no slouch. In a contested American League East division, they came away with not only with their first division title in nine years but with the best regular season record in the AL. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. terrorized the New York Yankees in a four game series win in the ALDS, and although the Seattle Mariners took them to a seven game series in the ALCS, George Springer’s late inning heroics brought Toronto to the World Series for the first time this century.

It is the third straight postseason series where the Dodgers are considered the underdogs on paper, as Toronto hosts the first two games of the series, but they are a juggernaut.

Blake Snell and Yoshinobu Yamamoto are once again the frontline starters for the Dodgers for the first two games of the World Series, and they are both coming off impressive outings against the Brewers. Snell faced the minimum through eight innings of work, allowing one single hit and racking up 10 strikeouts. Yamamoto became the first Dodger to throw a complete game in the postseason in 21 years in the following game.

Snell has posted remarkable numbers in his career against the Blue Jays, posting a 2.39 ERA with 97 strikeouts across 79 innings. In his most recent start against Toronto, Snell secured a win as he struck out 10 over just five scoreless innings despite allowing three hits and three walks. Yamamoto, on the other hand, will make his first career start in Canada having never faced the Blue Jays.

Tyler Glasnow has posted overwhelmingly unfavorable results in his career against the Blue Jays in his career, but since joining the Dodgers, he’s managed a respectable 2.31 ERA with 17 strikeouts across 11 2/3 innings over his last two starts against Toronto.

For Shohei Ohtani, it will also be his first go around on the mound against Toronto, but he has been a force on offense. In his career against the Blue Jays, Ohtani carries a .314 batting average with 11 home runs, 27 RBI, and 27 runs scored across 33 games. Ohtani has yet to show off his prowess on both sides against an American League team in the postseason, but Game 4 of the NLCS demonstrated what that could potentially look like.

Toronto has had nowhere near the leisurely experience than that of the Dodgers’ postseason journey. While the offense has been a wrecking crew headlined by the likes of Springer and Guerrero, the pitching staff has been the biggest concern. Blue Jays starters failed to toss a single quality start in the ALDS, even when factoring in rookie Trey Yesavage’s masterful 11 strikeout performance in Game 2. They had marginally better results in the ALCS (3.86 ERA across 37 1/3 innings), but the bullpen, outside of Louis Varland and Jeff Hoffman, managed a combined ERA of 8.52, and their overall pitching staff has the third worst ERA out of all 12 teams this postseason.

The Blue Jays offense has been the most destructive force of any team this postseason, clobbering 20 home runs and posting an .878 OPS as a team. That aspect will be the biggest concern to the Dodgers pitching, but if the rotation can repeat their success they’ve had throughout the postseason, then they’ll be once again be a four-headed monster that no team wants to face. The Dodgers offense has struggled to lift off after the Wild Card series, but with a Blue Jays pitching staff that has been inconsistent at best, adequate run support is more than enough to supplement the rotation.

Recent history has not been kind to teams like the Dodgers in this situation. The last four World Series between one team that swept through the ‘CS and the other that went to Game 7, the team with the longer road came away victorious, including the 1988 Dodgers. This time around, the Dodgers enter with a desire to repeat, unlike the other eight teams before in these situations. With a vaunted pitching staff and offense looking to fully break out, the Dodgers will demonstrate superteam traits and unleash their dominance against the Blue Jays.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/106269/dodgers-world-series-2025-blue-jays
 
Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith, Freddie Freeman, Max Muncy up for Silver Slugger Awards

gettyimages-2161068292.jpg


Louisville Slugger announced the “finalists” for 2025 Silver Slugger Award, which is a fancy way of saying they unveiled the top three to six players in voting for the best offensive performer at each position. The voting is already complete, selected by managers and up to three coaches on each major league team. There is no other round of voting coming.

Four Dodgers are among the top four at their position offensively, as deemed by managers and coaches — Shohei Ohtani at designated hitter, Will Smith at catcher, Freddie Freeman at first base, and Max Muncy at third base.

Designated hitter​


Ohtani has won three Silver Sluggers in the previous four seasons, including in 2024 with the Dodgers. With apologies to Christian Yelich of the Brewers, who was in the top three at the position, this Silver Slugger is between Ohtani and the Phillies’ Kyle Schwarber.

Ohtani: .282/.392/.622, 55 HR, 25 doubles, 9 triples, 20 steals, 146 runs, 102 RBI, 109 walks, 172 wRC+
Schwarber: .240/.365/.563, 56 HR, 23 doubles, 2 triples, 10 steals, 111 runs, 132 RBI, 108 walks, 152 wRC+

If Schwarber wins this Silver Slugger, it’ll be because of his 30 more RBI than Ohtani and possibly one more home run. Ohtani also stole 10 more bases. Ohtani had eight more extra-base hits and 40 more total bases, reached base 20 more times, and scored 35 more runs, while making 10 fewer outs.

Catcher​


Smith was the best-hitting catcher in the National League, but suffered a hairline fracture in his right hand after getting hit by a foul ball on September 3, and missed 22 of the final 23 games of the regular season, hurting his raw totals. William Contreras of the Brewers and Hunter Goodman of the Rockies are the other two in the top three of voting.

Smith: .296/.404/.497, 153 wRC+, 17 HR, 20 doubles, 61 RBI, 64 runs, 78 wRC, 4.7 oWAR (Baseball Reference)
Contreras: .260/.355/.399, 113 wRC+, 17 HR, 28 doubles, 76 RBI, 89 runs, 88 wRC+, 3.8 oWAR
Goodman: .278/.323/.520, 118 wRC+, 31 HR, 28 doubes, 91 RBI, 73 runs, 90 wRC+, 3.8 oWAR

The last Dodgers catcher to win Silver Slugger Award was Russell Martin in 2007.

Your 2025 National League @SluggerNation Silver Slugger Award finalists 💪

NL winners will be announced on Thursday, Nov. 6. American League finalists will be announced tomorrow, with AL winners on Friday, Nov. 7. pic.twitter.com/LppycGSfiu

— MLB (@MLB) October 22, 2025

First base​


Freeman is a three-time Silver Slugger Award winner, all won while with the Atlanta Braves. The top three in voting at the position are Freeman, Pete Alonso of the Mets, and Matt Olson of the Braves.

Freeman: .295/.367/.502, 139 wRC+, 24 HR, 39 doubles, 90 RBI, 81 runs, 27.6 Offense (FanGraphs), 4.2 oWAR
Alonso: .272/.347/.524, 141 wRC+, 38 HR, 41 doubles, 126 RBI, 87 runs, 29.2 Offense, 4.4 oWAR
Olson: .272/.366/.484, 136 wRC+, 29 HR, 41 doubles, 95 RBI, 98 runs, 26.1 Offense, 4.2 oWAR

The last Dodgers first baseman to win a Silver Slugger was Adrián González in 2014.

Third base​


Max Muncy missed 47 games on injured list stints for a left knee bone bruise and oblique strain, but impressed enough during his time on the field that he is at least in the top four in voting at the hot corner for a Silver Slugger. Others at the position are Matt Chapman of the Giants, Manny Machado of the Padres, and Austin Riley of the Braves.

Muncy: 388 PA, .243/.376/.470, 137 wRC+, 19 HR, 10 doubles, 67 RBI, 48 runs, 17.4 Offense, 3.3 oWAR
Machado: 678 PA, .275/.335/.460, 123 wRC+, 27 HR, 33 doubles, 95 RBI, 91 runs, 17.8 Offense, 3.8 oWAR
Chapman: 535 PA, .231/.340/.430, 118 wRC+, 21 HR, 23 doubles, 61 RBI, 76 runs, 12.5 Offense, 3.6 oWAR
Riley: 447 PA, .260/.309/.428, 103 wRC+, 16 HR, 20 doubles, 54 RBI, 54 runs, 0.2 Offense, 1.5 oWAR

Adrián Beltré in 2004 was the only Dodgers third baseman to win a Silver Slugger Award.

The 2025 Silver Slugger Award winners will be announced on Thursday, November 6.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...i-will-smith-freddie-freeman-max-muncy-voting
 
Highlighting the magnitude of the Dodgers dominance in the NLCS

gettyimages-2241720698.jpg


Easy narratives are common for obvious reasons, and with a similar path to that of last year’s playoff run, perhaps being challenged the most in the NLDS, it’s not particularly hard to be somewhat dismissive of what the Dodgers accomplished in the NLCS. Overlooking the Brewers as an adversary that the Dodgers were obligated to beat ignores key aspects of what postseason baseball is, and most importantly, it undermines an impressive accomplishment.

Let’s forget about the names, salaries, and everything that goes into a preconceived notion of what a player is, and let’s simply focus on who was this team that the Dodgers smoked right through on their way to another World Series appearance.

