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How to watch Dodgers at Blue Jays World Series Game 6

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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

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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

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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.

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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

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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

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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

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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
 
Dodgers World Series & postseason stats & fun facts

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So many things happened in Game 7 of the World Series, even just from the ninth inning and beyond, that it was hard to fully capture everything.

“It wasn’t easy, it wasn’t pretty,” Kiké Hernández said during the postgame celebration on Saturday. “But we did the damn thing.”

Here are some leftover notes, facts, and stats that I didn’t have a spot for until now.

Rotation reliance​


In a complete 180 from the 2024 championship run, the Dodgers were so full of starting pitchers that extra starters were used in relief this October. Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow, and Shohei Ohtani made all 17 starts during the postseason and accounted for 68.4 percent of the Dodgers’ innings. That quartet combined for a 2.55 ERA with 127 strikeouts in 113 innings.

Yamamoto famously got the final eight outs of Game 7 to cement his World Series MVP award, but Snell also got four outs of relief in the final game to get to Yamamoto. Glasnow pitched in relief three times in October, including Games 6 and 7 of the World Series in his first consecutive days pitched since 2018 with the Pirates. Even Ohtani’s final start in Game 7 was on three days rest, so all four starters went above and beyond and outside of their comfort zone.

Twelve of the Dodgers’ 17 starts lasted at least six innings, which matched the team’s total from the previous six postseasons (2019-2024), spanning 58 games.

In-N-Out of Toronto​


The Dodgers ended Game 6 of the World Series with a double play, in which left fielder Kiké Hernández caught a liner and threw to Miguel Rojas, whose scoop at second base secured the victory. In Game 7, it was Mookie Betts — a top-three finisher for a National League Gold Glove Award in his first full season at shortstop — taking Alejandro Kirk’s ground ball to second, then threw to first base to close out the title.

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

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

This was only the fourth World Series to feature game-ending double plays two games in a row, and the only Fall Classic in which the final two games ended on double plays.

  • 1921: Yankees (vs. Giants) in Games 1-2
  • 1960: Pirates in Game 1, Yankees in Game 2
  • 1974: A’s (vs. Dodgers) in Games 3-4
  • 2025: Dodgers (vs. Blue Jays) in Games 6-7

Inning by inning​


Dodgers pitchers did not allow a run in any of the 17 fifth innings of the postseason, holding opposing batters to just eight singles in 57 at-bats (.140/.222/.140) during that frame. The worst inning for Dodgers pitchers was the eighth with 13 runs scored, but only two of those runs came in the eighth inning of the last 12 games.

The most prolific inning on offense for the Dodgers was the seventh, scoring 18 runs, a quarter of their postseason total. The worst inning on offense was the fifth, with only three runs scored.

Dodgers pitchers did not allow a run in any of their 13 extra innings in October, which set the stage for three wins — NLDS Game 4, World Series Game 3, and World Series Game 7.

For the record books​


Yoshinobu Yamamoto is the first pitcher to win three road games in one World Series.

Freddie Freeman ended Game 3 with an 18-inning home run. He’s the only player ever with two walk-off home runs in World Series history.

Max Muncy hit three home runs this postseason to give him 16 career postseason homers, breaking a tie with Corey Seager and Justin Turner for most in Dodgers history.

Kiké Hernández started all 17 games of the postseason, and his 92 games played for the Dodgers are the most in franchise history.

Will Smith caught all 73 innings during the World Series, more innings than any other catcher in one Fall Classic.

Shohei Ohtani’s three home runs in Game 4 of the NLCS tied Hernández (2017 NLCS Game 5) and Chris Taylor (2021 NLCS Game 5) for most by a Dodger in a postseason game.

Ohtani’s nine times reaching base in Game 3 of the World Series were three more than any other batter in a postseason game. With two home runs and two doubles in that Game 3, Ohtani matched Frank Isbell (1906) as the only other player with four extra-base hits in a World Series game.

Ohtani hit .265/.405/.691 for the postseason, and his eight home runs tied Corey Seager (2020) for most by a Dodger during one postseason. Ohtani also had three doubles and a triple; his 12 extra-base hits tied Seager (2020) for most by a Dodger in a postseason.

Ohtani walked nine times during the World Series, one more than Jim Gilliam (1955) for most by Dodger in the World Series.

Justin Dean played in 13 of 17 games in the postseason, stole a base and scored a run, but he did not bat once. The center fielder set a major league record for most games in a postsesason without ever batting, five more games than Andy Fox in 1996.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...6/dodgers-world-series-postseason-stats-notes
 
Yoshinobu Yamamoto top 3 in NL Cy Young voting, Shohei Ohtani top 3 for NL MVP

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The Baseball Writers Association of America on Monday announced the top three finishers for its four awards, with a pair of Dodgers recognized for their excellent 2025 seasons. Shohei Ohtani is in the top three in voting for the National League MVP award, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto is in the top three for the NL Cy Young Award.

All four BBWAA awards will be announced next week on MLB Network, with the Rookie of the Year awards on Monday, November 10, Managers of the Year on November 11, Cy Young Awards on November 12, and MVPs on November 13. Each award show on MLB Network will begin at 4 p.m. PT.

Ohtani is the prohibitive favorite to win his fourth MVP award in five seasons, after winning NL honors in 2024 in his first year with the Dodgers and taking home American League MVP in 2021 and 2023 with the Angels.

Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber and Mets outfielder Juan Soto are the other top-three finishers for NL MVP in 2025. In Players Choice Awards announced last week, major league players voted for Schwarber as NL Outstanding Player, which as best I can guess was a wholehearted endorsement of runs batted in.

NL MVP top 3​

  • Ohtani: .282/.392/.622, 172 wRC+, 179 OPS+, 55 HR, 20 SB, 146 R, 102 RBI, 7.7 bWAR*, 9.4 fWAR*
  • Schwarber: .240/.365/.563, 152 wRC+, 150 OPS+, 56 HR, 10 SB, 111 R, 132 RBI, 4.7 bWAR, 4.9 fWAR
  • Soto: .263/.396/.525, 156 wRC+, 160 OPS+, 43 HR, 38 SB, 120 R, 105 RBI, 6.2 bWAR, 5.8 fWAR

Bold=led league; *Ohtani’s WAR also includes his pitching

Yamamoto had a postseason run that will be remembered for decades, but this is a good reminder that BBWAA honors are for regular season performance, and the voting was completed before the postseason began.

