October 31, 2025

WIll Blue Jays Win First Title In 32 Years Or Will Dodgers Rebound And Force Game 7?

The 2025 Major League Baseball season began in Tokyo, Japan, and it will end in Toronto, Canada. This is the first time a season has both begun and ended outside the United States. The Dodgers won way back on March 18 and they hope to win both tonight and Saturday night, and repear as World Series champions.

Los Angeles trails in the series 2-3 and are calling upon Yoshinobu Yamamoto to stifle the Toronto Blue Jays' bats, while simultaneously hoping to break out of their recent hitting slump. The Dodgers are hitting .201/.296/.354 in the World Series. (In Games 4 and 5, LA is 10-for-61 (.164), with eight singles .)

The noodle bats abound: Mookie Betts (.130, 3-for-23), Max Muncy (.150, 3-for-20), Kike Hernandez (.211, 4-for-19, zero walks, 10K), Tommy Edman (.143, 3-for-21). . . . The only Dodgers batting over .238 are Teoscar Hernandez (.318, 7-for-22), Shohei Ohtani (.316, 6-for-19, 2 doubles, 3 home runs, 7 walks) and Freddie Freeman (.250, 5-for-20, 4 walks (.400 OBP)).

Teams in the Blue Jays' position (breaking a 2-2 tie by winning Game 5 on the road in a 2-3-2 series) have won the series 74.1% of the time.

The 2025 Dodgers have lost their last two games and need to win their next two games. How often did the pattern LLWW appear in their schedule? Twelve times:

April 7-11, 12-15, 23-27
May 18-21, 24-27
June 6-9
July 9-13, 26-29
August 12-16, 22-25
September 15-18, 21-25

Yamamoto has been superb in his brief postseason career (two seasons). In six of his eight postseason starts, he's allowed two earned runs or fewer. He comes into Game 6 having thrown two consecutive complete starts, against the Brewers in NLCS 2 (9-3-1-1-7, 111) and against the Blue Jays in Game 2 (9-4-1-0-8, 105) of this series. 18 innings, 7 hits, 1 walk, 2 runs, and 15 strikeouts. (I'll mention his other WS start, in Game 2 last October, because he shut down the Yankees (6.1-1-1-2-4, 86).

Also: In the last 55 years, only three pitchers have thrown three complete games in a postseason: Luis Tiant (1975), Orel Hershiser (1988), Curt Schilling (2001).

Toronto will send Kevin Gausman to the hill, who was on the losing side in Game 2 (6.2-4-3-0-6, 82). The Blue Jays have a ton of momentum, winning Games 4 and 5 in Los Angeles after losing in 18 innings in Game 3. George Springer is back atop the lineup. (This may be limited to Sportsnet, but I have seen a pro-Jays commercial that puts Springer's seventh-inning, lead-grabbing, three-run homer against Mariners in ALCS 7 on par with Joe Carter's World Series-winning blast against the Phillies in 1993. Nonsense

2025: The Mariners held a 3-1 lead in the bottom of the seventh of Game 7. The Blue Jays' win probability was at 22%. The inning unfolded against Bryan Woo thusly: Addison Barger walk (29%). Isiah Kiner-Falefa single (39%). Andres Gimenez sacrifice bunt (37%). Eduard Bazardo replaced Woo. Springer homered to left (77%), giving Toronto a 4-3 lead (win probability increased by 40%). The Mariners retained a win probability of 26% as they began the top of the eighth. They trailed by one run and would come to bat for at least two more innings. At the start of the ninth inning, their win probability had dropped to 17%. I don't know how many 2025 games in which the winning team began the ninth inning with a 17% win probability, but I'll bet it's over 30. Unfortunately, the Mariners went down in order in both innings.

1993: Carter's shot off Mitch Williams came in Game 6 (which I watched in the Brooklyn apartment of a hardcore Phillies fan; I don't know where Carter was when the TV was shut off, but he hadn't touched home plate, that's for sure), not a decisive Game 7. Even if the Blue Jays had lost that game 6-5, there would have been another game the following night. Toronto led 5-1 after six innings (94%), thanks to a strong performance from Dave Stewart (6-2-1-3-2, 99). But Stewart also faced three batters in the seventh and the Phillies went walk, single, home run (Dykstra, 69%). Another run in that inning tied the game 5-5, dropping the Blue Jays' likelihood of a win at 37%. And it kept dropping: 26% (end of 7), 32% (mid 8), 17% (end of 8), 21% (mid 9). With Mitch Williams on the mound: Henderson walk (35%), White F7 (22%), Molitor single (34%), Carter home run (100%). The play added 66% to Toronto's win probability. 

And it fuckin won the World Series. Which is a much bigger deal than winning a pennant and getting the chance to play in the World Series. Springer's home run was a hell of a moment for Blue Jays fans, especially for those fans born after Carter's heroics, which thus have been relegated to "history".

Does David Ortiz's game- and series-winning home run against the Angels on par with either of his game-winning hits against the Yankees in the ALCS? No. Of course not.

Out of curiosity, I looked at those three games. 

ALDS 3: Boston begins B10 at 66%. Rodriguez pitching, Damon single (73%), Bellhorn bunt-FC (65%), Reese pinch-run, Manny K (57%), Washburn pitching, Ortiz home run (100%). Added 43%.

ALCS 4: Boston begins B12 at 66%. Quantrill pitching, Manny single (73%), Ortiz home run (100%). Added 27%. (Extra: Roberts' steal in the ninth added 25%!)

ALCS 5: Boston began B14 at 66% (this is standard in the middle of an extra inning; WP is at 50% after each full extra inning). Loaiza pitching, Bellhorn K (59%), Damon walk (65%), Cabrera K (57%), Manny walk (62%), Ortiz single (100%). Added 38%.

In this case, the order of importance of those hits (ALCS 4, ALCS 5, ALDS 3) is in reverse proportion to their value, according to win probability.


Trey Yesavage has left his mark on this postseason:

Yesavage has eight major league starts on his resume. Five of those came in this postseason. He is the first major league pitcher to make even three postseason starts within his first eight games and the first pitcher in history to start multiple World Series games within his first eight career games.

Yesavage's 12 strikeouts in Game 5 set a World Series record for rookie pitchers, surpassing Don Newcombe (11 Yankees, 1949 WS 1). Yesavage issued no walks, becoming the first pitcher to strike out 12+ and not walk anyone in a World Series game.

Yesavage struck out each batter in the Dodgers' starting lineup at least once. He's the third starting pitcher in World Series history to do that, joining Bob Gibson (1968 WS 1, Tigers) and Randy Johnson (2001 WS 2, Yankees).