Much was made of what Milwaukee did on the basepaths and through their defensive work, stealing runs through unorthodox play in what is a modern game without as much action on the basepaths as in previous eras. Those things are important, but the reality of the situation is that if you don’t perform well in more traditional ways, like actually hitting the ball well, no amount of baserunning, a good offense makes. Do you want to guess who is the only team that stole more bags than Milwaukee in the regular year, and finished second to Milwaukee’s first in Base Running Value? It was the Tampa Bay Rays, who are not in the playoffs, a team that scored roughly 100 fewer runs than Milwaukee and finished the year with a losing record.

Milwaukee earned value on the base paths, but they also featured tremendous depth in their lineup, with eight hitters finishing the year with a wRC+ above 110. For context, the Phillies only had five. Now, this gets to the second and rather obvious point of star power. You’re right to point out that Milwaukee didn’t have a Kyle Schwarber or a Trea Turner hitting for them, but the Average Joe’s bit was perhaps a bit overplayed.

Yes, Milwaukee had plenty of out-of-nowhere production from the likes of Isaac Collins, Jake Bauers, and Andrew Vaughn, which warranted great skepticism of how it’d hold up against elite pitching. On the other hand, William Contreras, Jackson Chourio, and Christian Yelich form a rather formidable trio, particularly for a small-market team. That the Dodgers’ starting pitching was able to shut these guys down with authority isn’t the cakewalk that some would lead you to believe. Over the last three seasons, Yelich and Contreras have each had an OPS north of .800 and could easily be considered among the best at their respective positions in the whole of the National League.

Moving to the pitching side of things, Milwaukee didn’t have the star power there either, but here is a bullpen that pitched to the tune of a 2.52 ERA against the Dodgers. Freddy Peralta doesn’t owe anything to the Dodgers starters, as his outstanding campaign will earn him some Cy Young votes. Jacob Misiorowski, who was a big factor in driving down that bullpen ERA, pitched like a dominant starter in a bulk-innings role. These aren’t smoke-and-mirrors type of pitchers; their elite stuff holds up with anybody.

For a fan base that’s seen this team roll out World Series contenders year after year for over a decade and, more often than not, come up short, it’s important not to lose perspective. And the 93-win record is indeed a complete illusion of the team’s true talent level, and there is a reason why they were heavy favorites to begin with, but it’s not as if they shattered a facade of a team. The Brewers earned every single one of those 97 wins, which is all the more impressive in a year in which no team was able to hit the 100-win mark.

Which makes the Dodgers dominance of the NLCS all the more impressive.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...83/dodgers-nlcs-dominance-brewers-perspective
 
How to watch Dodgers vs. Blue Jays World Series Game 1

gettyimages-2242544417.jpg


The 121st Fall Classic begins with the Los Angeles Dodgers facing the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 1 on Friday night at Roger’s Centre in Toronto.

Blake Snell gets the start for the Dodgers, with two consecutive scoreless starts and only two total runs allowed during his three starts this postseason. He’s the third Dodgers pitcher to start three Games 1 in the same postseason, joining Clayton Kershaw in 2017 (NLDS, NLCS, World Series) and Walker Buehler in 2020 (wild card series, NLDS, NLCS).

The Blue Jays are turning to rookie right-hander Trey Yesavage, their first-round draft pick in 2024, to make his seventh major league start in Game 1 of the World Series. Four of those seven starts will be in the postseason, including an 11-strikeout win over the Yankees in Game 2 of the ALDS, and a win over the Mariners in an elimination Game 6 of the ALCS last Sunday.

World Series Game 1 info​

  • Teams: Dodgers at Blue Jays
  • Ballpark: Rogers Centre, Toronto
  • Start time: 5 p.m. PT
  • TV: Fox (Joe Davis, John Smotz, Ken Rosenthal, Tom Verducci)
  • National radio: ESPN Radio (Jon Sciambi, Eduardo Pérez, Jessica Mendoza, Buster Olney)
  • Local English radio: AM 570 (Stephen Nelson, Rick Monday)
  • Local Spanish radio: KTNQ 1020 AM (Pepe Yñiguez, José Mota, Luis Cruz)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...ays-world-series-game-1-television-start-time
 
How to watch Dodgers vs. Blue Jays World Series Game 2

gettyimages-2242539820.jpg


The Dodgers allowed nine runs in the sixth inning to turn a close Game 1 into a Blue Jays rout on Friday night. On Saturday in Game 2, Los Angeles will try to leave Rogers Centre in Toronto with a split.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto was the rock of the Dodgers pitching staff this season, the only starter to remain on the active roster all season, posting a 2.49 ERA and 2.73 xERA in 30 starts and 173 2/3 innings, the first Dodgers pitcher to qualify for leaderboards since 2022. Yamamoto has a 1.83 ERA in 19 2/3 innings in his three starts this postseason, and is coming off the team’s first playoff complete game in 21 years, 11 days ago.

Kevin Gausman has been as dependable as they come, starting at least 31 games for the last five years in a row, including a 3.59 ERA and 3.70 xERA in 32 starts and 193 innings this season. The 34-year-old right-hander has allowed only four runs in his three postseason starts and recorded exactly 17 outs each time. Gausman also pitched a scoreless inning in relief in Game 7 of the ALCS on Tuesday, working around three walks.

World Series Game 2 info​

  • Teams: Dodgers at Blue Jays
  • Toronto leads best-of-seven series, 1-0
  • Ballpark: Rogers Centre, Toronto
  • Start time: 5 p.m. PT
  • TV: Fox (Joe Davis, John Smotz, Ken Rosenthal, Tom Verducci)
  • National radio: ESPN Radio (Jon Sciambi, Eduardo Pérez, Jessica Mendoza, Buster Olney)
  • Local English radio: AM 570 (Stephen Nelson, Rick Monday)
  • Local Spanish radio: KTNQ 1020 AM (Pepe Yñiguez, José Mota, Luis Cruz)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...ays-world-series-game-2-television-start-time
 
Blue Jays put on an offensive clinic to beat Dodgers in Game 1

gettyimages-2243118937.jpg


The script for how a particular game could go south for the Los Angeles Dodgers was followed to a tee in this blowout Blue Jays win to open the World Series. Much was made of the battle between elite swing-and-miss stuff from the Dodgers starter and a contact-oriented approach from the Blue Jays lineup. Contact alone will only take you so far, and it’s important not to gloss over the many home runs hit by Toronto in Game 1. At the heart of the Blue Jays’ success was an innate ability to avoid strikeouts, keeping Blake Snell from getting in a groove throughout the whole evening.

As was the case in the matchup against the Brewers, Snell faced a righty-heavy lineup in Toronto with Daulton Varsho and ninth-hole hitter Andrés Giménez as the only two lefty presences. This once again led the Dodger starter to a changeup-heavy approach. The big difference is that, unlike the Brewers, the Jays were able to put it in play consistently, making contact at over 80 percent of the changeups thrown both in and out of the zone.

While they didn’t score early, Toronto was capable of setting the tone with a pivotal 29-pitch first inning out of Snell—even before the blowup in the sixth that saw the home team take a commanding lead. By that point, Snell had already labored enough that in the best-case scenario, he’d be out after six in a close game. Now, you can claim that while it was close, the Dodgers had as much a chance to get to the Blue Jays bullpen as the other way around; the big difference is the starting point was one of great advantage for Los Angeles with a far superior starter.

Looking back at the NLCS, the complementary nature of Milwaukee’s lineup was praised in the regular season, and it simply didn’t show up in the playoffs. Nothing could be further from the truth when it comes to this Blue Jays lineup at the moment. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and George Springer delivered good at-bats, and Bo Bichette gave them a clear spark back from injury, and all of that would’ve been for naught without the key contributions from the likes of Alejandro Kirk, Daulton Varsho, and Addison Barger. These three hit the crucial home runs in this game that was filled with star power.

Focusing on Barger and the following games in this series for a minute, he poses the threat of an improved Blue Jays lineup against a sequence of right-handed Dodger starters. To the surprise of no one, John Schneider defaulted to his lefty killer in this game, starting a cold Davis Schneider and batting him second. It’ll undoubtedly be the last game he starts until Snell takes the ball again, especially with Barger coming off the bench to hit a grand slam against a lefty. In fact, it’s feasible that Schneider takes a chance at Barger even against a lefty if he is able to replicate this at any point in the series.

With Snell out before recording an out in the fifth, that dreaded prolonged bullpen exposure for the Dodgers comes to fruition, even more worrisome now minus one Alex Vesia in this series. Assessing specifically the moves made by Roberts once he got Snell out of there, everyone’s uneasiness is matched by the doubt as to how much better Roberts could have handled this. Emmet Sheehan was thrust into a bases-loaded, no-out situation and couldn’t put away anyone. And then, Los Angeles brought Anthony Banda in, again with the bases loaded, this time with just one out and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. looming on deck.