The regular season for Yamamoto was very strong as well, finishing second in the NL in both ERA (2.49) and xERA (2.94), and third in strikeout rate (29.4 percent) in 173 2/3 innings. The problem for Yamamoto is that Pirates ace Paul Skenes was ahead of him in all three categories and pitched more innings. Phillies left-hander Cristopher Sánchez, who stymied the Dodgers during the NLDS and finished second in the NL with 202 innings, is the other top-three finisher in the NL for the Cy Young.

NL Cy Young top 3​

  • Yamamoto: 2.49 ERA, 2.73 xERA, 173 2/3 IP, 59 BB, 201 K, 12-8, 5.0 bWAR, 5.o fWAR
  • Skenes: 1.97 ERA, 2.59 xERA, 187 2/3 IP, 42 BB, 216 K, 10-10, 7.6 bWAR, 6.5 fWAR
  • Sánchez: 2.50 ERA, 3.00 xERA, 202 IP, 44 BB, 212 K, 13-5, 8.0 bWAR, 6.4 fWAR

Bold=led league

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...oto-shohei-ohtani-cy-young-mvp-voting-dodgers
 
Dodgers, Blue Jays relievers wore Alex Vesia’s 51 on their caps during World Series

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Amid the joy of the Dodgers’ second straight World Series win and subsequent championship parade and celebration on Monday was the absence of pitcher Alex Vesia, one of the team’s best relief pitchers for the last five seasons.

Vesia pitched in seven of the Dodgers’ 10 playoff games through the National League Championship Series, but was inactive for the World Series, not with the team as he was home with his pregnant wife Kayla. To date no details of what happened have been revealed, but the weight has been obvious over the last week and a half.

“It’s with a heavy heart that we share that Alex Vesia is away from the team as he and his wife Kayla navigate a deeply personal family matter,” the Dodgers said in a statement on October 23.

When the Dodgers returned home from Toronto after the first two games, Dodgers relievers all had Vesia’s number 51 stitched into their caps. Game 3 turned out to be perfect timing to show it, because all nine active relievers pitched in the 18-inning game.

“Ves, he means a lot to all of us. He i’s a huge part of this team and a huge part of that bullpen,” Clayton Kershaw said after Game 3. “We just wanted to do something to honor him.”

“I would like to let them speak about that when they want to,” Game 3 hero Will Klein said that night. “But just keeping them in our thoughts and our prayers. There’s bigger things than baseball, and he’s in all of our hearts.”

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Once the series shifted back to Rogers Centre in Toronto, the Blue Jays bullpen followed suit, and had number 51 written on the side of their caps as well. It was a welcome gesture amid the heightened competition.

“After [Chris] Bassitt struck me out, and then I was looking up at the board to see the replay, and that’s when I saw that he had 51,” Kiké Hernández said before Game 7. “Instead of being mad that I struck out, I was kind of going back to the dugout thinking, Did Bassitt play with Vesia at some point? And then after the game, I saw that everybody had them.

“For those guys to do that, it’s incredible. They’re trying to win a World Series, but they understand that this is — life is bigger than baseball, and baseball’s just a game. For them to do that with the stakes — where we were at with the stakes, hat’s off to them, and I want them to know that we appreciate ’em. Regardless of what happens tonight, we appreciate what they did.”

“I think it really speaks to the brotherhood of athletes, major league baseball players, that they’ll all say that baseball is what we do, but it’s not who we are, and for these guys to recognize Alex and what he and Kay have gone through, it’s — heartbreaking is not even a good enough descriptor,” manager Dave Roberts said before Saturday’s Game 7. “For them to acknowledge that, it just speaks to how much respect and love they have for one another. It’s a huge, huge tribute to Alex.”

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...x-vesias-51-on-their-caps-during-world-series
 
Dodgers notes: Clayton Kershaw, Freddie Freeman, World Series rewind

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Have you come down from the high yet? If yesterday’s parade is any indication, the Dodgers certainly haven’t—and why should they? I’ll be wearing Dodger blue, spontaneously bursting into “I Love L.A.,” and watching highlights all week.

In the spirit of letting the party continue, today’s notes feature some excellent analysis of Game 7, parade coverage, and a look at what the Dodgers’ historic World Series win means not only for L.A., but for the sport of baseball as a whole.

Dodgers Notes​


If you thought Game 7 was a phenomenal piece of baseball, you’re not alone. Tyler Kepner at The Athletic argues that this was the greatest Game 7 in World Series history and details the “confluence of chaos” that made it so special.

Millions of people tuned into that game—an average of about 26 million, to be exact, the Associated Press reports. That’s a 10% increase over the number of people who watched the last Game 7 we had in a World Series, when the Washington Nationals beat the Houston Astros in 2019. Viewership peaked to 31.54 million at 11:30 p.m., around the time the game went into extra innings.

In classic Clayton Kershaw fashion, the future Hall-of-Famer had no idea that the Dodgers had just won the World Series again—he was too busy preparing to enter the game if needed, writes Bill Plunkett at the Orange County Register.

The Dodgers’ World Series win has some big implications for the future of baseball, especially when it comes to a salary cap. Players aren’t sold on the idea, and neither is Chris Isidore at CNN, who chatted with economics professors to dig into the reasons a cap may not be the answer.

The Los Angeles Times had some fun Dodgers parade coverage, including conversations with fans who talked about what it means to be part of the Dodgers community and celebrate yet another World Series title. “This is insane,” Freeman said. “I feel like it’s almost double from last year.”

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...n-kershaw-freddie-freeman-world-series-parade
 
Dodgers 2026 spring training schedule

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Behold, a normal spring training is coming for the Los Angeles Dodgers! Major League Baseball on Wednesday unveiled the full schedule for spring training in 2026. The Dodgers will begin Cactus League play on Saturday, February 21 against the Angels in Tempe.