Yesavage got the Dodgers to swing-and-miss 23 times, the most by a pitcher in a World Series game since pitch tracking began eighteen years ago (2008).

Yesavage has two of the seven postseason games in which a rookie struck out 11+ batters. (He struck out 11 Yankees in ALDS 2.) He's the first rookie in postseason history with multiple 10+-strikeout games and the first to do so before his 23rd birthday.

Yesavage became the second pitcher in World Series history with 10+ strikeouts in the first five innings. He joined Sandy Koufax (1963 WS 1, Yankees).

Yesavage is the second pitcher to have a 10+K postseason game in his career, joining Gerrit Cole. Yesavage is the first to it twice in the same postseason (i.e., his "career").

Yesavage made only three MLB starts before this postseason and did not record 10 strikeouts in any of them. He's is the first pitcher in history to have his first two career 10+ strikeout games in the postseason. He has more strikeouts in the World Series (17) than in the regular season (16).

Yesavage became the youngest pitcher with 10+ strikeouts in a World Series game (22 years and 93 days). Smoky Joe Wood of the Red Sox was 22-349 when he struck out 11 Giants in 1912 WS 1

Yesavage is the third-youngest pitcher with 10+ strikeouts in any postseason game. The previous two: John Candelaria (21-335, 1975 NLCS 3, 14 K vs Reds) and himself (!) (22-69, 2025 ALDS 2, 11 K vs Yankees).

Happy Halloween!

October 29, 2025

WS 4: Blue Jays 6, Dodgers 2
WS 5: Blue Jays 6, Dodgers 1

Blue Jays - 002 000 400 - 6 11  0
Dodgers - 010 000 001 - 2  6  0

Blue Jays - 200 100 210 - 6  9  0
Dodgers - 001 000 000 - 1  4  0

Now that the Dodgers' starting pitching has come back down to Earth and the Blue Jays are proving that every spot in their lineup can contribute at any time, I'm finding it difficult to imagine a scenario in which the American League champions lose two consecutive games in Toronto.

The Blue Jays seem to have everything lined up to win their first World Series title in more than 30 years. The Toronto franchise is playing in its third World Series -- and it leads the Dodgers 3 games to 2 games. In the previous two, the Blue Jays beat Atlanta 4-2 in 1992 and the Phillies 4-2 in 1993. If they win on Friday night at Skydome, they will beat the Dodgers 4-2.

After the exhausting brilliance of Monday's 609-pitch marathon, the greatest game I have seen in a very long time (perhaps since the other 18-inning World Series game back in 2018), the next two games were standard contests between two good teams. Similar scoring in the first three innings, a lead-expanding rally by Toronto in the seventh, and a general feeling that the Dodgers have lost . . . something . . . cohesiveness, perhaps. They have not presented themselves as a unified team at the plate for the last two nights, that's for sure. Los Angeles is 10-for-61 (.164) in Games 4 and 5. Of those 10 hits, eight are singles. They have gone 0-for-6 with RATS. Their three runs were driven by a solo home run, a fly out, and a ground out. In Game 5, the Dodgers has as many hits as wild pitches (four).

In Game 4 on Tuesday, the Blue Jays faced the possibility of trailing 1-3 in the series and knowing they might be forced to watch the Dodgers repeat as World Series champs with 50,000 of their fans. Shane Bieber (5.1-4-1-3-3, 81) allowed a run in the second inning due to a momentary loss of control. A four-pitch walk to Max Muncy, a single to right (on a 2-1 pitch) by Tommy Edman, and a sac fly to from  Kiké Hernández gave the Dodgers a 1-0 lead. The Blue Jays answered immediately against Shohei Ohtani in the third. With one out, Nathan Lukes, atop the lineup with George Springer out with "right side discomfort", singled and Vladimir Guerrero hammered a sweeper over the wall in left-center for a lead-grabbing two-run homer.

Bieber allowed only two baserunners over the next three innings --  a single in the third and a walk in the fourth -- and both of those came with two outs. He pitched a clean fifth but left a bit of a mess in the sixth. Freddie Freeman singled off Guerrero's glove at first for a single. Will Smith lined out to center and Teoscar Hernández singled to center. Mason Fluharty (who allowed a .157 average to lefty batters this season) came in to face LH-hitting Max Muncy -- who lifted the first pitch to left center for the  second out. Edman, a switch-hitter, opted to bat righty, and struck out on three pitches.

Excited by that escape, perhaps, Toronto batted around in the seventh against three Los Angeles pitchers. Ohtani threw only three pitches before being lifted, but allowed a single to Daulton Varsho and a double off the left-center wall to Ernie Clement. Anthony Banda took over. It was during Andrés  Giménez's eight-pitch at-bat that my Telus connection to Sportsnet dropped out and sputtered off and on until things cleared up in the bottom of the eighth.

Gimenez singled to left to give the Jays a 3-1 lead. Isiah Kiner-Falefa lined out to third and first base umpire Adam Hamari said Muncy's throw to first doubled off Giménez. The Dodgers challenged the call at first and Hamari's call was overturned. Ty France batted for Lukes and brought Clement in with a groundout to second. Guerrero was walked intentionally and Blake Treinen came in to pitch with Toronto up 4-1 and runners at first and second with two outs. As Ohtani had done to begin the inning, Treinen allowed two hits in a span of three pitches. Bo Bichette singled to deep left to score Giménez and Addison Barger grounded a single past shortstop to bring Vlad home. Alejandro Kirk lined out to right to end the inning. Blue Jays 6-1.

Toronto continued getting baserunners, stranding men at second and third in the eighth and first and second in the ninth. Los Angeles went in order in the seventh and had a leadoff single in the eighth wiped out on a double play. Teoscar H. walked to begin the ninth, went to third on Muncy's double to right, and scored on Edman's grounder to third. Louis Varland struck out Kiké H. and then intentionally balked Muncy to third to stop him from giving info about the catcher's positioning to the batters. The distraction having been dealt with, Varland retired Alex Call on a line drive to left.

The main story of Game 5 was Trey Yesavage (7-3-1-0-12, 104), who was as dominating and as impressive as he was against the Yankees in Game 2 of the ALDS, back on October 5. In that game, he pitched 5.1 no-hit innings and recorded 11 of his 16 outs "by way of the K". Facing the Dodgers in hostile territory, Yesavage became the youngest pitcher (22 years, 93 days) to have 10+ K in a World Series game. (Of his eight major league starts in 2025, five came in this postseason.)