This is entirely a moot point, as it was the lefty Barger taking Banda deep for a grand slam to make this a blowout; however, it’s difficult to get over the idea of having Banda pitching to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in that spot if he was successful in his first matchup. While a double play would have ended the inning, it isn’t the type of play you can bank on as a manager, thinking you’ll avoid the next at-bat. That felt rather obviously a spot for a right-hander, any right-hander. In a world of conciliating results and processes, it’s a move that makes us more wary of the Dodgers’ plans this series, if/when they have other games in which they need to use the bullpen a lot. While the lack of righties in the bullpen without having to default to your leverage arms (Roki Sasaki and Blake Treinen) is a problem, Will Klein or Edgardo Henríquez would’ve been better options, and it being the case should ring alarm bells.

Over an entire series, there is still a great chance Dodger starting pitching takes over in a commanding way; only the opening round went to the Blue Jays lineup, not one star player or even two, but the whole batting order.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...itching-blue-jays-offense-game-1-world-series
 
Starters lead the show, what else is new? Yamamoto goes the distance in Game 2

gettyimages-2243318931.jpg


Even though the Dodgers, as a team, won Game 2, you wouldn’t be entirely wrong to claim that Yoshinobu Yamamoto singlehandedly took over this one, doing so with what could only be described as an anachronistic effort. While our loyalties lie with teams, we often fall in love with individuals to take us to that place of fandom. It’s no stretch to ponder if Yamamoto inspired a bunch of new Dodger fans in the US and particularly overseas with what he did on the mound.

Perhaps the biggest compliment one could come up with for what Yamamoto and the entirety of the Dodgers rotation have done in the playoffs is this: with no basis other than simple logic, Dave Roberts has surely broken the record for most time spent sitting back on the dugout in a single postseason. Notice his posture in many of these outings in which we’ve seen a Dodger starter mowing down hitters like they belong in a separate league, and the word tense, commonly associated with playoff baseball, wouldn’t even cross your mind.

Following a rocky Blake Snell outing, Yamamoto overcame early struggles and cruised to the point that any questions for a change were never posed. Sure, Roki Sasaki stayed loose in the ninth in case the Blue Jays built a rally, only as a precautionary move. Yamamoto was so locked in that a one-two-three ninth felt inevitable, and that’s exactly what we got.

Inevitable, though, is a dangerous word for moments and performances such as these, for it often devalues the effort level and skill to stand out so spectacularly. Saying Yamamoto felt inevitable is more a figure of speech than anything else, for up until the very end, the need to execute at a high level remained the same. Nothing is automatic, as Snell’s Game 1 outing proved, and even here, Yamamoto’s outing could’ve gone in an entirely different direction early on.

Scoring in the top of the first to take the air out of the building a bit, the Dodgers nearly gave that lead back right away with the first two reaching off Yamamoto. While the splitter was his most utilized pitch in this performance, Yamamoto zeroed in on the curveball to get him out of that jam.

Yamamoto had the scorching-hot Vladimir Guerrero Jr. up with runners at the corners and no outs in the first. Down in the count 2-0, the Dodger starter refused to cave and got Vladdy to swing over the top of a splitter at the bottom of the zone.

View Link

A few pitches later, with the Jays’ star hitter fouling off multiple splitters, Yamamoto threw the first curve of the at-bat and managed to miss Vladdy’s bat without leaving the zone once again.

View Link

There was no inevitability in this battle of heavyweights that could easily be interpreted as game-defining given the outing’s progression. Yamamoto located his pitches well and executed an outstanding game plan, eventually getting out of the inning with a soft liner and another strikeout on a curve, this time against Daulton Varsho.

The second time through the order, once again this same portion of the lineup gave him fits, but he minimized the damage to one run, getting Varsho to chase a splitter out of the zone for a weak contact.

Getting nastier as the game progressed, Yamamoto outlasted Kevin Gausman, who eventually caved, in what was an outstanding pitcher’s duel, allowing a couple of key homers to Will Smith and Max Muncy in the top of the seventh. Those long balls are yet another example of the unwavering focus to do what Yamamoto did, as his opponent was almost as impressive but paid the price for the mistake of throwing one too many fastballs to Smith. Muncy’s home run—there is nothing you can do about it, just a great piece of hitting.

If one complete game was impressive, two in a row is the type of accomplishment that’ll generate everlasting memories from a pitcher who’s everything the Dodgers hoped they were getting, and then some.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/106576/dodgers-yoshinobu-yamamoto-world-series-game-2-blue-jays
 
How to watch Dodgers vs. Blue Jays World Series Game 3

gettyimages-2243492027.jpg


LOS ANGELES — The 2025 World Series is now a best-of-five series, with the next three games at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, beginning with Game 3 on Monday night.

Tyler Glasnow makes the start for the Dodgers, having allowed one run over 13 1/3 innings in his three postseason starts to date — one spot relief appearance and two starts — with eight walks and 18 strikeouts.

Max Scherzer is on the mound for the Blue Jays, the 27th career postseason start for the 41-year-old.

World Series Game 3 info​

  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Blue Jays
  • Best-of-seven series tied, 1-1
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles
  • Start time: 5 p.m. PT
  • TV: Fox (Joe Davis, John Smotz, Ken Rosenthal, Tom Verducci)
  • National radio: ESPN Radio (Jon Sciambi, Eduardo Pérez, Jessica Mendoza, Buster Olney)
  • Local English radio: AM 570 (Stephen Nelson, Rick Monday)
  • Local Spanish radio: KTNQ 1020 AM (Pepe Yñiguez, José Mota, Luis Cruz)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...ays-world-series-game-3-television-start-time
 
Dodgers Blue Jays Game 3- Boo Birds for some Jays

gettyimages-2241066695.jpg


And so now, the World Series moves back to the US, back to the West Coast, back to Los Angeles, for a pivotal Game 3.

After an abysmal Game 1, where the offense couldn’t get going, and the bullpen couldn’t get out of its own way, the Dodgers did much better in both respects in Game 2. Some key hits and home runs and another complete outing from Yamamoto Yoshinobu allowed the Dodgers to tie the series heading into their home part of the series.

Tyler Glasnow will take the mound for the Dodgers. In his last outing, against the Milwaukee Brewers, Glasnow went 5.2 innings while striking out eight, and allowing only one run. The Dodgers had to use five pitchers total in that game, and it would be better if that didn’t have to happen again.

While the bullpen is rested, having not been used in Yamamoto’s outing and the off day, that’s where things went wrong for the Dodgers in Game 1. Granted the Dodgers did not use their high leverage arms in that game, but not much of the bullpen inspires confidence these days. The Dodgers are also without Alex Vesia, who pitched in Glasnow’s last outing as one of the five. (Continued well wishes to the whole Vesia family).

Glasnow went six innings in the NLDS against the Phillies, allowing no runs. It would be great if he could go deeper into games, but the Dodgers will most likely have to cover three innings with the bullpen.

Vladimir Guerro Jr and George Springer are a combined 12-for-20 off Glasnow, with four extra base hits. And an oddly specific, and worrisome in this case stat, the Blue Jays rank first in MLB against pitchers who generate seven feet or more of extension.

Toronto will send their grizzled veteran Max Scherzer to the mound. Many Dodger fans would love to see the offense just tee off on him, because of the whole Dead Arm Gate of 2021 when Scherzer was with the Dodgers. Scherzer has only pitched in one game so far this postseason, going 5.2 innings against the Seattle Mariners where he allowed two earned runs, one homer, striking out five. He did walk four, and if the Dodgers play their usual patient selves at the plate, they could get to him and knock him from the game early.

And then of course, the top of the first will be filled with loud boos for George Springer, who famously didn’t apologize for his part in the cheating scheme when he played for the Houston Astros.

Keys of course will be shutting down Springer and Guererro Jr, jumping on Scherzer, and minimizing the bullpen usage. Easier said than done of course, as the Blue Jays have a track record of having bigger offensive explosions after being held to minimal runs, and Scherzer could absolutely be Mad Max on the mound and mow down the Dodgers offense. But I do feel this will be a battle of the bullpens, and please guys, be the good version this time.