In each of the last two seasons, the Dodgers began their regular season in Asia more than a week before 28 other teams, first in South Korea against the Padres in 2024 and then against the Cubs in Japan in 2025. Both required truncated spring training schedules plus an earlier start than everyone else. We don’t yet know exact reporting dates, but per the collective bargaining agreement the earliest teams can require pitchers and catchers to report is 43 days before opening day, or February 11, 2026.

This year, things are mostly back to normal, except for the World Baseball Classic, which will be played during March. But that will only necessitate some players missing from exhibition games, while the full spring training schedule will still be played. To that end, the Dodgers will play against Team Mexico on March 4 at Camelback Ranch prior to the WBC.

DateOpponentLocation
Sat, Feb 21AngelsTempe
Sun, Feb 22PadresPeoria
Mon, Feb 23MarinersCamelback Ranch
Tue, Feb 24GuardiansCamelback Ranch
Wed, Feb 25DiamondbacksSalt River Fields
Thu, Feb 26White SoxCamelback Ranch
Fri, Feb 27GiantsScottsdale
Sat, Feb 28CubsCamelback Ranch
Sat, Feb 28RangersSurprise
Sun, Mar 1AngelsCamelback Ranch
Mon, Mar 2RockiesSalt River Fields
Tue, Mar 3GuardiansGoodyear
Wed, Mar 4Mexico*Camelback Ranch
Thu, Mar 5RedsGoodyear
Fri, Mar 6RoyalsCamelback Ranch
Sat, Mar 7RockiesCamelback Ranch
Sun, Mar 8A’sMesa
Mon, Mar 9BrewersMaryvale
Tue, Mar 10DiamondbacksCamelback Ranch
Wed, Mar 11OFFn/a
Thu, Mar 12RedsCamelback Ranch
Fri, Mar 13MarinersPeoria
Sat, Mar 14White SoxCamelback Ranch
Sun, Mar 15CubsMesa
Sun, Mar 15RangersCamelback Ranch
Mon, Mar 16BrewersCamelback Ranch
Tue, Mar 17RoyalsSurprise
Wed, Mar 18GiantsScottsdale
Thu, Mar 19OFFn/a
Fri, Mar 20PadresCamelback Ranch
Sat, Mar 21A’sCamelback Ranch
Sun, Mar 22AngelsAnaheim
Mon, Mar 23AngelsDodger Stadium
Tue, Mar 24AngelsDodger Stadium
*exhibition game before World Baseball Classic

Fifteen of the Dodgers’ 29 games in the Arizona portion of their spring training schedule are at Camelback Ranch, including the exhibition game against Mexico and one home game for the White Sox, co-tenants of the facility, on March 14. The Dodgers’ first game at Camelback Ranch is Monday, February 23 against the Mariners.

The exhibition Freeway Series will be held from March 22-24 back in Southern California, with Sunday at Angel Stadium in Anaheim followed by Monday and Tuesday at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.

The Dodgers open their 2026 regular season schedule at home against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday, March 26.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-schedule/107307/dodgers-2026-spring-training-schedule
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Blake Snell

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Blake Snell was the Dodgers’ No. 1 free-agent target last offseason, and the veteran left-hander made no secret of why he reunited with president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman in Los Angeles.

“Being able to pitched in a packed stadium, to make moments for people, this is where you want to play. I don’t think there’s a situation that you could be in better than being right here,” Snell said at his introductory press conference in December. “Knowing Andrew as well as I know him, that played a big part. It all started because he believed in me.”

He got that chance and then some, in the upper half of a quartet that formed the Dodgers starting rotation that carried the team to a championship in October.

It wasn’t necessarily a smooth ride, but it rarely is for Snell, who has reached 130 innings twice in his 10 major league seasons, the two years he won a Cy Young Award (2018, 2023). But even in the incomplete years there were usually stretches of brilliance, which earned Snell a five-year, $182-million contract with the Dodgers, his fourth major league team.

Snell allowed eight runs over his final seven regular season starts in 2022, gave up 19 runs over his last 23 starts in 2023 (that’s not a typo, and the four-month 1.20 ERA stretch cemented his second Cy Young), and finished 2024 with 12 runs allowed in his last 14 starts.

“That stretch in the second half last year is about as dominant as a pitcher could possibly be, and you saw the uptick in strike one,” Friedman said last December.

Snell started the home opener for the Dodgers on March 28, and beat the Tigers despite walking four and striking out two. He walked four and struck out two again against the Braves six days later and allowed five runs, but the Dodgers later won that game anyway. Snell was off the hook for the loss, but he’d be on the shelf for a while with left shoulder inflammation.

Tyler Glasnow, who was sidelined for the Dodgers’ postseason run in 2024 with an elbow injury, was again injured in 2025, sidelined like Snell with shoulder inflammation in April. Glasnow made it back first, in July, then Snell returned on August 2 after missing four months. That locked the Dodgers rotation into place, along with Shohei Ohtani by August getting fully stretched out two months into returning to two-way status.

Snell allowed 14 runs over his final nine regular season starts. There was a five-run start in Pittsburgh on September 4 — part of the Dodgers’ last truly bad week of 2025 — but Snell followed with consecutive scoreless starts with double-digit strikeouts.

Blake Snell convinced Dave Roberts to let him stay in the game while Alex Vesia was already jogging onto the field pic.twitter.com/RUIdx3vIEe

— Talkin’ Baseball (@TalkinBaseball_) September 18, 2025

The last of those was against the Phillies on September 17 at Dodger Stadium, and he was leading 3-0 in the seventh inning. Two walks with two outs — Snell’s first two walks of the night — brought the tying run to the plate, and Dave Roberts made the walk to the mound with Snell at 107 pitches.

Shaking his head and telling Roberts, “I got this,” Snell talked his way into staying in the game, and finished the frame with his 12th strikeout of the night.

Faith in his starting pitchers was a 180 from 2024 for Roberts, who had only three pitchers in his postseason rotation and a strong, deep bullpen. This year the bullpen was shaky and depleted, and the Dodgers had so many starters that a handful of them were only used in relief in October. But it started with Snell, who was dominating the Dodgers in Game 6 of the 2020 World Series, but was famously removed by Rays manager Kevin Cash in the sixth inning after pitching twice through the order.