The other story was David Schneider and Vladimir Guerrero beginning the game with two solo home runs, which had never before occurred in a World Series game. Schneider belted Blake Snell's first pitch to left, estimated at 373 feet. Guerrero looked at a called strike before also clearing the left field wall, at an estimated 394 feet. Three pitches and Toronto led 2-0. The Blue Jays also challenged a double play call and had it overturned (Jordan Baker blew the call at first this time), but could not take full advantage.

Yesavage retired the first seven batters (including five in a row) before Kiké H. got ahold of a fastball at 93 and homered to left (407 feet). It was barely a speed bump for Yesavage, who fanned three of the next four batters, and gave up only two infield singles and an HBP over the next 4.2 innings.

Varsho tripled to right to begin the top of the fourth. Teoscar H. did not have a chance to catch sinking liner and should have played it safe. Instead, he went into a dive and the ball skipped by him. Varsho tagged and scored on Clement's line out to center. Snell issued a walk, but struck out the next two. He also began the fifth with a walk, but a double play took care of the runner.

LA manager Dave Roberts trule trusts only a few bullpen arms, so he sent Snell out for the seventh at 93 pitches. Barger singled to the opposite (left) field, the ball sailing through the spot normally occupied by Muncy, who was playing the batter to pull. IKF attempted to bunt twice before Snell wild-pitched the runner to second. IFK grounded out to shortstop. Giménez worked an eight-pitch walk. After a mound conference, Schneider stepped in. Snell (6.2-6-5-4-7, 116) got two called strikes, then threw three balls (one of which was another wild pitch), before a swinging strikeout. Snell threw the most pitches in the seventh inning: 15-11-19 21-12-14 23 = 116.

Edgardo Henriquez, who was impresive with 101/102 heat in Game 3, had nothing tonight. Facing Guerrero, he went to a full count before walking him with a wild pitch that scored Barger and moved Giménez to second (where he would have been anyway because of the aforementioned walk). After a called strike to Bichette, Henriquez threw three balls (inside, away, very high) before the Son of Dante singled to right, bringing in Toronto's fifth run. Henriquez then issued a four-pitch walk before Banda got the final out (the first ball was actually a strike but the next three were: in the dirt, well outside, and up at sasahe height).

Clement led off the eighth with a single, took second on a Banda wild pitch and scored on IKF's single  through the 5/6 hole into left.

As for Yesavage, he stranded two runners in the fourth, and retired the side in order in the fifth and sixth. He began the seventh with a K before Teoscar H. singled. Edman batted from an 0-2 count to 3-2 but hit into a 5-4-3 double play.

Seranthony Domínguez had an easy eighth. A first-to-pitcher ground out, a strikeout, a walk (during which plate umpire Alan Porter blew the calls on consecutive pitches), and a line out to first. Jeff Hoffman gave up a leadoff single to start the home ninth, but the runner went no further. A fly to left and two strikeouts ended the game. Describing the pitches to the last two hitters would consist of repeating the phrase "down and away" over and over, like Jim Garrison in a court room. And that's today's Sir Story.

So . . . I fuckin cannot stand Buck Martinez. His extremely nasal voice should make him a very popular target of impressionists, but he calls Blue Jays games in Canada, so no one gives a shit. Both Buck and Ron Shulman slipped up and acted professionally during Game 3, probably because both teams were so evenly matched and the game was so tense and constantly amazing, they forgot their roles as mindless shills for the Jays. I had to mute the TV several times during Game 4 and grind through a few other rough spots. 

On nights I worked, the game was muted on my computer, but my partner Laura was watching Sportsnet and being tortured. She said they both had given up any pretext of neutrality and were gushing non-stop over the Blue Jays like a couple of ignorant fans in the stands. When they weren't mindlessly polluting the airwaves by repeating every worthless, overused cliche you can think of, they  were busy spinning everything that happened on the field as a "win" for the Blue Jays. Even when the Jays did something that was clearly not ideal (like swinging at pitches way out of the strike zone), they argued that, no, it was great because blahblahblahblah. I kind of wanted to go back and re-watch a bit with the sound on, but I never did. (I'm amazed at people who listen to the fascists on US television (either the shameless propaganda channels or from shitposters in government) and transcribe and report on what they say. A younger me would love to work at a place like Media Matters, but I couldn't do that kind of work.)

The two dongs to start the game clearly super-charged their inanity muscles and I scribbled some of the worst examples in the first two or three innings. 

Shulman, T1: "They can't wait to get to the ballpark." (Players on other WS teams avoid going to the park for as long as they can.)

Shulman, T2: He seemed truly astounded that between the ALCS and WS, Barger flew home for the birth of his third child. The ALCS ended on a Monday and the WS did not start until Friday. The more amazing thing is that the timing worked out for the Barger family, not that Barger flew round-trip from Toronto to Florida. Depending on where he lives, the flight is between three and four hours. He wasn't going to fuckin New Zealand for fuck's sake (which could take 22+ hours).

Martinez, T3: "Who does this better than Kirk?" He went gaga over Kirk fouling off a 2-2 pitch in the dirt. Here's a small example of a bad decision being presented as great. Kirk's foul kept the count at 2-2, but not swinging at a pitch off the plate and very close to the ground would have improved the count to 3-2. Kirk then swung and missed the next pitch and ended the inning. No one does it better!!

Martinez, B3: Buck also praised ALL of the Jays hitters for running up Snell's pitch count. He threw 45 pitches in the first three innings. Snell was not sharp, but the sooner the Jays got into LA's bullpen, the better, right? Probably. But after two innings, Yesavage had thrown two more pitches than Snell (27-26) and one more pitch after three (47-46). Yesavage's pitch limit was far more strict that Snell's, so in fact it was the Dodgers that were doing a better job of rushing the opposing pitcher out of the game.

Shulman, T4: "It's only the fourth inning, but that run [putting Toronto up 3-1] seems very big . . ." It turns out that Dodgers' run was the extent of their scoring, so the third run was not big at all. Toronto could have won 2-1. Admitting it's only the top of the fourth is also an admission that feeling is all in your head and has no relationship to reality.

Martinez, B4: "This is a beautiful trip to the mound." Martinez was a catcher, so he's especially tuned in to what a catcher should do. But this praise is Sutcliffian in its inflating something minor into a Hall of Fame-worthy action.

Martinez, T7: Barger made a nice sliding catch on a line drive for the first out in the B6. Yesavage said something to Barger in the dugout as the T7 began. Speaking of the 22-year-old pitcher: "He knows what's going on around him." Most fans would assume he's utterly clueless, never turns around to look at his fielders at all (probably believes he's in Pittsburgh), but Martinez's astute analysis is pure in-game education.