World Series Game 3 info​

  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Blue Jays
  • Best-of-seven series tied, 1-1
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles
  • Start time: 5 p.m. PT
  • TV: Fox (Joe Davis, John Smotz, Ken Rosenthal, Tom Verducci)
  • National radio: ESPN Radio (Jon Sciambi, Eduardo Pérez, Jessica Mendoza, Buster Olney)
  • Local English radio: AM 570 (Stephen Nelson, Rick Monday)
  • Local Spanish radio: KTNQ 1020 AM (Pepe Yñiguez, José Mota, Luis Cruz)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/106646/dodgers-blue-jays-game-3-boos-early
 
Freddie Freeman walk-off home run give Dodgers another 18-inning World Series win

gettyimages-2243329378.jpg


LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers made multiple outs on the bases, several errors and misplays in the field, and couldn’t get five innings from their starting pitcher, a rarity this postseason, in a game that needed a combined 44 players and 18 innings to decide. After six hours and 49 minutes and several close calls, Freddie Freeman hit a walk-off home run to beat the Blue Jays 6-5 in Game 3 of the World Series.

FREDDIE FREEMAN, OCTOBER LEGEND. #WORLDSERIES pic.twitter.com/SW3XeFihxq

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 28, 2025

Will Klein was the 10th Dodgers pitcher of the night, and their last reliever on the roster. He pitched longer than he ever has in five years of professional, throwing four scoreless innings to get the Dodgers through 18 innings, matching their own record for longest-ever game in the World Series.

Klein’s previous career high was three innings, done five times in High-A Quad Cities in 2021 in the Royals system, and once this year on August 30 with Triple-A Oklahoma City. On Monday night, Klein struck out five and worked around two hits and a walk.

WILL KLEIN IS NASTY. #WORLDSERIES pic.twitter.com/d50jBe4XCm

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 28, 2025

Game 2 starter and completer Yoshinobu Yamamoto was warming up to pitch the 19th inning of Game 3, but Freeman made sure it didn’t get that far.

Nine times?​


Shohei Ohtani hit two home runs and two doubles, tying a World Series record with four extra-base hits in a game, something previously only accomplished by second baseman Frank Isbell with his four doubles for the “hitless wonders” Chicago White Sox in Game 5 of the 1906 Fall Classic.

Ohtani’s second double drove in a run in the sixth inning and he scored the tying run later that frame. His second home run tied the game again in the seventh.

With eight home runs in 13 games, Ohtani tied the Dodgers record for one postseason. Corey Seager also hit eight in 2020, in 18 games. The major league record for a single postseason is 10 homers, by Randy Arozarena for the 2020 Rays.

Ohtani was having such a good game that Blue Jays manager John Schneider intentionally walked him with one out and nobody on in the ninth inning of a tie game, putting the winning run on base. But in keeping with the theme of the game, Ohtani was thrown out trying to steal second because he came off the bag.

Ohtani was also walked intentionally with two outs and nobody on in the 11th, and with two outs and a runner on third in the 13th, and then worked a walk in the traditional manner in the 17th as well. Ohtani reached base nine times in a World Series game, three more than the previous of six times on base, by Stan Hack in 1945 and Kenny Lofton in 1995.

Early relief​


Justin Wrobleski got five outs to get into the seventh inning, then came Blake Treinen for his team-leading eighth appearance in 13 games this postseason. Treinen needed only one out to finish the inning, but allowed three singles beforehand. The middle hit ricocheted off the right field wall in foul territory (including apparently off the leg of a Fox sound person).

Teoscar Hernández, who was thrown out at third base by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. on a busted play to end the bottom of the sixth inning, couldn’t return the favor in the top of the seventh with terrible throw home, allowing Guerrero to score the go-ahead run.

It was a great relay that kept the game tied in the top of the 10th inning. With pinch-runner Davis Schneider on first base, Nathan Lukes doubled into the right field corner. This time, Hernández got off a very good throw to Tommy Edman, who made an error earlier but this time fired a great relay home to Will Smith to nail Schnieder with room to spare.

Edman also made a glove toss on the run to get the final out of the 12th inning to retire Nathan Lukes, the only batter Clayton Kershaw faced.

In addition to Wrobleski and Klein, Edgardo Henriquez also worked his way up the bullpen trust tree with two scoreless innings of his own, preceding Klein.

Starters for short​


Max Scherzer allowed solo home runs to Teoscar Hernández — who had one hit in his previous 16 at-bats with nine strikeouts — and Ohtani for a 2-0 lead by the inning. Freddie Freeman walked and stole second base later in the frame, and had another extra base on his mind when Will Smith singled to right field. Only this time, Addison Barger’s throw home nailed Freeman with plenty of time to spare to end the inning without additional runs.

Tyler Glasnow started the second inning by allowing a single, walk, and single. But after the first single, Bo Bichette wandered off first base after an absurdly-late strike call on what might have been ball four to Daulton Varsho. Will Smith threw down to nail Bichette in no-man’s land, which neutered a potential rally.

Glasnow in the fourth inning was not as fortunate, walking Guerrero to start the inning, then a possible double-play grounder got past Tommy Edman at second base for an error, putting runners at the corners. One out later, Alejandro Kirk unloaded on a first-pitch curveball for a three-run home run to turn a Toronto deficit into a one-run lead. Two more singles and a sacrifice fly made for a four run inning, two of the runs earned.

Manager Dave Roberts tipped his hand during an interview with Tom Verducci on Fox in the bottom of the fourth inning, saying he’d like to get a scuffling Glasnow through Bichette, the third batter due up in the fifth. Glasnow issued his third walk of the night, putting Nathan Lukes off to open the fifth, but Glasnow did get Guerrero and Bichette to end his night.

Anthony Banda was called in, and had a much better time than his two-homer appearance in the sixth inning of Game 1 in Toronto, inducing an infield popout to end the frame.

Scherzer got one out in the fifth but wasn’t allowed to face Ohtani a third time, pulled with one out. Ohtani, who doubled and homered off Scherzer, greeted left-hander Mason Fluharty with another double to score Kiké Hernández, giving the Dodgers three runs off Scherzer for the first time since the 2016 NLDS, 12 starts ago.

Freeman followed with a single inside first base off Fluharty to score Ohtani to even the score, officially turning the game over to the bullpens.

But nobody realized the game still had over four more hours to go.

World Series Game 3 particulars​


Home runs: Teoscar Hernández (5), Shohei Ohtani 2 (8), Freddie Freeman (2); Alejandro Kirk (5)

WP — Will Klein (1-0): 4 IP, 2 hits, 1 walk, 5 strikeouts

LP — Brendon Little (0-2): 1+ IP, 2 hits, 1 run, 1 walk, 1 strikeout

Up next​


Shohei Ohtani is on the mound for the Dodgers in Game 4 on Tuesday (5 p.m., Fox), with Shane Bieber pitching for the Blue Jays.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...ddie-freeman-home-run-will-klein-world-series
 
Will World Series Game 4 give another Sho?

gettyimages-2241717280.jpg


Wow. So, where do they go from here? Last night’s game was epic in every way. All of us are exhausted. Personally, after going to be at 3:15 am Eastern, I’m surprised my brain is functioning enough to write this.

That fatigue will be the story line for Game 4, starting most notably with the Dodgers starting pitcher. You know, that guy who did nothing more than hit two doubles and two homers and got on base all nine times he was at the plate. (Insert Ferris Buehler’s principal’s Nine Times meme here).

The last time Shohei Ohtani pitched a game at Dodgers Stadium, he delivered a game for the ages. Three homers on top of pitching six shutout innings.

We can say for certain that won’t happen again. Well, the six shutout innings very well might, but not the three homers. After Game 3, Toronto manager John Schneider said that they will not be pitching to Ohtani. “You know, he had a great game, he’s a great player, but I think after that you just kinda take the bat out of his hands.” When asked by a reporter is that’s what to be expected going forward, Schneider replied “yeah”.

Indeed, Ohtani was walked his last five at bats. (What an insane sentence). As such, that means the rest of the team needs to step up, and more specifically Mookie Betts. Mookie started the postseason hot, garnering four hits in the first Wild Card game. Since, he has only had one multi-hit game, and four games where he did not have any hits. In last night’s marathon game, he had only one hit in nine plate appearances.

The Dodgers will be facing Shane Beiber, a right hander the Blue Jays acquired at the trade deadline. He has allowed exactly two runs in each of his three postseason outings. However, two of those outing were less than four innings. With both teams having to use all of their available arms, he will be pressed to go deep into the game. In fact, he was loosening up in the Blue Jays bullpen last night. The Dodgers would do well to get to him early.

Another thing to watch is if George Springer will be in the lineup. The Blue Jay’s leadoff guy left the game in the seventh inning, dealing with right side tightness. He went for an MRI and it remains to be seen if he will appear in any more postseason games.

