Game 7 Dodgers vs Blue Jays Makes History
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Nine first-timers got an award this year, including rookie Javier Sanoja (utility, Marlins), while three players — Yankees pitcher Max Fried, Guardians left fielder Steven Kwan and Cubs left fielder Ian Happ — won the award for a fourth time.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have a dynasty. Their 5–4 win over the Toronto Blue Jays on Saturday night, in one of the best winner-take-all games in World Series history, makes them the first repeat champions in a quarter-century.
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Game 7 ninth inning: How Dodgers' Miguel Rojas and Andy Pages created one of the most exciting frames in baseball history
Miguel Rojas, who hit just seven home runs in the regular season and has hit double-digit home runs only once in 12 major league seasons, blasted a game-tying home run to left field, evoking memories of Rajai Davis' unlikely game-tying shot in Game 7 of the 2016 World Series.
It might be time to cut Isiah Kiner-Falefa some slack. A former Los Angeles Dodgers star tried to defend IKF, but he got one part of his argument dead wrong.
Heading into Game 7 of the World Series on Saturday night, the Blue Jays felt good about where they were from a pitching standpoint. The belief was that, if Max Scherzer could just start them off on the right foot,
Dodgers fans are not cutting Teoscar Hernandez any slack for the blunder he made in right field in the fourth inning of Game 5.
The Blue Jays were one win from a World Series title but suffered two consecutive heartbreaking losses that helped the Dodgers repeat as champions.
Game 7 of the 2025 World Series was one of the wildest, and to some extent that’s expressed as easily as “a deciding World Series game went to extra innings,” which had happened just twice before in baseball history.