Both announcers have said several times how LOUD Dodger Stadium is. They do not mean the fans, they mean the sound system. They say it's the loudest system in the majors by a wide margin. (And they call games at Skydome, which can be so loud between innings, it's impossible (literally) to converse with the person next to you. Though I doubt they would complain about the noise at Skydome if it was the worst.) You can tell through the TV that everything is cranked. They are especially fond of playing the slow droney bit from the beginning of "Iron Man" and the drum/cymbal clatter from the start of "Hot For Teacher". The noise is a real shame. We were at a Dodgers game late in 2003 and it was not like that at all. Organ music between innings, as if the whole point of being there was the baseball game. What a fuckin concept.

They have also described this series as being dominated by the splitter. A lot of pitchers on both teams rely heavily on split-finger fastballs. And yet every plate umpire's judgment on pitches at the bottom of the strike zone and below has been shit. Some calls have been eye-poppingly wrong. Low pitches are tough to judge in general, but I'd be extremely surprised if anyone in power at MLB considered this and assigned umpires who are the best, relatively speaking, at calling low pitches. Extremely surprised.

Shulman and Martinez are going to be absolutely unlistenable on Friday. But I don't want to experience Game 6 in silence. . . . Sigh. . . . If I mute, how will I know if these players "understand" that it's "Game 6"? How else will I learn that "this" is what they "play for"? Will all of them be wearing his "game face" ? And, perhaps most importantly, when a ballplayer is shown on TV, how can I be sure that he is a "ballplayer"?

October 28, 2025

WS 3: Dodgers 6, Blue Jays 5 (18)

Blue Jays - 000 400 100 000 000 000 - 5 15  0
Dodgers - 011 020 100 000 000 001 - 6 16  2

For the second time this postseason, baseball fans – and more casual postseason observers who do not obsess over the game from the moment the gates of spring training camps are unlocked in mid-February – have been treated to an extraordinary, unforgettable game that simply would not have occurred if the most radical of the rule changes imposed on the game by Commissioner Rob Manfred's tenure had been used, as it is during the regular season.

The extra-inning runner that is used during the regular season is not used during the postseason. It would appear that even Manfred understands, on some level, that he shouldn't shit on the most important games of the season by insisting upon his most infamous gimmick of a rule change. I don't believe in prayer, but I pray this obscene rule is erased as soon as Manfred's current tenure ends in 2029, and the basic foundation of the game, which had done quite well for 150 years, is restored. 

The Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays battled through eighteen innings on Monday night in the third game of the 2025 World Series, leaving fans of both teams utterly exhausted, as though they had run a marathon. For six hours and 39 minutes, the two teams battled in what truly deserved to be called a heavyweight bout before Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman hit a game-winning home run in the bottom of the 18th round inning. Los Angeles leads 2-game-to-1 in the World Series. (Earlier this month, the Seattle Mariners beat the Detroit Tigers 3-2 in 15 innings to win the American League Division Series.

This game is tied for the longest World Series game by innings with Game 3 of the 2018 World Series between the Dodgers and Boston Red Sox, a game won 3-2 by the Dodgers on Max Muncy's walkoff home run after seven hours and 20 minutes. (A couple of years ago, looking at the online box score and seeing 7:20 as the time of game, my first thought was that it must be a typo. Nope. The game ended for me at 3:30 a.m. in the Eastern time zone. I ended up not posting all that much about the game because I needed to get a bit of sleep before later that day. I went to bed around 4:15, got four hours of sleep, and worked my noon-to-midnight shift at a Toronto law firm. (My favourite factoid from that game: It lasted 15 minutes longer than the entire 1939 World Series, when the Yankees swept the Reds in a combined 7:05 (1:33, 1:27, 2:01, 2:04).)

That 2018 game featured 561 pitches. This "instant classic" had 609 pitches (48 more than in any other postseason game since at least 2000), which were disbursed over 153 plate appearances against a total of 19 pitchers (which is a record for a postseason game). The 37 combined runners left on base also set a postseason game record.

In a best-of-seven postseason series that is tied 1-1, the Game 3 winner has gone on to win the series 70 of 101 times (69.3%). Teams breaking a 1-1 tie with a home win in Game 3 in the current 2-3-2 format that have gone on to win the series 29 of 48 times (60.4%).

The best place to begin is probably with Shohei Ohtani. The man set several World Series records in this game because of course he did. If a game with Ohtani in it goes 18 innings, he's probably going to break a few all-time records. It would be surprising if he did not. Ohtani batted nine times and he reached base a record NINE TIMES. He went 4-for-4, with two doubles, two home runs, five walks (four intentional), three runs scored, and three RBI. The four BBIs was a new record. Then he went nine innings (as LA's DH), more than three hours, without facing a single pitch. He did not swing at a pitch after the seventh inning. He now shares the World Series record of four extra-base hits in a game with Chicago White Sox second baseman Frank Isbell, who hit four doubles in Game 5 of the 1906 World Series. . . . Ohtani will be the starting pitcher for the Dodgers in Game 4.

Ohtani At The Bat

1st inning: Double to right
3rd inning: Home run to right (increased LA lead to 2-0)
5th inning: Double to left-center, RBI cut Toronto's lead to 4-3 (he scored tying run)
7th inning: Home run to deep left-center (401 feet, first pitch, tied game 5-5)
9th inning: Intentional walk, thrown out trying to steal second
11th inning: Intentional walk
13th inning: Intentional walk
15th inning: Intentional walk
17th inning: Walk (four pitches)

[Some Ohtani factoids at end of post.]

Both teams seemed allergic to clean innings all night long. Of the 35 complete half-innings, only 10 were comprised of three straight outs. Once the game went into extras, I spent the top half of seemingly every inning anxiously watching the Dodgers' pitchers get in and out of trouble, before relaxing during the bottom half, happy to accept whatever the LA batters did or didn't do. . . . I was really hoping the game would last into a record 19th inning . . . and beyond. (I have this entire week off. I have nowhere to go, nothing to do.)

The Dodgers took a 2-0 lead on solo homers from Teoscar Hernández leading off the second and Ohtani with one out in the third. That inning ended with Freeman being thrown out at the plate by Blue Jays right fielder Addison Barger, who fielded a single from Will Smith and threw a perfect strike to Alejandro Kirk on the fly. Kirk was in perfect position to catch the ball and block the runner from the plate and tag Freeman out.