“It was a moment in time that I learned from. I told Andrew that if I wanted to stay out there longer, I should have done a better job before that game to make that decision easier on Kevin,” Snell said at his introductory press conference last December. “It was ultimately up to me to be a better pitcher there.”

He was that and then some this postseason, joining Clayton Kershaw (2017) and Walker Buehler (2020) as the only Dodgers to start three Games 1 in the same year. After completing six innings in none of his first 10 career postseason starts, Snell lasted at least six innings in four of his five starts, and averaged 6.53 innings.

Yes, Snell allowed five runs in both of his World Series starts and took the loss in both, but if anything those were in part due to the Dodgers’ subpar bullpen. Snell struggled through five innings in Game 1 but was asked to start the sixth of a tie game. In Game 5 Snell was pushed to 116 pitches as the Dodgers held off as long as possible in turning the game over to the bullpen. Five of Snell’s 10 runs allowed in the Fall Classic scored after he left the game.

In total, Snell’s body of work in the postseason was more than solid, including four outs of scoreless relief in Game 7 of the World Series, with 3.18 ERA in 34 innings and a major-league-leading 41 strikeouts, the most ever by a Dodgers pitcher in one postseason.

2025 particulars​


Age: 32

Stats: 2.35 ERA, 3.20 xERA, 11 starts, 61 1/3 IP, 26 walks, 72 strikeouts, 1.3 bWAR, 1.9 fWAR

Postseason: 3-2, 3.18 ERA, 34 IP, 13 walks, 41 strikeouts

Salary: $64.8 million (entire $52 million signing bonus, plus $26 million salary, less $13.2 million deferred)

Game of the year​


The Dodgers started on the road in their final three postseason series, adding an extra layer of difficulty to their path to a championship. Snell was up first in the NLCS against the Milwaukee Brewers, whose 97 wins were more than any other major league team. During the regular season, the Brewers were 6-0 against the Dodgers, but they never faced Snell.

Snell in Game 1 of the NLCS allowed a single by Caleb Durbin to open the third inning and then promptly picked him off first base, and cruised the rest of the way. Snell retired his final 18 batters faced and completed eight scoreless innings with 10 strikeouts. That put Snell in very select company, joining Sandy Koufax (twice) and Clayton Kershaw as the only Dodgers pitchers with a postseason start of double-digit strikeouts and no runs allowed. They would take on one more member a few days later, but more on him later.

In all of MLB postseason history, there have only been two starts longer than six innings in which the pitcher based the minimum number of batters — Don Larsen in his perfect game in 1956 for the Yankees against the Brooklyn Dodgers, and Snell in Game 1 of the NLCS.

Roster status​


Snell is under contract for four more seasons, plus a conditional club option for 2030. His salary for 2026 is $26 million, of which $13.2 million will be deferred to 2035-46.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107215/blake-snell-2025-dodgers-review
 
Tony Gonsolin designated for assignment, Dodgers add Ryan Ward & Robinson Ortiz

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Thursday was a busy transactional day for the Dodgers, who exercised 2026 club options for third baseman Max Muncy ($10 million) and relief pitcher Alex Vesia ($3.65 million) but also made several other moves.

Tony Gonsolin was designated for assignment, which made room on the full 40-man roster for Muncy’s return. But it was a tough break for Gonsolin, who came back from Tommy John surgery to make seven starts in 2025 but underwent another elbow surgery in August which included both an internal brace procedure and flexor tendon repair.

At best Gonsolin might return in the final month or two of 2026, and with five years, 152 days of service time he is eligible for salary arbitration and likely in line to make at least another $5.4 million next season.

Gonsolin was an All-Star in 2022 with the Dodgers, going 16-1 with a 2.14 ERA in 24 starts, then pitched through an elbow injury in 2023 before succumbing to Tommy John surgery that September. A ninth-round pick of the Dodgers in 2016 out of Saint Mary’s College, Gonsolin had a 3.34 ERA in 86 games with the Dodgers, including 78 starts, with 387 strikeouts and 149 walks in 411 2/3 innings.

The Dodgers also added slugging first baseman/outfielder Ryan Ward and left-handed pitcher Robinson Ortiz to the 40-man roster on Thursday. The deadline to set rosters for the Rule 5 draft isn’t until November 18, but both Ward and Ortiz would have been minor league free agents on Thursday had they not been added to the 40-man roster.

A relatively recent example of this early-offseason addition was left-hander Victor González, who was added to the Dodgers’ 40-man roster on October 31, 2019.

Ortiz was signed by the Dodgers out of Peravia in the Dominican Republic as an international amateur free agent in 2017. He pitched at all four minor league affiliates in 2025, posting a collective 2.73 ERA with 72 strikeouts (a 28.3-percent strikeout rate) and 33 walks in 59 1/3 innings over 48 games. The left-hander turns 26 in January.

Ward has been productive enough over the last three seasons in Triple-A that he set several Oklahoma City records for the Bricktown Era (1998-present) in various categories. Ward won Pacific Coast League MVP this season after hitting .290/.380/.557 with a 132 wRC+ for the Comets, and led all of minor league baseball in home runs (36), runs batted in (122), extra-base hits (73), and total bases (315).

With Freddie Freeman at first base and Shohei Ohtani at designated hitter, Ward’s only path to playing time with the Dodgers in 2025 would have been in the outfield, and the club instead opted to call up other outfielders with better defense and/or speed like Justin Dean and Esteury Ruiz.

Dean found a highly-specialized role with the Dodgers down the stretch, playing late-inning defense in center field and/or pinch-running. He played in 17 of the 28 games for which he was active during the regular season and only batted twice. In the postseason he played in 13 of 17 games but didn’t bat at all.

“The game is still the game,” Dean said in October. “So that might be a little bit more hyper focused, yeah, as far as my routine, but I’m still getting my hitting in and my working in the cage and stuff like that. So it’s still going through a normal day.”