So, lets see what Game 4 has in store. A tidy little win would be nice. Please no more extra innings. (stifles yawn)

World Series Game 4 info​

  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Blue Jays
  • Los Angeles leads best-of-seven series, 2-1
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles
  • Start time: 5 p.m. PT
  • TV: Fox (Joe Davis, John Smotz, Ken Rosenthal, Tom Verducci)
  • National radio: ESPN Radio (Jon Sciambi, Eduardo Pérez, Jessica Mendoza, Buster Olney)
  • Local English radio: AM 570 (Stephen Nelson, Rick Monday)
  • Local Spanish radio: KTNQ 1020 AM (Pepe Yñiguez, José Mota, Luis Cruz)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/106748/world-series-game-4-give-sho
 
The Dodgers have an Andy Pages problem, and it’s not good

It would sound obscure to say that the Dodgers’ secondary leader in home runs in the regular season is also the same player that is hitting under .100 out of the nine hole in the postseason.

That is the situation that Andy Pages finds himself in, and he has become a major detriment for the Dodgers offensively.

To his credit, Pages has had a couple moments of productivity, as he his batted ball in the bottom of the 11th inning in Game 4 of the NLDS helped the Dodgers take the series, thanks in help to an errant throw from Orion Kerkering that’ll forever haunt the Phillies. He also collected an RBI double off of Freddy Peralta in Game 2 of the NLCS that gave the Dodgers the lead.

Since that moment, he has a batting average of just .091. He has outdone himself in the World Series with a putrid .067 average and was replaced by Alex Call in both Games 3 and 4, with the fate of his role as a starter looking more dim with every missed opportunity at the plate.

With the Dodgers in need of a shuffle in the lineup, the starting nine for Dave Roberts might look a bit different. When Roberts was asked by Bill Plaschke of the Los Angeles Times about potential lineup changes, Roberts commented that changes could be made as the season winds down to three games at most. Roberts did not specify as to who will bear the brunt of a demotion from the starting lineup.

“I’m gonna think about it long and hard, and it might look a little bit different tomorrow.”

Links​


Shohei Ohtani wasn’t able to replicate the same dominance he had against Milwaukee on the mound, as he handed Toronto the lead via a two-run home run from Vladimir Guerrero Jr. before being pulled in the seventh inning for a second straight start.

Eager to give his team needed length on the mound, Ohtani failed to meet his own expectations of going seven full innings, as he regretted not being able to provide enough before the bullpen let Toronto’s lead ballon out of sight, per Jim Alexander of the Orange County Register.

“Whether it’s during the regular season or the postseason, my goal is to be able to pitch six innings,” Ohtani said through interpreter Will Ireton. “And the situation, this game, I wanted to go seven, and it was regrettable that I wasn’t able to finish that inning.”

Speaking of the bullpen, the duo of Anthony Banda and Blake Treinen fed into the Blue Jays’ four run seventh inning which ultimately left the Dodgers struggling to find answers against Toronto’s heavily depleted bullpen.

Treinen, who has now allowed runs (both off the bat of Bo Bichette) in back to back games, spoke on Toronto’s knack for being able to put the ball in play and do so in succession, per Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times.

“They do a good job of battling tough pitches,” Treinen said, “and putting pitches that are mistakes in play.”

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-links/106804/dodgers-andy-pages-shohei-ohtani-blake-treinen
 
Trey Yesavage dominates Dodgers, Blue Jays take World Series Game 5

gettyimages-2243542543.jpg


LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers head to Toronto facing a daunting task, needing two wins in two road games to stay alive, after falling 6-1 in Game 5 on Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium to a Blue Jays team that has outplayed them thus far in the World Series.

Trey Yesavage brought the hammer in Game 5, riding a dominant slider and splitter to 12 strikeouts in seven innings, allowing only one run.

“We are always a team that gets starters 70 to 90 pitches by the fourth,” first baseman Freddie Freeman said before Game 5. ”We got to do that again and just build innings, keep putting pressure on ’em, and not have quick 1-2-3 innings.”

Yesavage didn’t get to 90 pitches until the seventh inning, allowing only three hits, one of them a solo home run by Kiké Hernández, who made his first start in center field since September 7. Yesavage had four 1-2-3 innings.

The rookie right-hander broke Smokey Joe Wood’s record for the 1912 Red Sox for most strikeouts in a World Series game by a pitcher 22 or younger.

The Dodgers in Game 1 chased Yesavage after 80 pitches through four innings and scored twice against him, but also left four on base, including not adding on from a bases-loaded, no-out situation last Friday.

“It was a 180 on his command from the first game,” Freeman said after the loss. “He had everything working tonight.”

“At-bat quality is not just pitches. It’s hitting mistakes,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I do think that the first time through the at-bat quality was good as far as kind of gathering information. But I think in total, two times through the order, there were a lot of pitches that we missed.”

The Dodgers swung and missed 23 times against Yesavage, with 21 of those coming on his 75 combined sliders and splitters. He also didn’t walk anybody, giving him the most strikeouts in a World Series game with no walks.

11+ strikeouts, 0 walks in World Series​

  • Trey Yesavage (2025 Game 5): 7 innings, 12 strikeouts
  • Don Newcombe (1949 Game 1): 8 innings, 11 strikeouts
  • Clayton Kershaw (2017 Game 1): 7 innings, 11 strikeouts

Poor fastball command doomed Blake Snell in his Game 1 loss, and establishing the pitch has been the talk the last few days heading into his Game 5 start. Problem was, Davis Schneider and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. each homered on inside fastballs within Snell’s first three pitches, putting the Dodgers behind before many Dodger Stadium seats were even warm.

Schneider and Guerrero are the first pair of batters to start a World Series game with home runs.

Potential double play balls in the middle infield turned into only one out thanks to a molasses-slow turn in the first and a poor throw by Mookie Betts in the third inning, rushed even though a slowed Bo Bichette was the trail runner. Those weren’t cashed in, but an ill-advised dive by Teoscar Hernández in right field turned a double into a triple to lead off the fourth was, adding a free run thanks to a sacrifice fly.

Déjà vu​


After the two home runs, Snell was mostly solid, getting through 6 2/3 innings in his final start of the year. He walked four but struck out seven. He left trailing by two in a similar situation to Shohei Ohtani in Game 4, with two runners on. This time there was only one out to get, instead of three.

Edgardo Henriquez was first in the relief saddle on Wednesday, and walked Guerrero with a wild pitch on the final ball that allowed one inherited run to score, then allowed a single to Bichette to bring home the other inherited runner. Henriquez did not retire any of his three batters.

“It’s hard because you can only push a starter so much,” Roberts said of Snell’s 116 pitches. “I thought Blake emptied the tank.”

Two nights in a row the Dodgers tried to stretch out a starting pitcher because their bullpen has been terrible, only to see said starter struggle at a point of fatigue. Then when the bullpen finally came in, they did poorly. A real vicious cycle.

“The guys have got to be better. They certainly had a good game in Game [3] or whatever it was,” Roberts said. “Everyone’s got to do their job.”

With a fully-functioning offense and a competent bullpen, getting consecutive six-inning starts with two and three runs allowed, respectively are both winnable games. But the Dodgers have neither right now, which is a problem.

The Dodgers have averaged 3.54 runs per game after the wild card round, and scored three or fewer runs six times in their last 11 games. They’ve scored four runs in their last 27 innings.

Now their backs are firmly against the wall, with two days and a long flight to try to find that offense.

World Series Game 5 particulars​


Home runs: Kiké Hernández (1); Davis Schneider (1), Vladimir Guerrero, Jr. (8)

WP — Trey Yesavage (3-1): 7 IP, 3 hits, 1 run, 12 strikeouts

LP — Blake Snell (3-2): 6 2/3 IP, 6 hits, 5 runs, 4 walks, 7 strikouts

Up next​


The MLB season reaches its final destination with everyone headed to Toronto for Game 6 on Friday (5:10-ish p.m. PT, Fox). Yoshinobu Yamamoto will try to keep the Dodgers alive, while Kevin Gausman is pitching for the Blue Jays.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...esavage-dodgers-blue-jays-world-series-game-5
 
Dodgers relying on experience in facing elimination

gettyimages-2243565166.jpg


LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers need to win or the season is over, adding clarity and immediacy of purpose after two home losses that followed frustratingly similar patterns.

A winnable start through six innings goes south in the seventh inning with a shaky handoff to a struggling bullpen, and an offense not performing anywhere close to their capabilities making for lopsided final scores.

“It doesn’t feel great,” manager Dave Roberts said after Wednesday’s Game 5 loss. “You clearly see those guys finding ways to get hits, move the baseball forward, and we’re not doing a good job of it.”