Toronto was retired in order in the first and third inning, while stranding runners at the corners in the second. Mark Wegner, the home plate umpire, screwed the Blue Jays in the second. With Bo Bichette on first, Daulton Varsho walked on a high 3-1 pitch. But Wegner fucked up twice: he called the pitch a strike and he waited so long before annoucing the blown call that a confused Bichette was picked off first base. Varsho ended up walking and Kirk singled, so Wegner's blown call and unprofessional delay likely stole at least one run from the Blue Jays.

Toronto broke through against Tyler Glasnow (4.2-5-4-3-5, 85) in the fourth. Vladimir Guerrero drew a full-count walk and Bichette reached on an error. After Varsho poped to left, Kirk crushed a first-pitch curve to left-center for a three-run dong. The Jays made it 4-2 with singles by Barger and Ernie Clement and a sac fly from Andrés Giménez.

The Dodgers tied things in the fifth off Max Scherzer (4.1-5-3-1-3, 79), pitching in the World Series for his fourth team (2012 Tigers, 2019 Nationals, 2023 Texas). Kiké Hernández grounded a single into to center. With one out, Mason Fluharty came in and gave up a run-scoring double to Ohtani (who had fanned three times in three previous at-bats against him). With two outs, Freeman lined a single down the right field line, scoring Ohtani with the tying run.

The two teams each scored in the seventh. George Springer led off the top half and hurt himself when he fouled the first pitch off. He left the game and Ty France took over the at-bat, striking out. Nathan Lukes grounded back to the pitcher for the second out. Blake Treinen relieved Justin Wrobleski, and gave up a single to Guerrero. Bichette fouled off four pitches before singling down the right field line. The ball got tangled up with a sound guy and Guerrero scored all the way from first. The throw from right field was to the first base side of the dish and Smith could not get back for a tag before the run scored.

Seranthony ("Sir Anthony") Domínguez began the bottom of the seventh by retiring Andy Pages on a fly to right. Ohtani was next and Toronto's decision during a mound meeting was between simply sending him to first base or going right after him. (The idea of nibbling and trying to get him to chase was dismissed as pointless.) They decided to pitch to him, but Domínguez's first offering was a grooved fastball at 98. He might as well have placed the ball on a tee. Ohtani took a swing that appeared so easy and controlled and relaxed, it was a small shock that the ball travelled 401 feet to deep left-center. Ohtani's second home run of the night re-tied the game at 5-5. With two outs, Domínguez walked Freeman and Smith and had a 3-1 count on Max Muncy, but got Muncy to ground out.

And 5-5 was how the score remained for the next ten innings. Toronto put runners on first and third, thanks to a Betts error and a single from Giménez off Jack Dreyer. Roki Sasaki took over and got two ground outs to escape the jam, the third out coming when he leapt skyward to spear Lukes' high chopper over the mound. Sasaki seemed sharp as he got the first batter in the ninth, but then couldn't find the plate. He walked Isiah Kiner-Falefa (who had pinch-run for Bichette two innings earlier) on five pitches. Varsho lined a full-count pitch towards right field. Freeman leapt and the ball deflected off his glove. Tommy Edman chased the ball into the outfield and then fired a throw to third base to get IKF, who had ill-formed ideas of getting to third. That was the second out and Sasaki walked Kirk before getting a force at second. The Blue Jays left two men on base in each of the seventh, eighth, and ninth innings, going 1-for-9 with RATS.

In the bottom of the ninth, Ohtani was walked intentionally with one out. He was also thrown out trying to steal before Betts fouled to right. It was the first of four consecutive intentional walks to Ohtani. The next time he actrually stood in the box and saw some pitches was when he walked on four straight ball sin the seventeeth inning.

Emmet Sheehan faced the Jays batters in the tenth. (Sportsnet analyist Buck Martinez informed the international audience: "This is a big game for both teams." I suppose there might have been a few seals on Baffin Island who were unsure about the stakes.) Sheehan needed only six pitches to get two outs before giving up a single to France and a double to Lukes. The Baltimore dong was lined to to right, but the Dodgers gunned down pinch-runner David Schneider at the plate 9-4-2. Edman, the cut-off man, took Teoscar Hernández's throw, and made a perfect relay throw to the plate. It was in plenty of time and as Will Smith gloved the ball, he turned to block the runner and protect the plate. The Blue Jays challenged both the umpire's out call and his ruling that Smith didn't block the plate before he had possession of the ball. They lost on both counts.

Bottom of the 10th: Blue Jays reliever Jeff Hoffman hit Smith with a pitch with one down. After Muncy struck out looking, Teoscar Hernández smacked an 0-2 pitch into left for a hit. Hoffman got Edman to foul out to Gerrero on his 33rd (and final) pitch of the night.

Top of the 11th: Sheehan avoids any drama, retiring Toronto's 3-4-5 hitters in order. Guerrero F8, Kiner-Falefa 1-3, Varsho K.

Bottom of the 11th: "Let's Go" Braydon Fisher, a rookie who had given up five runs in 5.2 postseason innings, is the seventh pitcher for Toronto. He strikes out Kiké Hernández on a diving curve and Clement catches Pages' line drive at third. Ohtani is put on first base and Mookie Betts singles to left. Ohtani appears to jog gingerly into second base. Roberts and a translator come out to chat, but everything seems fine. Freeman pops to left.

Top of the 12th: My scorecards have room for 12 innings, but the many pitchers on both sides (as well as several scrawled notes) have left little room at the bottom of the page, so I start a second scorecard. This is a scary fuckin inning. Facing Fisher, Kirk walks on five pitches (none of the four balls were close) and Tyler Heineman pinch-runs. The Blue Jays now have no position players on the bench. Myles Straw twice tries to bunt before lining to first. Clayton Kershaw is warming up for the Dodgers! Clement falls behind 0-2 and grounds the ball up the middle. Edman moves to his right, backhands the ball and fires to first. It's the second out, on a very close play. LA manager Dave Roberts has Giménez walked intentionally, putting runners at first and second. The move mystifies both Sportsnet announcers. Ron Shulman announces the move in a WTF voice and all Martinez can say is "very interesting" with a certain amount of wonder in his voice. Fisher has a 2-2 count on Schneider but misses with ball 3 – a pivitol pitch, because now the runners will be off with the pitch. Schneider hits a slow grounder towards third. Heineman is running to third and Muncy has his foot on the bag, forced to wait for the ball to get to him. Getting to third does not seem to be an urgent concern for Heineman, but he does make it to the safely base (without sliding). The bases are loaded and here comes Kershaw, who has announced he will retire after the World Series. He battles Lukes to a full count (bcbcb). His next three pitches are all a bit out of the strike zone, and would presumably be called ball 4 and force in a run, but Lukes offers at all of them, fouling the first two off before grounding out to second. Inning over, three left on base.