The 28-year-old Dean was claimed off outright waivers by the San Francisco Giants on Thursday.

Michael Grove was sent outright to the minors. The right-hander did not pitch in 2025 after undergoing shoulder surgery in March. With three years, 90 days of service time, Grove would have been eligible for salary arbitration this offseason for the first time.

Grove, drafted by the Dodgers in the second round in 2018 out of West Virginia, pitched in parts of three seasons for the Dodgers, with a 5.48 ERA in 64 games, including 20 starts, with 151 strikeouts and 45 walks in 149 1/3 innings.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...ony-gonsolin-ryan-ward-robinson-ortiz-dodgers
 
Shohei Ohtani wins 4th Silver Slugger Award, Dodgers take team honor

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The Dodgers won a pair of National League Silver Slugger Awards on Thursday, one for star Shohei Ohtani and another as the best team on offense in the circuit. Voting is done by league managers and up to three coaches from each team.

It’s the fourth Silver Slugger Award for Ohtani as the top designated hitter in his league over the last five years, and his third in a row, including both seasons in Los Angeles.

Ohtani hit .282/.392/.622 with 55 home runs, 20 stolen bases, 146 runs scored, 102 RBI, and a 172 wRC+.

He is the first player ever to hit at least 50 home runs steal at least 20 bases in multiple seasons, doing so in both 2024-25 with the Dodgers. His 146 runs set a modern-era Dodgers record and was just the seventh season scoring at least that many runs since integration in 1947.

Ohtani led the majors in runs, total bases (380), and extra-base hits (89), and led the National League in slugging percentage, OPS (1.014), wOBA (.418), weighted runs created (148), OPS+ (179), and wRC+.

Ohtani is also in the top three in National League MVP voting by the Baseball Writers Association. He’s expected to win that award when it is announced next Thursday, November 13, which would be Ohtani’s fourth MVP award and third in a row.

Freddie Freeman, Max Muncy, and Will Smith were all also in the top three in voting at their position for a Silver Slugger Award, but the honors at their positions went to Pete Alonso at first base, Manny Machado at third, and Hunter Goodman of the Rockies at catcher.

Smith was pretty clearly the best-hitting catcher in the National League, at .296/.404/.497 with a 153 wRC+, compared to .278/.323/.520 with a 118 wRC+ for Goodman. But this is where Smith’s hairline fracture in his right hand cost him, in addition to missing 22 of the final 23 games of the regular season.

Goodman batted 143 more times than Smith and was able to compile more numbers in bulk, like 31 home runs, 28 doubles, five triples, and 91 RBI compared to 17 home runs, 20 doubles, one triple, and 61 RBI for Smith, for instance. In total Weighted Runs Created (wRC), which is not park adjusted, Goodman outpaced Smith there as well, 90-78.

The Silver Slugger team award started in 2023, honoring the best offensive team in each league. The Dodgers have won each of the last two seasons. This year the Dodgers lead the National League in runs scored (5.09 per game), slugging percentage (.441), OPS (.768), home runs (244), total bases (2,415), and wRC+ (113).

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...84/shohei-ohtani-silver-slugger-award-dodgers
 
What it was like at World Series Game 7 in person

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How does one begin to describe being in attendance at arguably the best game of baseball ever played?

I started this journey with you all in late April and early May of 2021. For the past four seasons, everything has been leading to this moment, to this setting. Not necessarily the outcome, but there are no more summits to climb, with only three stadiums left unexplored.

How can anything top going to Game 7 of the World Series, much less this Game 7 of the World Series? That question is one for another day.

I am likely one of the few people in the world outside of the Dodgers’ organization who attended both games in Tokyo, the last two regular-season games in Seattle, and the literal final game of the year at the Rogers Centre.

Season’s soundtrack​


As is tradition, I have created a wrap-up video for my travels during this 2025 season. One might notice that the bulk of field reports in 2025 have taken the form of song titles. This formulation was not accidental, but rather a roundabout way of having a private laugh. Song titles as essay hooks just fell into place, especially when the Dodgers had the road trip from hell after Labor Day.

Dave Itzkoff of The New York Times and I have been engaging in an intermittent private practical joke for the last couple of months. We are both fans of the HBO show Peacemaker starring John Cena. Its second-season theme song, “Oh Lord” by Foxy Shazam, is extremely catchy and arguably suits everything. The show’s cold open, which was often dramatic at the very least, would segue into the song, and the cast would dance with no expression. In context, it works; said aloud, one might question my sanity.

Itzkoff, I, and others have been testing this theory about the song because the internet is supposed to be a goofy, delightful place where one can and should be silly as a primary state of being.

If the 2024 Dodger season could be soundtracked to Kendrick Lamar’s Not Like Us, then I present the following argument that the completed 2025 season belongs to Oh Lord. If you do not believe me, one should check out my results with Kerkering’s Blunder, which concluded the NLDS, the end of the NLCS, Freeman’s walk-off in Game 3 of the World Series, where we all went a little mad that night, and the conclusion of the World Series.

If you want to condense eight months of adventures into a four-minute video with an earworm that works for both the good moments, the bad moments, the sentimental moments, and the moments of absolute insanity that no one will believe that someone outside of the team actually witnessed firsthand, then have at it.

Thanks for coming along with me. Not just this year but since the heady amateur days of 2021. It feels like I started this trek both a lifetime ago and last week. I have loved just about every minute of it, being blessed beyond measure, drinking the bounty of life with reckless abandon.

It’s my life


Saying that one is going to Game 7 of the World Series is an odd thing to say, much less do. Without being too dramatic, earlier that week, my doctors at Kaiser told me that a mass I was concerned about on my eyelid was not cancerous and could be removed in an outpatient setting.

Considering that father and stepfather passed from cancer within 18 months of each other, I was relieved. I did not discuss this issue with others previously because, until I knew more, nothing could be gained by worrying about the unknown.

Last year, I had a job opportunity fall through after I returned from Miami, having witnessed Shohei Ohtani transcend into godhood for an afternoon. As a result, even though prices for attending Games 4 and 5 of the World Series in the Bronx plummeted, the responsible thing to do was not to go.