The Blue Jays have outscored the Dodgers 29-18 in this World Series, with Toronto hitting .261/.341/.389 with a 105 wRC+ as a team compared to just .201/.296/.354 with a 79 wRC+. With runners in scoring position, the Blue Jays are hitting .282/.392/.436 with 51 such plate appearances in five games, while the Dodgers are 6-for-30 with no extra-base hits (.200/.286/.200) in only 36 PA.

“Hitting creates energy and we weren’t getting hits, so we weren’t really doing what it took to find that energy,” said Kiké Hernández, whose solo home run provided the Dodgers’ only run of Game 5.

Down 3-2 in the World Series, the Dodgers are facing elimination for the first time in 2025. But not only do they have to beat the Blue Jays on the road. They have to do it twice, something done eight times previously in a best-of-7 World Series:

  • 1926 Cardinals (at Yankees)
  • 1934 Cardinals (at Tigers)
  • 1952 Yankees (at Dodgers)
  • 1958 Yankees (at Braves)
  • 1968 Tigers (at Cardinals)
  • 1979 Pirates (at Orioles)
  • 2016 Cubs (at Cleveland)
  • 2019 Nationals (at Astros)

That 2019 World Series was an odd one, with the road team winning all seven games. Winning an elimination game is hard, doing on the road is even more difficult, and having to do so twice in a row is even more daunting. But the Dodgers have to first win Game 6 to earn the right to have to win Game 7.

“It sucks, but we get a day off, you go there and we just have to win one game. You win one game at a time, that’s what I keep saying all the time,” third baseman Max Muncy said. “It’s not going to be easy, but you can’t think about trying to win two games on the road. You just take it one game at a time, and we have to focus on the next game.”

Making the playoffs in all 10 seasons thus far under Roberts provides for many opportunities for playing in elimination games. They’ve done pretty well in such games, winning 13 of 20, while the rest of MLB since 2016 is 78-96 (.448) when facing elimination.

The Dodgers are 5-4 on the road when facing elimination, while the rest of MLB since 2016 is 27-47 (.365). The wins for Los Angeles in these games were the 2016 NLDS Game 5 in Washington D.C., 2018 NLCS Game 7 in Milwaukee, 2020 NLCS Game 5 “at” Braves (at Globe Life Field in Texas), 2021 NLDS Game 5 in San Francisco, and 2024 NLDS Game 4 in San Diego.

The 2025 Dodgers, as you might imagine, are leaning heavily on their experience from 2024, when they were down two games to one in the Division Series. They beat the Padres in San Diego in Game 4, and closed them out at Dodger Stadium in Game 5.

“We all know what we’re capable of, and we haven’t done it for two games. Maybe a day off will cool them down and reignite us,” Freeman said. “We’ve been here before. We were down 2-1 to the Padres last year and won two in a row. So we can do it again.”

Yoshinobu Yamamoto will be on the mound for the Dodgers in Game 6 at Rogers Centre in Toronto, coming off two complete games in a row, facing Kevin Gausman who took a 1-1 tie into the seventh inning against Yamamoto in Game 2 before home runs by Will Smith and Muncy gave the Dodgers one of their two wins in this series.

“We’ve got to make some adjustments. We have seen Gausman a ton, a lot of our guys have seen him, so we just got to continue to — I just think we just got to come in fresh,” Roberts said. “We’ve been in elimination games, a core group of these guys, and we got to find a way to win a game. That’s it.”

“As a group it’s time to show our character, put up a fight, and see what happens,” Hernández said. “We’re a more talented team than we were last year. We found a way to do it last year, and I thought we were in a bigger hole given the situation with our pitching staff last year.

“Right guy on the mound at the right time for us in Game 6 in Yoshinobu. It’s time for the offense to show up.”

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...gers-elimination-games-world-series-blue-jays
 
How to watch Dodgers at Blue Jays World Series Game 6

gettyimages-2243704874.jpg


The Dodgers need to win two games at Rogers Centre to win a championship, but in order to win Game 7 they first have to beat the Blue Jays Game 6 on Friday night in Toronto.

The Blue Jays come home riding high up three games to two in the series after winning the last two games at Dodger Stadium, now one win away from their first championship in 32 years.

Game 6 is a rematch of six days ago in Game 2 in the same ballpark, in which the game was tied 1-1 in the seventh inning when the Dodgers rallied for a win. Kevin Gausman retired 17 straight at one point before allowing home runs to Will Smith and Max Muncy to suffer the loss in his 6 2/3-inning start. Yoshinobu Yamamoto retired his final 20 batters faced to finish off another complete game, the first MLB pitcher with consecutive complete games in the postseason in 24 years.

World Series Game 6 info​

  • Teams: Dodgers at Blue Jays
  • Toronto leads best-of-seven series, 3-2
  • Ballpark: Rogers Centre, Toronto
  • Start time: 5:10-ish p.m. PT
  • TV: Fox (Joe Davis, John Smotz, Ken Rosenthal, Tom Verducci)
  • National radio: ESPN Radio (Jon Sciambi, Eduardo Pérez, Jessica Mendoza, Buster Olney)
  • Local English radio: AM 570 (Stephen Nelson, Rick Monday)
  • Local Spanish radio: KTNQ 1020 AM (Pepe Yñiguez, José Mota, Luis Cruz)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...ays-world-series-game-6-television-start-time
 
Dodgers vs. Blue Jays World Series Game 6 overflow chat

gettyimages-2243704711.jpg


More Game 6 discussion.

REMINDER: we’ll have one more game thread at 7:24 p.m. PT.

World Series Game 6 info​

  • Teams: Dodgers at Blue Jays
  • Toronto leads best-of-seven series, 3-2
  • Ballpark: Rogers Centre, Toronto
  • Start time: 5:10-ish p.m. PT
  • TV: Fox (Joe Davis, John Smotz, Ken Rosenthal, Tom Verducci)
  • National radio: ESPN Radio (Jon Sciambi, Eduardo Pérez, Jessica Mendoza, Buster Olney)
  • Local English radio: AM 570 (Stephen Nelson, Rick Monday)
  • Local Spanish radio: KTNQ 1020 AM (Pepe Yñiguez, José Mota, Luis Cruz)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-game-threads/106922/dodgers-blue-jays-world-series-game-6
 
Dodgers redefining how little you need to hit to win a World Series game

gettyimages-2243890975.jpg


The Dodgers won Game 6 of the World Series, and they did so with yet another largely bad performance at the plate. Struggling on the hitting front for the better part of this series, for Los Angeles to be successful in these games and hopefully secure a second consecutive World Series, the path was no longer to, quote unquote, “find themselves as a lineup”—while that definitely could be accomplished, there is very little outside of faith in these players’ track records to expect a drastic turnaround at the eleventh hour. Luckily for the Dodgers, they didn’t need to be brilliant offensively; they didn’t even need to be particularly good. All that was required was to seize the moment and maximize the rare opportunity in which it could do damage.

Kevin Gausman, a pitcher who notoriously handles Shohei Ohtani quite well, came out of the gates firing on all cylinders, punching out the reigning NL MVP to lead off the game en route to striking out a whopping six of the first seven hitters he faced. If the Dodgers’ own struggles weren’t enough to paint a bleak picture, they had to contend with an ace who was, by all accounts, at the top of his game.

After Kiké Hernández led off the third with an out, the Dodgers had their first and only opportunity to score against Gausman. Tommy Edman doubled, and Shohei Ohtani was intentionally walked on either side of a Miguel Rojas strikeout, setting up a two-on, two-out situation.

It’d be easy to come here and praise the lineup shifting as the thing that unlocked a bit of scoring, but at its core, this moment was about a big player(s) showing up at a crucial time. While it is not performing well right now, the Dodgers’ offense has a multitude of hitters you believe are able to step up for a single moment and make the difference between winning and losing a season-defining baseball game. As contradictory as it may sound, that’s effectively the case.

Moved to the second hole since Game 5, Will Smith delivered an RBI double, and after a Freddie Freeman walk, it was Mookie Betts, likely this team’s biggest underperformer in terms of expectation and current production (regular and postseason), who got the biggest hit.

View Link

Gausman, who had already thrown a fastball up and in past Mookie in that at-bat, tried to do it again, and the Dodgers shortstop was ready for it, dumping it in left field to drive in two runs.

After that moment, the Dodgers’ offense had nothing left, and apart from a wasted opportunity in the eighth, it emptied the tank to the point of not even creating threats. In a game they had to win, the Dodgers finished nine innings with a meager four total hits. But boy, were they timely hits, three of them coming in that glorious third inning.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...le-you-need-to-hit-to-win-a-world-series-game
 
Will Smith home run completes Dodgers Game 7 comeback to win another World Series

gettyimages-2244556570.jpg


Will Smith caught more innings than any other catcher in a single World Series, and his 11th-inning home run gave the Dodgers their first lead of Game 7, and clinched a second straight championship with a 5-4 win over the Blue Jays on Saturday night and into Sunday morning at Rogers Centre in Toronto.