Bottom of the 12th: The Dodgers are retired in order. Fisher strikes out Smith and Eric Lauer, a lefty who made 15 starts during the season, gets two infield popups.

Top of the 13th: Edgardo Henriquez, a 23-year-old righty, takes over for the Dodgers, and alternates fastballs at 101/102 with sliders at 83/84. He hits Varsho in the back leg with a 102-mph fastball with two outs. Heineman, in his first postseason trip to the plate, flies to center.

Bottom of the 13th: Edman extends his arms and drives an outside 0-1 pitch to right-center.  Centerfielder Varsho was shaded towards left, and has a long run to get the ball. It's a double. Pinch-hitter Miguel Rojas bunts the potential winning run to third. Alex Call, another pinch-hitter (for Pages, who is 4-for-48 (.083) in this postseason), gets ahead 2-0 but pops to shortstop. Toronto manager John Schneider intentionally walks Ohtani (who reaches base for the seventh time, a new WS record). He also intentionally walks Betts, setting up an inning-ending force at every base, but also affording his pitcher absolutely no room for error. Freeman takes a ball before launching a fly to deep center. Varsho drifts back to the track and makes the catch. Schneider is a badass. (Buck Martinez: "This is a baseball game, folks.")

Top of the 14th: It's the bottom of the Jays lineup and Henriquez sets them down with a minimum of fuss: F8, 5-3, K.

Bottom of the 14th: Smith leads off and belts Lauer's eighth pitch to deep left-center, sending Straw to the wall for a very long (and for Dodgers fans, heart-stopping) out. Lauer is throwing a lot of pitches (and/or the Dodgers are making him work). After an eight-pitch F7, Lauer walks Muncy (seven pitches) and gives up a single to Teoscar Hernández (eight pitches). LA is again threatening to end the game, but Lauer suddenly needs only four pitches to get the final two outs: Edman pops to second (infield fly rule) and Rojas grounds to third.

Top of the 15th: Toronto's bats have cooled significantly since the twelfth. The last reliever in the Dodgers' pen, Will Klein, showcases a disgusting red beard that has obviously repelled all attempts at grooming. Perhaps it is a weapon to distract opposing hitters. Guerrero singles with two outs but is left at first when Kiner-Falefa strikes out looking.

Bottom of the 15th: GDGD says Brendon Little is now pitching for Toronto, but it's actually still Lauer (for the next two innings, in fact). Back at Skydome, it's 1:48 a.m. and a lot of fans are still watching the game on Skydome's huge board (which is extremely huge and high defintion). The team's admission charge of $15 seems greedy – why not free or a token $5 and make your $$ on food and drink?, but the remaining fans are getting their money's worth. Call grounds to second, Ohtani is walked intentionally, Betts flies to right, and Freeman lines out to deep left-center, as Varsho makes a nice running catch at the wall.

Top of the 16th: The Bue Jays go 1-2-3. It's quite boring, for a change: 4-3, P1, K. Guerrero eats an apple.

Bottom of the 16th: The Dodgers go 1-2-3. K, K, F8 to the track in right-center. Things have calmed down and I envision both teams settling into a groove of making outs for many innings.

Top of the 17th: Another clean inning for Klein. F8, K, L1. He's retired seven in a row! Sportsnet says that Fox's Tom Verducci is reporting that Dave Roberts will have a position player on the mound if the game goes into the 18th. Shulman and Martinez are skeptical. Why wouldn't Roberts have someone like Blake Snell (G1 starter) go for an inning or two instead?

Bottom of the 17th: Lauer is done after 4.2 innings (4.2-2-0-4-2, 68), having thrown the second-most pitches of any Jays pitcher (after Scherzer). Little is in and he strikes out Edman and gets Rojas on a grounder to short. Call singles to left-center and Toronto is more or less forced to pitch to Ohtani, hoping to maybe get him out rather than put the wnning run at second for Betts. But Little misses with four straight and Ohtani gets franked anyway. (Ohtani saw one strike after the fifth inning tonight, his HR in the seventh (which was also his last swing oif the game.) Betts, who has barely been an afterthought in this game, sees eight pitches and fouls to first. (He's 2-for-15 in the WS.)

Top of the 18th: No position player. It's Klein for his fourth inning (4-1-0-2-5, 72). Though, with one out, Yoshinobu Yamamoto (who threw a complete game in G2!) is warming up in the Dodgers bullpen. Guerrero walks, but is forced at second. Varsho also walks and the runners take second and third on a wild pitch before Heineman strikes out.

Bottom of the 18th: Freeman hammers a 3-2 sinker – the 609th pitch of the game – that is left out over the plate. This time, Varsho runs to the wall can do nothing. Little grabs his cap and walks off the field as the Dodgers celebrate.

The two longest World Series games by innings were both won at Dodger Stadium on solo home runs (hit on full counts) by the first batter in the home half of the 18th inning:

2018 WS Game 3 (October 26): Max Muncy led off the bottom of the 18th inning and homered on a full-count pitch (bbbcff) to left-center.

2025 WS Game 3 (October 27): Freddie Freeman led off the bottom of the 18th inning and homered on a full-count pitch (fbbbc) to center.

Four Dodgers played in both games: Max Muncy, Enrique Hernandez, Clayton Kershaw, and Mookie Betts (who was with the Red Sox).

Ohtani set a new postseason record by reaching base nine times in a game. The previous record was six times, held by Stan Hack (1945 WS 6), Kenny Lofton (1995 WS 3), and Kerry Carpenter (2025 ALDS 5).

Ohtani is one of four players to reach base nine times in any game (regular season or postseason) and the first to do so in the last 83 years. The other three: Max Carey (July 7, 1922), Johnny Burnett (July 10, 1932), and Stan Hack (August 9, 1942).

Ohtani is the first player in MLB history with 4+ hits and 5+ walks in a game (regular season or postseason)

Ohtani is the first player to be intentionally walked more than once with the bases empty in a postseason game (since BBI became official in 1955). He had three tonight. Albert Pujols had one in 2011 World Series 5.

Ohtani is the first player to be intentionally walked four times in a postseason game. Only six players have had 4+ BBI in a regular season game, since 1955: Roger Maris (1962), Garry Templeton (1985), Andre Dawson (1990), Manny Ramirez (2001), Barry Bonds (2004, 4 games), James Wood (2025).

Ohtani has nowbeen walked eight times in this postseason, tying Pujols (2011) for the second-most BBis. Barry Bonds received 13 BBI in 2002.