So I sat on my hands and missed Brent Honeywell’s finest hour in Game 4 and the New York Yankees having an evening of self-immolation for the ages. My prudence, while correct, always bothered me as an opportunity that slipped through my grasp.

Accordingly, I decided to take a second crack at a denied opportunity in 2024. Naturally, while I did buy a World Series ticket for a potential Game 7 of a Dodgers/Seattle Mariners series, the matchup did not occur, and I received my money back with little hassle. Being told I did not have cancer put a figurative fire under me, as I asked myself a simple question: could I even pull something like this off?

I am gifted with travel logistics, but my specialty is long-term, careful planning, not last-minute slapdash shenanigans. It was relatively easy to put together, as just about everything could be cancelled with no cost to me in time for any flight to Toronto.

Considering the ongoing federal shutdown, I honestly did not want to risk flying out to Toronto on the same calendar day as the game, as the worst possible outcome would have been arriving at Rogers Centre too late to see most of the game.

I found a cheap hotel around the corner from Rogers Centre, and I figured the best strategy was to buy two one-way tickets, as purchased tickets can be refunded within 24 hours of purchase on most American airlines. I found a relative bargain for a seat at Rogers Centre. The ticket price was comparable to what I paid in Tokyo, in an area that I suggested in my own Rogers Centre guide.

I was not really paying attention to Game 6 of the World Series as I was hurriedly packing and getting the last details in place. On the True Blue LA writers Slack, everyone was justifiably freaking out when Barger’s Wedgeshot hit the wall.

View Link

Eric joked that I was stuck in place, much like the ball. It was not funny at the time, but it is quite funny now. I had everything in hand, ready to sprint out the door and head to San Francisco International Airport. In the end, I had a buffer of twenty minutes as the game dragged on.

KIKÉ TO MIGGY. THERE WILL BE A GAME 7! #WORLDSERIES pic.twitter.com/aGIkdrlM6e

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) November 1, 2025

I had only two sentences to say as I cut off communication with the writers here and rushed to San Francisco with literally minutes to spare.

“That’ll do. See you in Toronto.”​


I suggested a headline of’ “TOOTBLAN!!!” for the recap headline, but sometimes genius just is not appreciated in its own time. What saved me was the fact that my flight to Toronto was via Detroit, allowing me to use my pre-check status to shorten the security experience.

After checking into Canada and having some Tim Horton’s to pass the time, I finally made it to my hotel, which was literally around the corner from the back entrance of Rogers Centre. The bad news is that I had to wait for a couple of hours before finally napping for a couple of hours.


It was 40 degrees F (5 degrees C), which is cold for a Californian used to Bay Area weather. The Canadians I talked to found my views on the weather adorable. Not wanting to delay the proceedings, and wanting to take advantage of the fact that the gates opened three hours before first pitch, I got into away gray and crossed the street.

For @truebluela.bsky.social, for the final game of the year…we…are…live!!!Welcome to the Rogers Centre for Game 7 of the 2025 World Series!

Michael Elizondo (@elidelajandro.bsky.social) 2025-11-01T21:41:08.130Z

I spoke with a couple of people with MLB cameras who stopped me and chatted with me about the circumstances that brought me to Game 7. Folks stared as I entered the stadium, bought food, and made my way to my seat. I have been primarily a road fan for the last eight years, and I developed rules to handle the most ardent of jerks masquerading as fans.

There are stereotypes about Canadians, but I learned a long time ago in NLDS Game 2 in San Francisco, when a little old lady, a third of my size, tried to pick a fight with me because she thought Adric was a voodoo doll: people, when emotional, get dumb.

For most of the night, I felt a pensive, anxious energy from the majority of the home crowd and the Dodgers fans I was interacting with online. Honestly, I was making an active effort to enjoy the atmosphere of the setting. Barring a stinker of a game, I was determined to enjoy every moment of this night.

The Greatest Game Ever Played​

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After I finished eating, I watched the rest of the crowd eventually funnel in. The fireworks truly started in the third inning with the loudest reaction to a home run that I have ever heard. The video does not adequately reflect the literally deafening roar that followed Bo Bichette’s home run.

What followed was the greatest game I have ever seen played — a tight, well-played contest that teetered on a knife-edge for most of the night. The game had the benches clearing, bang bang plays with the season on the line, the slowest strike ’em out-throw ‘em out in history, and more.

If you liked tension and runners on base, this game was for you.

However, I did not count on the Toronto faithful standing for most of the night, regardless of who was at bat. The irony, considering the cost of seat prices, was that most people were not bothering to use them except during the breaks between innings. I did the best I could, but I complained to the True Blue LA staff that I was no longer suited for this kind of activity, as I had long not been a service worker.

While the Dodgers’ offensive struggles throughout the past month have been well-documented, credit to the Jays’ defense for making play after play to minimize the damage.

Most Dodgers fans who passed my seat were stressing out over the outcome. Truly, I was as calm as a cucumber who repeatedly said that I was not worried about this game’s outcome. Yes, this game was winner-take-all, but something I wrote earlier this week kept coming back to me:

Toronto sports have a history of failure (usually, almost always, hockey, but occasionally baseball). For the first time in this series, the weight of expectation is on the Blue Jays, who have two cracks at winning a title at home. It is all fun and games to be scrappy until someone expects something out of you.

Personally, I’m picking Yamamoto over Gausman eight days a week and twice on Sundays….

Someone is leaving Toronto in tears — I would prefer it to be their team over ours.

Sometime last month, I shared a documentary of the consistent and comedic failures of the NHL’s Toronto Maple Leafs in the comments here at True Blue LA. I knew next to nothing about hockey when I first saw this video. I was gobsmacked by the Leafs once having an owner who was a combination of Arte Moreno, Bob Nutting, and Marge Schott (with less overt racism). I am reasonably sure the documentary depressed those who sat through it.

Imagine if that same team finally built a talented roster and kept finding ways to lose in comedic fashion—every single year (from geographic lesser rivals (think the San Diego Padres but worse) to historic rivals to the eventual champions to the point where the team was broken up afterwards.