Seven different pitchers who started games in this World Series were used in a do-or-die Game 7, including Game 4 starter Shane Bieber, who allowed the go-ahead home run to Smith with two outs in the 11th.

Will Power 😤😤pic.twitter.com/PlhQtM80Pb

— SportsNet LA (@SportsNetLA) November 2, 2025

Smith caught all 73 innings of the 2025 World Series, two more than Lou Criger caught for the Boston Americans (later, the Red Sox) in the 1903 Fall Classic.

That made a winner out of Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who you might remember from such starts as Game 6 one night earlier. After throwing 96 pitches in six innings on Friday, Yamamoto escaped an inherited jam in the ninth, pitched through the 10th, then worked around a leadoff double by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. for a clean 11th as well to earn the win for a second straight night.

The final outs came on a double play grounder by Alejandro Kirk, with Mookie Betts taking it himself to shortstop then throwing to first base to close out the first back-to-back champions in MLB since the New York Yankees from 1998-2000.

THE @DODGERS ARE BACK ON TOP AS WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS 👑 #CHAMPS

(MLB x @BudweiserUSA) pic.twitter.com/a9QnyHxZ7F

— MLB (@MLB) November 2, 2025

Yamamoto was named World Series MVP for his three wins in the series.

For a while, it didn’t seem like the Dodgers would get this chance. They left two runners on base in each of the fourth, fifth, and sixth innings, and during the World Series hit just .203/.294/.364 and averaged 3.71 runs per game. They trailed by two runs late but got solo home runs by Max Muncy in the eighth and Miguel Rojas in the ninth to even the score. Muncy, Rojas, and Smith joined Lou Johnson (1965) as the only Dodgers with home runs in Game 7 of the World Series.

They also might not have even got to extra innings were it not for Andy Pages, who was inserted for Tommy Edman in center field in the ninth. Pages got to a bases-loaded fly ball that Edman with his bad ankle likely wouldn’t have reached, and made a game-saving catch, bowling over Kiké Hernández in the process.

OH MY GOODNESS WE ARE GOING TO EXTRAS pic.twitter.com/r3I9Swj4gg

— MLB (@MLB) November 2, 2025

Shohei Ohtani pitching on three days rest was not sharp, having trouble with most of his pitches outside the fastball and looking exhausted while on the mound. He got through the first two innings scoreless, thanks to George Springer bailing on a stolen base attempt to end the first inning and a hobbled Bo Bichette not sent home from second base on a single in the second when Toronto stranded the bases loaded.

Ohtani was at 43 pitches through two innings, and was still sent out for a third inning to face the top of the order. Ohtani ended the top of the first inning on base and ended the third inning at-bat, and both times was given extra time to warm up for pitching the bottom of the frame, to the understandable consternation of Blue Jays manager John Schneider. During the Fox broadcast, major league umpire Mark Carlson from the MLB replay center explained that if a pitcher ends the previous inning on base or at-bat, umpires are allowed discretion to give extra time for warming up.

But all that was background noise soon enough, as Springer opened the third inning with a single, was bunted to second, and took third on a wild pitch. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. was intentionally walked with a 1-0 count, then Bichette hammered a slider for a three-run home run to open the scoring and end Ohtani’s time on the mound.

BO BICHETTE BELTS ONE TO DEEP CENTER 🤯@BLUEJAYS LEAD 3-0 IN GAME 7 pic.twitter.com/64ai0Udfyl

— MLB (@MLB) November 2, 2025

Justin Wrobleski was first out of the bullpen and retired four of his six batters faced with two strikeouts, ending his first postseason series with five scoreless innings and six strikeouts in four appearances. There were some fireworks in the fourth, when Andres Giménez leaned in and nearly got hit by one pitch then did get hit on the hand by the next pitch. Giménez and Wrobleski exchanged expletives and the benches emptied but it was much ado about nothing, except to provide training for an introductory lip-reading course.

A closer look at the exchange between Wrobleski and Giménez that led to the benches clearing. pic.twitter.com/PvHaPkmVfL

— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) November 2, 2025

The Dodgers had some hard-hit balls of Max Scherzer, making his second career Game 7 start in the World Series. But they didn’t have much to show for it until the fourth inning, when Will Smith doubled high off the wall in center and the team had runners at the corners with nobody out, and bases loaded with one out. Los Angeles got a run on a sacrifice fly, but it could have been more if the out on the play wasn’t an incredible diving catch by Daulton Varsho in center field to rob Teoscar Hernández of a hit. Guerrero then made a diving grab behind first base on a Tommy Edman liner to end the inning.

Rojas singled with one out in the fifth to end Scherzer’s night, and Ohtani singled off reliever Louis Varland, who broke a major league record by appearing in 15 games (out of 18) this postseason. But Smith and Freddie Freeman each flew out to waste the opportunity.

Chris Bassitt, the third Toronto pitcher, was greeted by a Mookie Betts walk and Muncy single to set up another run, this time on a sacrifice fly by Edman to pull within 3-2.

Tyler Glasnow, who got the final three outs on three pitches in Game 6, entered a precarious situation in the fourth inning, with two on and two out, facing the Blue Jays best hitter. But he got Guerrero to fly out to end that threat and kept his ledger scoreless scoreless until two hits, including an RBI double by Giménez to put Toronto’s lead back at two. Glasnow escaped further damage by getting Guerrero to ground out to end the sixth.

This was the second time in Glasnow’s career he pitched on consecutive days, along with two innings on June 30 and one inning on July 1, 2018 while with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Game 5 starter Trey Yesavage got five outs in relief, but also allowed Muncy’s home run in the eighth inning to pull the Dodgers within a run. Fellow Game 5 starter Blake Snell entered in the bottom of the eighth inning with a runner on second base, and retired all three batters he faced.

A total of seven pitchers who started games in this World Series pitched in Game 7, with Ohtani, Glasnow, Snell, and Yamamoto recording 26 outs with four runs allowed, while Scherzer, Yesavage, and Bieber recorded 21 outs and gave up three runs.

World Series Game 7 particulars​


Home runs: Max Muncy (3), Miguel Rojas (1), Will Smith (2); Bo Bichette (1)

WP — Yoshinobu Yamamoto (5-1): 2 2/3 IP, 1 hit, 1 walk, 1 strikeout

LP — Shane Bieber (2-1): 1 IP, 1 hit, 1 run

Up next​


Another parade in Los Angeles, on Monday.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...d-series-will-smith-yoshinobu-yamamoto-game-7
 
Whatever you saw coming, it wasn’t this type of World Series win

gettyimages-2243906030.jpg


The Los Angeles Dodgers won the World Series, and the number of people who expected to say that ever since the start of the season was uncommon for a sport whose playoff format is so unpredictable. If that championship came, as it did, no matter the circumstances, there would be plenty willing to jump to the conclusion of the inevitability of it all. What Game 7 showed us is that this line of thought couldn’t be further from the truth, doing a disservice to each member of this roster to argue otherwise. It was clear in multiple instances that it would’ve been the easiest thing in the world for Los Angeles not to come out on the winning end, and it could’ve happened countless times, and the fact that it didn’t only enhances the individual accomplishments of this group. They didn’t steamroll the competition with superior talent; they gutted one out in the truest sense of the word.

Right at the start of things, Shohei Ohtani, on short rest in a hostile environment, could’ve been the story of the most gifted, talented athlete this sport has ever seen, proving himself superior to anyone else. Not the case. Few pitchers who took the mound in this game looked as vulnerable as Ohtani, who couldn’t find the strike zone consistently, mostly lucking himself into holding the Jays scoreless for the first two frames despite allowing a wave of base runners. Knowing the state of his bullpen, Dave Roberts kept pushing his luck with Ohtani until it all came crumbling down on a Bo Bichette three-run bomb in what was likely his last hitter (Justin Wrobleki was ready to face Addison Barger), no matter what. If this series has indicated anything, it is that a three-run deficit might as well feel like five+ with how Los Angeles was hitting.

On the opposite end of the pitching matchup, as we alluded to before the game here, even if Max Scherzer did well, the Dodgers were going to get more opportunities than they did facing Trey Yesavage and Kevin Gausman. That came to pass, but Los Angeles failed to capitalize, in large part due to some bad batted ball luck and outstanding outfield defense from the Jays. Despite collecting plenty of hard contact against the future Hall of Famer, the Dodgers only scored one run against him in 4+ innings of work.

Right as it felt Los Angeles was gaining some momentum, after they made it a 3-2 game, Andrés Giménez, of all people, managed to tack on a run in the sixth against Tyler Glasnow. The right-hander was effective in his performance, just not enough to keep that run off the board, eventually stranding that runner with far better hitters (George Springer and Vladimir Guerrero Jr.) coming up.