Ohtani and Babe Ruth are the only players with postseasn careers with multiple pitching starts and more than two home runs. Ruth (15 HR, 3 GS), Ohtani (11 HR, 2 GS).

Ohtani is the only player in postseason history with at least one pitching start and multiple home runs in a single postseason.

Ohtani has hit eight home runs in the 2025 postseason, tied for the most in a single postseason in Dodgers history, with Corey Seager (8 in 2020). In MLB history, only Randy Arozarena has hit more (10 in 2020).

Ohtani is the first player with multiple games with 12+ total bases in a single postseason. The only other player with two such games in a postseason career is Babe Ruth.

Ohtani is the first player with three multi-homer games in a single postseason.

Ohtani's last two games at Dodger Stadium:
October 17, 2025 (NLCS G4): 12 total bases (3 HR)
October 27, 2025 (World Series G3): 12 total bases (2 HR, 2 2B)
No other MLB player in the modern era (since 1900) has had 12+ total bases in two consecutive home games in the regular season or postseason.

October 18, 2025

NLCS 4: Dodgers 5, Brewers 1 (LAD wins 4-0)
ALCS 5: Mariners 6, Blue Jays 2 (SEA leads 3-2)

We may have witnessed – in Game 4 of the 2025 NLCS – the greatest performance in a major league baseball game by a single player.

Shohei Ohtani won the MVP award (after being introduced as "the greatest baseball player on the planet") largely because of his unprecedented performance in the Dodgers' pennant-winning 5-1 victory on Friday night in Los Angeles, finishing off a dominating sweep of the Milwaukee Brewers (who had won all six of the games the two teams played during the season).

Ohtani pitched six shutout innings, allowing only two hits and walking three. He collected 10 strikeouts. One of those hits and one walk came in the seventh, at which point manager Dave Roberts called upon his bullpen. If Ohtani had called it a night after finishing the sixth, his line would have been: 6-1-0-2-10, 87.

Ohtani also hit three home runs, all of which were crushed more than 425 feet. They were all solo shots, but he couldn't do anything about that. He also walked, because why make an out? (I almost wanted the Brewers to tie the game, so Ohtani could win the pennant in the bottom of the ninth with his fourth homer of the night. He would have been the inning's second batter.)

Ohtani came into the game hitting only .103 (3-for-29) since the start of the NLDS. I guess he's out of his slump. He also had not pitched in almost two weeks.

Ohtani swung at six pitches in the game: three home runs, two foul balls, and one swing and miss.

So how unique was his performance? ... I'm glad you asked.

Hitting three home runs.
Allowing no runs and striking out 10+ batters.
No one in major league history has ever done both over an entire career (same game, different games, regular season, postseason, spring training). Ohtani did both in the same game. (Won the pennant, too.)

Ohtani is the first Dodgers starting pitcher to throw multiple 100.0+ mph strikeouts in a postseason since pitch tracking began in 2008. All other Dodgers starters combined for one such pitch in those 18 seasons. Ohtani had two in the first inning.

Ohtani is the first pitcher in MLB history to hit a leadoff home run (regular season or postseason).*

Ohtani is the second player in major league postseason history to hit three home runs as his team's leadoff batter. George Brett did it against the Yankees in 1978 ALCS Game 3. (They were also all solo shots.)

Ohtani is the first player to strike out a batter and hit a home run in the first inning of a postseason game. (He actually struck out three batters, after walking the leadoff guy.)

Ohtani is the first player with multiple career postseason innings which include two strikeouts as a pitcher and a home run as a batter. Both happened in G4 (1st and 4th innings).

Ohtani is the first pitcher in postseason history with a multi-homer game. (Bob Gibson had 10+ strikeouts and 1 home run in a game on two occasions (1967 World Series Game 7 (9-3-2-3-10) and 1968 World Series Game 4 (9-5-1-2-10).)

Ohtani is the first pitcher in Dodgers history to hit a home run in the postseason. (The last pitch home run in the postseason was Brandon Woodruff of the Brewers off Dodgers lefty Clayton Kershaw in Game 1 of the in 2018 NLCS.)

Ohtani is the first pitcher with 10+ and no runs allowed in a pennant-clinching game.

Ohtani is the first major league player to have 10+ strikeouts as a pitcher and multiple home runs at the plate in a game (regular season or postseason) twice in his career.

Ohtani is the first player in major league history with 3 homers and 10 strikeouts as a pitcher in a game (regular season or postseason).

Ohtani's three home runs, with estimated distance and speed of the ball off the bat:
1st inning: 446 feet, 116.5 mph
4th inning: 469 feet, 116.9 mph  (over the pavilion roof in right-center; his teammates were in awe)
7th inning: 427 feet, 113.6 mph

Ohtani is the first major league player with two 116+ mph home runs in a game in the Statcast Era (since 2015, regular season or postseason). And, as the indefatigable Sarah Langs (who tweeted most of these) pointed out, "HE IS ALSO PITCHING TONIGHT"

Ohtani has hit 8 home runs of 450+ feet at Dodger Stadium in the Statcast Era (since 2015, regular season and postseason). No other major league player has hit more than one. (Of course, he plays there more often than most players. I'd like to know which visiting players have the most plate appearances at Dodger Stadium since the start of 2015.)

Ohtani's first two home runs are the hardest-hit home runs hit by a pitcher in the Statcast Era (since 2015, regular season and postseason).

10-17-25  Ohtani: 116.9 mph (2025 NLCS G4, 2nd of game)
10-17-25  Ohtani: 116.5 mph (2025 NLCS G4, 1st of game)
08-23-23  Ohtani: 115.7 mph
04-04-21  Ohtani: 115.2 mph
09-10-21  Ohtani: 114.7 mph
05-15-23  Ohtani: 114.6 mph
07-21-25  Ohtani: 113.4 mph 
06-09-23  Ohtani: 112.9 mph 
04-02-17  Madison Bumgarner: 112.5 mph
04-02-17  Bumgarner: 112.1 mph

Ohtani is the only name on the list of the Dodgers' 18 hardest-hit batted balls in the Statcast Era (since 2015, regular season and postseason). (Every other Dodger in the last decade has had a noodle bat, apparently.)