The point is that Game 7 failure and Toronto go together like chocolate and peanut butter. Yes, the Blue Jays outlasted the Seattle Mariners in the ALCS, but frankly, it was a matter of watching who would fail first.

While the Blue Jays were putting up more of a fight than their hockey neighbors from down the literal street, what kept me calm was that pensive energy I was feeling throughout the park. The home fans were almost in shock that they were winning, and for all the bluster, everyone was waiting for that shoe to drop.

I was confident that the Dodgers would prevail, but this game was the type where I would have been fine with either outcome, considering how entertaining and exciting it was.


That said, if the Blue Jays faithful went home in tears, I would not complain.

After Max Muncy’s home run in the eighth, Shohei Ohtani was guaranteed to bat one more time. In the ninth inning, I believed in the power of the rally cap and waiting inevitably for the destined clash between Blue Jays closer Jeff Hoffman and Ohtani.

It would have been something out of fiction. Miguel Rojas said nuts to that scenario and did it himself to the shock of everyone.

I can confidently say that I have never been as shocked to my core about a home run. The gaggle of Blue Jays fans around me, some of whom had been quite abusive all game, was silent. The few Dodgers fans in the stands were ecstatic.

I learned days later that Rojas’ availability in Game 7 was so uncertain that there were discussions to activate Michael Conforto in his place. Had Conforto played, the Blue Jays likely would have won.

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The Dodgers used all four of their aces in this game. When Yoshinobu Yamamoto came in to pitch in the bottom of the ninth, he truly did feel like the final boss for this World Series. Afterwards, I found that this belief was indeed correct.

The Jays had some measure of success against everybody but Yamamoto, so if the Blue Jays managed to get a walk-off on Yamamoto, they deserved to be champions. Honestly, the tension of the ninth inning did not register because I had total confidence in the defense backing up Yamamoto.

My initial thought was “of course this game is going to take extra innings. Pages have just flatted Hernandez – okay, sure, why not.” In retrospect, I may have been underestimating the Jays’ chances in the ninth.

Yamamoto held, and the Dodgers could not score despite loading the bases in the tenth. In the eleventh, Will Smith demonstrated why he is the best catcher in baseball, and my blood pressure finally spiked. For most of the game, my blood pressure remained stable and at normal levels, unlike the end of the failed Yamamoto no-hit bid on September 6th.

Watching the Dodgers claw all the way back and hold on to dear life in the bottom of the eleventh was an out-of-body experience. Even after Guerrero, Jr. doubled to start the inning, even with gulping breath, I did not doubt that Yamamoto would shut the door on the Blue Jays.

I even told my seatmates that to beat the champion, you have to knock him out, which was amusing considering that call was what Joe Davis used on the broadcast, which I did not see until much later. I watched the Blue Jays fans depart and loitered for about an hour afterwards, absorbing the vibes and memories, while unsuccessfully trying to find Stephen Nelson.

Inshallah. The job is done. Not a bad weekend in Toronto.

Michael Elizondo (@elidelajandro.bsky.social) 2025-11-02T04:49:49.002Z

The rest of it involved scrambling back across the street to write some promised copy for Eric and then heading to the airport two hours later for my 6 a.m. direct flight back to San Francisco. This write-up took longer than expected due to the task of sifting through emotions and memories.

Final thoughts of fire and rain​


No other ballgame can possibly compare to the magnitude and importance of this Game 7. I will never forget it. I must acknowledge this fact lest I spend time and effort trying to recapture a high of emotion that will likely never return.

In some ways, the parade and celebration were a mere denouement to a season that was uniquely mine in my travels. But as the song goes, I have been walking my mind to an easy time, my back turned towards the sun, Lord knows when the cold wind blows, it will turn your head around. While there is still time to talk about things to come, sweet dreams and other things are scattered on the ground.

I am always melancholy at the end of a season. This season, especially so. However, if you have made it to the end of this lengthy field report, please know that once winter gives way to spring, Adric and I will once again return to the road to provide in-person coverage of Dodger baseball.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...105930/final-field-report-game-7-world-series
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Teoscar Hernández

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Teoscar Hernández was a key cog in the Dodgers lineup during the 2024 championship run, and parlayed that into a three-year deal to return to Los Angeles that seemingly everyone wanted to happen. Year one of the deal saw regression, and the key will be finding out how much was aging and how much was due to injuries.

Hernández had the worst walk rate of his career at 4.8 percent, well below his 6.9-percent career rate and far worse than his 8.1-percent walk rate in his first year with the Dodgers. That fueled a .284 on-base percentage which ranked 138th among 145 qualified major league hitters.

Struggles in right field were the norm for Hernández, whose range was poor, most notably on display in an August 18 loss at Coors Field, in which a relatively routine flyout instead dropped in front of Hernández, which put the winning run on second base in the ninth inning in a rare loss to the Rockies. Hernández by Outs Above Average was at negative-9 this season.

Hernández missed 12 games with a groin strain in May, and was sidelined briefly in July after fouling a ball off his foot though that didn’t require an injured-list stint. It’s fair to wonder how much the injuries further limited him in the outfield, but Hernández was at negative-10 Outs Above Average in 2024 as well, split between right field and left field.

Perhaps the groin injury affected Hernández more at the plate. He hit .315/.333/.600 with a 155 wRC+ and eight home runs in 33 games prior to landing on the IL, then hit just .223/.268/.404 with an 84 wRC+ and 17 home runs in 101 games the rest of the regular season.

Hernández when healthy deepens the Dodgers lineup and gives them someone they are comfortable batting as high as third or fourth. He did hit 25 home runs for a fifth straight season. The trade off is you take the defensive shortcomings in exchange for a few timely bombs on a regular basis.

This was clear in a few games this postseason. Hernández had a ball clank off his glove that would have ended the first inning of Game 2 of the wild card series against the Cincinnati Reds, which led to two unearned runs. He got those runs back with a two-run double in the sixth inning that blew open a relatively close game. In Game 1 of the NLDS against the Phillies, Hernández played a drive by JT Realmuto into a triple, which beefed up what became a three-run inning. But then in the seventh inning, Hernández hit a three-run home run to turn the game around as the Dodgers won the road series opener.