Trailing 4-2 in the late innings, the Dodgers had the star power to step up and still perpetuate the narrative of inevitability, but they’d need to do it against dominant pitchers such as Yesavage and Hoffman. It wasn’t Shohei Ohtani nor Freddie Freeman, but Max Muncy, this franchise’s all-time leader in home runs, and Miguel Rojas who hit clutch solo shots in the eighth and ninth to eventually tie the game.

By every measure, Rojas shouldn’t be in this situation. The Dodgers paid Michael Conforto a bunch of money to help strengthen the depth of this lineup, and they developed Andy Pages as a breakout youngster. Alex Call easily could’ve been pinch-hitting for Rojas in the spot, as a likelier candidate to run into one. In the end, though, Roberts trusted Rojas, and he delivered against all odds.

Following Ohtani on the pitching side of things, the Dodgers let the recent performance dictate their choices, and what that screamed was to trust as many starters as possible, regardless of their outlook heading into the game. Factoring that in, what was so inevitable about Emmet Sheehan and especially Justin Wrobleski keeping the Jays off the board? This bullpen being a vulnerable spot wasn’t an overplayed narrative, but more so a genuinely accurate description of the current situation. These choices could’ve blown up in the Dodgers’ faces, but they didn’t because those pitchers rose to the occasion.

Once they managed to tie it up with Rojas, even then, the sense of inevitability was nowhere to be found, with the Jays knocking on the possibility of a walk-off win right after. What bridged the gap between the Dodgers tying it and winning it was the memorable work of Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who looked untouchable but managed that in a situation where everyone was simply flabbergasted and awed by his accomplishments. Pitchers don’t come back after a start on no days of rest for multi-inning appearances, and if they do, their effectiveness is a complete unknown.

Before the Dodgers secured the win, it was widely known that if they did, Yamamoto would be the World Series MVP, and even at that point, only three outs away, reality crept in and showed there are no assurances. A Vladimir Guerrero Jr. double to lead off the eleventh made it an even more tense game until the final out, but Yamamoto was able to bear down and seal the win.

Every game has its ebbs and flows, but taking an objective approach, it’s virtually impossible for anyone to have watched this game and now argue it was never in doubt. In doubt is what it was for nearly all of it for the Dodgers, and that makes it all the more special.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/107101/dodgers-blue-jays-world-series-game-7
 
The legend of Yoshinobu Yamamoto

gettyimages-2244109148.jpg


Yoshinobu Yamamoto threw the first pitch of the Dodgers’ 2025 season in Tokyo, Japan, and he threw the last pitch of the year in Game 7 of the World Series in Toronto, Canada. The only member of the team’s starting rotation active for the entire season, Yamamoto was the ace who trumped everything else, and secured the Dodgers’ second championship in a row while winning World Series MVP.

Signed to the richest contract ever signed by a pitcher, a 12-year, $325-million pact that looks like a steal two years in, Yamamoto is the Dodgers’ pitcher most on a specific schedule, never starting with fewer than five days rest, by design to keep him on a routine he is used to, and on a team usually with the depth to facilitate such a schedule. Yet it was Yamamoto who loomed most as a Bill Brasky-type figure this October.

“To see what Yamamoto did, to be honest, was some of the craziest things I’ve ever seen,” said fellow starting pitcher Tyler Glasnow, who earned the save in Game 6 and also got seven outs in relief in Game 7.

“Yama closing it with two and two thirds, I gotta learn from him. That was impressive. Impressive,” said Blake Snell, who got four outs in relief himself in Game 7, on two days rest.

Yamamoto in the World Series pitched in every inning from the first through the 11th, and even warmed up to pitch during the Game 3 marathon at Dodger Stadium. Just two days after throwing his second consecutive complete game, the first pitcher to do so in 24 years, Yamamoto was set to pitch the 19th inning had Game 3 gone at least one more frame.

“He would have gone as long as we needed,” manager Dave Roberts said after the 18-inning win. “He would have been the last guy.”

Freddie Freeman, whose walk-off home run in the 18th inning won Game 3, two days later spoke in awe of Yamamoto potentially pitching in that game.

“I heard he was like throwing like 10, 15 miles an hour in the bullpen, and they said, Hey, like, can you go? And he said, ‘Yeah, I can go.’ And they’re like, ‘Well, you need to pick it up, because you’re going to come into the 19th inning.‘ And they said his next pitch was 97 dotted, down and away, in the bullpen,” Freeman said Wednesday (start at 10:59 of this video). “And I was like, yeah, that’s, it’s incredible. I hope it epitomizes Yoshi as what he was going to do for us two days ago.”

A Game 3 appearance for Yamamoto would have been on one day rest, but pitching in Game 7 was on no days rest after throwing 96 pitches over six innings in Game 6.

Prior to Game 7, Roberts was asked if Yamamoto was available in a truly all-hands-on-deck situation, and said, “He said he feels good, he is definitely interested.”

By Saturday night, we all were interested.

The Dodgers used their other three starting pitchers — Shohei Ohtani, Glasnow, Snell — by the ninth inning, when Yamamoto was summoned to escape a jam and keep the game tied. He got two very memorable outs in the ninth — the Miguel Rojas stab and throw home, followed by a just-entered Andy Pages covering nearly an entire province for his bulldozing catch on the warning track.

Yamamoto followed with a scoreless 10th and — after Will Smith provided the Dodgers’ first lead of the night — a scoreless 11th as well to close out a title. One day after he started and threw 96 pitches in Game 6, Yamamoto got eight outs, more than any other Dodgers pitcher in Game 7.

WON IT ALL. #WORLDSERIES pic.twitter.com/rYb9LEi5Pn

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) November 2, 2025

Yamamoto is the first pitcher to win three games in a World Series since Randy Johnson in 2001, and he’s the only pitcher to win three road games in the same Fall Classic.

“We needed a next-level performance from Yamamoto and we got it,” Roberts said.

“It’s unheard of, and I think that there’s a mind component, there’s a delivery, which is a flawless delivery, and there’s just an unwavering will. I just haven’t seen it. I really haven’t. You know, all that combined. There’s certain players that want moments and there’s certain players that want it for the right reasons, but Yoshi is a guy that I just completely implicitly trust and he’s made me a pretty dang good manager.”

Yamamoto is the first Dodgers pitcher to win five games in one postseason, and just the fifth major league pitcher to do so, joining Randy Johnson (2001 Diamondbacks), Francisco Rodríguez (2002 Angels), Stephen Strasburg (2019 Nationals), and Nathan Eovaldi (2023 Rangers).

“The complete game in Game 2 here, going six innings the other night — last night — and three tonight, is just insane,” said Smith, who caught every inning of the World Series.

Yamamoto in his two years in Los Angeles is already tied for the most World Series wins in Dodgers history with four, along with Johnny Podres and Sandy Koufax, who in Games 7 closed out championships 70 and 60 years ago, respectively. Yamamoto to date has only pitched in four World Series games, three of them starts.

His 37 1/3 innings this postseason are third-most in a single postseason in franchise history, trailing only literal Dodgers legends Orel Hershiser (42 2/3 in 1988) and Fernando Valenzuela (40 2/3 in 1981). Only two years in and two and a half months after his 27th birthday, Yamamoto’s seven career postseason wins are already third in Dodgers history, trailing only Clayton Kershaw (13) and Julio Urías (eight).



Yamamoto nearly completed a game on September 6 in Baltimore, taking a no-hitter all the way to two outs in the ninth inning before Jackson Holliday of the Orioles spoiled things with a solo home run. The Dodgers still led 3-1 and only needed one out to secure the victory, but the bullpen had other ideas, suffering their second walk-off loss in a row.

The Dodgers were 0-5 against last place teams to that point in a disastrous road trip through Pittsburgh and Baltimore, and though they were still in first place by a game over the Padres, the Dodgers looked at their most vulnerable this season.

They went 28-9 the rest of the way to win another title.

Yamamoto beginning on August 31 — the start before his near no-hitter — allowed 11 runs (nine earned) in 10 starts plus one relief appearance, posting a 1.14 ERA and 28.9-percent strikeout rate over 71 1/3 innings.

Between the regular season and postseason combined, Yamamoto allowed zero or one run in 20 of his 35 starts with a 2.30 ERA and 234 strikeouts in 211 innings. His season, and especially his postseason, will live in Dodgers lore forever.

“Obviously when you’ve got a guy like Yoshinobu Yamamoto on your team, it makes things a little easier, you know?” said Kiké Hernández.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...oshinobu-yamamoto-dodgers-world-series-legend
 
Back
Top