Hernández drove in 13 runs during the postseason, a total bested in the playoffs by only Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (15) and Shohei Ohtani (14), and his five home runs are tied for the third-most by a Dodger in a single postseason.

2025 stats​


Age: 32

Stats: .247/.284/.454, 25 HR, 29 doubles, 89 RBI, 103 OPS+, 102 wRC+, 1.5 bWAR, 0.6 fWAR

Postseason: .257/.303/.486, 5 HR, 13 RBI, 116 wRC+

Salary: $25.5 million ($23 million signing bonus, plus $10 million salary, less $7.5 million deferred)

Game of the year​


In the Dodgers’ playoff opener, in Game 1 of the wild card series against the Reds, Hernández homered twice and had three hits. His three-run home run off Hunter Greene in the third inning broke the game open in what became a blowout.

TEOSCAR AND TOMMY GO BACK-TO-BACK. pic.twitter.com/K7H4yGKRNb

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 1, 2025

Honorable mention goes to Game 3 of the World Series, in which Hernández had four hits, joining Ohtani as only the fifth set of teammates each with four hits in a Fall Classic contest.

Roster status​


Hernández is under contract for two more seasons, plus a club option for 2028. He has a $12 million salary for 2026, of which $8 million is deferred

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange.../107274/teoscar-hernandez-2025-dodgers-review
 
Tragedy strikes the Vesia family

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As previously reported, before the rosters were announced for the 2025 World Series, Alex Vesia announced that he was stepping away from the team because of a “deeply personal family matter.” Vesia and his wife, Kayla, were expecting their first child at the time of the announcement.

“It’s with a heavy heart that we share that Alex Vesia is away from the team as he and his wife Kayla navigate a deeply personal family matter,” the Dodgers said in an issued statement. “The entire Dodgers organization is sending out thoughts to the Vesia family, and we will provide an update at a later date.”

The World Series pressed on because it had to. The Vesias navigated their family emergency because they had to.

Bigger than baseball​


Lost in the exuberant bliss of the Dodgers successfully defending their title (regardless of whether one was there to see it live) and the jubilation of the aftermath, there was a lingering dread. An unspoken fear that could only be made real and felt by all once the news that everyone had worked so hard to avoid finally came due.

Friday afternoon, Alex Vesia and his wife returned to the public square with heartbreaking news about their daughter.


Sterling Sol Vesia, the couple’s first child, passed away on Sunday, October 26. No further details were released at this time.

There are times when there is literally nothing to say and nothing that can be said, but we press on because silence is not an option.

For those keeping track of this timeline compared to the World Series games, it is a straight line from when the members of the Dodgers’ bullpen had Vesia’s 51 stitched into their caps for the rest of the series, starting in Game 3 on October 27th.

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“Ves, he means a lot to all of us. He is a huge part of this team and a huge part of that bullpen,” Clayton Kershaw said after Game 3. “We just wanted to do something to honor him.”

“I would like to let them speak about that when they want to,” Game 3 hero Will Klein said that night. “But just keeping them in our thoughts and our prayers. There’s bigger things than baseball, and he’s in all of our hearts.”

What happened next was truly extraordinary.

True Sportsmanship​


Once the World Series shifted back to Toronto, Eric Stephen reported that the Blue Jays’ relief core had taken the genuinely kind and extraordinary step of solidarity to adorn their own caps with Vesia’s 51 in white sharpie.

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“After [Chris] Bassitt struck me out, and then I was looking up at the board to see the replay, and that’s when I saw that he had 51,” Kiké Hernández said before Game 7. “Instead of being mad that I struck out, I was kind of going back to the dugout thinking, Did Bassitt play with Vesia at some point? And then after the game, I saw that everybody had them.

“For those guys to do that, it’s incredible. They’re trying to win a World Series, but they understand that this is — life is bigger than baseball, and baseball’s just a game. For them to do that with the stakes — where we were at with the stakes, hat’s off to them, and I want them to know that we appreciate ‘em. Regardless of what happens tonight, we appreciate what they did.”

“I think it really speaks to the brotherhood of athletes, major league baseball players, that they’ll all say that baseball is what we do, but it’s not who we are, and for these guys to recognize Alex and what he and Kay have gone through, it’s — heartbreaking is not even a good enough descriptor,” manager Dave Roberts said before Saturday’s Game 7. “For them to acknowledge that, it just speaks to how much respect and love they have for one another. It’s a huge, huge tribute to Alex.”

The Dodgers exercised Vesia’s contract option for 2026 on Thursday. One can only imagine the response Vesia will get during Spring Training and his first time taking the mound for the Dodgers in 2026.

In the interim, sorrow poured in from all corners of baseball for the Vesia family’s loss, with many Dodgers fans donating to The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, with $30,000 being donated as of November 7.

Dodgers fans ease Blue Jays’ World Series pain with donations to SickKids. Many fans donated $51 as a tribute to the Blue Jays relievers who put the number 51 on their caps to pay respects to L.A. pitcher Alex Vesia.

https://t.co/tACOleR8iU

— Toronto Star (@TorontoStar) November 7, 2025

Friend of the site and journalist Molly Knight likely had the most apt words for this terrible situation:

There’s nothing I can add here to give peace to the Vesia family right now as they navigate the unthinkable. “I’m so sorry for your loss” feels so hollow, but we say it anyway because it’s better than not saying anything at all.

It breaks my heart that the Vesias waited until well after all the confetti from the Dodgers victory parade had been swept up from the streets of downtown Los Angeles to make this announcement, though maybe this much time was needed for them to even find the words.

Please continue to keep Alex, Kayla, and their family in your thoughts, and shower them with love wherever possible. And please be good to each other.

No one is guaranteed a tomorrow. It costs nothing but effort to be kind. Sometimes all we can do is make a gesture, even a feeble one, because to do nothing, to say nothing, is unconscionable. For everyone here at True Blue LA, we offer our deepest and most heartfelt condolences to the Vesia family during this darkest hour.

We will provide relevant updates as they become available, such as information on where to send donations, if any are requested, and other pertinent details.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107412/tragedy-vesia-family-aftermath
 
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