09-02-25  Ohtani: 120.0 mph HR
04-27-24  Ohtani: 119.2 mph 1B
07-27-24  Ohtani: 118.7 mph HR
04-23-24  Ohtani: 118.7 mph HR
09-11-24  Ohtani: 118.1 mph HR
05-05-25  Ohtani: 117.9 mph HR
10-17-25  Ohtani: 117.8 mph HR  
2024 NLCS G4
09-30-25  Ohtani: 117.7 mph HR  
2025 NLWCS G1
09-02-24  Ohtani: 117.2 mph 1B
08-05-24  Ohtani: 117.1 mph 2B
10-17-25  Ohtani: 116.9 mph HR  
2025 NLCS G4 (2nd of game)
09-25-24  Ohtani: 116.8 mph 2B
09-08-24  Ohtani: 116.7 mph HR
07-21-24  Ohtani: 116.7 mph HR
10-17-25  Ohtani: 116.5 mph HR  2025 NLCS G4 (1st of game)
10-13-24  Ohtani: 116.5 mph 1B  2024 NLCS G1
07-01-25  Ohtani: 116.3 mph HR
08-02-24  Ohtani: 116.3 mph HR

The Dodgers pitching staff simply suffocated the Brewers offense. Here are the stats for the four NLCS starters, with pitches, batters faced, and number of swings/misses:

G1 Blake Snell        8.0-1-0-0-10, 103 P, 24 BF, 20 S/M
G2 Yoshinobu Yamamoto 9.0-3-1-1- 7, 111 P, 32 BF, 14 S/M
G3 Tyler Glasnow      5.2-3-1-3- 8,  99 P, 23 BF, 13 S/M
G4 Shohei Ohtani      6.0-2-0-3-10, 100 P, 22 BF, 19 S/M

28.2 innings, 9 hits, 2 runs, 7 walks, and 35 strikeouts. 0.64 ERA starters' ERA.

The Dodgers allowed a puny .118 opponent batting average (14-for-119) in the NLCS. That's a major league record for the lowest in a postseason series of three or more games. The Brewers slugged .193 and their on-base was .191. Will Smith's .400 batting average was higher than the Brewers' .384 OPS!

Most consecutive games allowing 1 or 0 runs in single postseason:

2025 LAD: 5  (active streak)
1996 ATL: 5
1981 LAD: 5
1990 OAK: 4
1948 CLE: 4
1920 CLE: 4
1907 CHC: 4

Going into the top of the ninth . . .

I got my wish!!

My next request is for the Mariners (who have never been this far in the postseason before, winning a third game of an ALCS) to take a big dump on the Blue Jays' fortunes tomorrow, crush the hopes of every single Blue Jays fan, and give me the Mariners/Dodgers I wanted before the postseason began.

* I do not consider the first batter in the bottom of the first inning to be a "leadoff" hitter. I believe the term "leadoff" is reserved for the first batter of the game, especially when referring to home runs. In other words, the home team can never have a "leadoff" anything, because they don't bat first. We don't take special note of home runs that are hit to start any other inning. You can hear some arcane factoids during a game, but I've yet to hear which active player has the most "leadoff" fifth inning home runs. Maybe I should ignore "leadoff" factoids simply because other people define them differently incorrectly (see, RATS/RISP), but whatever.

October 15, 2025

ALCS 1: Mariners 3, Blue Jays 1
ALCS 2: Mariners 10, Blue Jays 3

NLCS 1: Dodgers 2, Brewers 1
NLCS 2: Dodgers 5, Brewers 1

The Seattle Mariners have never won more than two games in an ALCS. They lost both the 1995 and 2000 ALCS in six games. If they win Game 3 tonight, it will be the farthest the 49-year-old franchise has ever gotten in the postseason.

Also: No team has ever won an LCS (best-of-5 or best-of-7) after losing the first two games at home. We will see if the Blue Jays and/or Brewers can pull it off.

While Shohei Ohtani (1-for-7) and Mookie Betts (0-for-7) have been quiet atop Los Angeles' lineup (the pair has walked five times), Blake Snell (8-1-0-0-10, 103) and Yoshinobu Yamamoto (9-3-1-1-7, 111) have carried the team with two superb starts.

Sarah Langs

Starts of 8+ innings & 1 or no runs allowed in each of first 2 games of postseason series, last 50 years:
2025 NLCS Dodgers
1983 NLCS Dodgers
1981 NLDS Dodgers
1981 ALDS A's
1981 NLDS Astros 
h/t @EliasSports

The 17 IP pitched by Snell and Yamamoto are the most by any team's SP over the first two games of a postseason series since the 2005 White Sox threw 17 1/3 IP in the ALCS
h/t @MLBNetwork research squad

Yoshinobu Yamamoto is the 5th pitcher to throw his first career MLB complete game (reg or post) in the Postseason, joining:
Marco Estrada G1 2016 ALCS, 8.0 IP
Josh Beckett G5 2003 NLCS
Liván Hernández G5 1997 NLCS 
Jim Beattie G5 1978 WS
h/t @EliasSports

This is the second season where the road team went up 2-0 in BOTH LCS in the same year, joining:
1970, the second year of LCS play, when the round was best-of-5

Frst postseason complete game since: 2017 Justin Verlander ALCS G2
Last first for Dodgers since: 2004 Jose Lima NLDS G3

This is the first time the Dodgers got consecutive postseason starts of 8+ innings since Oct. 4-5, 1988 Games 1 & 2 of NLCS vs. Mets – Orel Hershiser & Tim Belcher.
h/t @EliasSports

Allowed leadoff home run and threw complete game, postseason history:
2025 NLCS G2 Yoshinobu Yamamoto
1954 WS G2 Johnny Antonelli
1942 WS G5 Johnny Beazley 
1909 WS G5 Babe Adams
Only Yamamoto and Antonelli also allowed no other runs

The Dodgers are the 5th team in postseason history to allow a leadoff home run and allow no other runs the rest of the game, joining:
2025 ALCS G1 Mariners 
2018 WS G5 Red Sox
2012 ALDS G1 Tigers 
1954 WS G2 Giants

Lowest starters ERA in 1st 8 games of a postseason:
2018 Brewers: 0.68 (26 2/3 IP)
2012 Tigers: 0.96 (56 1/3)
1972 A's: 1.33 (54)
1981 Dodgers : 1.44 (62 1/3)
1995 Cleveland: 1.46 (55 2/3)
2025 Dodgers: 1.54 (52 2/3)
1983 Orioles: 1.54 (52 2/3)
1981 Expos: 1.54 (58 1/3)

Complete game with no opponent at-bats with runners in scoring position, postseason last 20 years:
2025 NLCS G2 Yoshinobu Yamamoto
2010 NLDS G1 Roy Halladay (no-hitter)
2005 ALCS G3 Jon Garland

Fewest hits allowed in first two games of a postseason series:
2019 NLCS Nationals: 4
2025 NLCS Dodgers: 5
1906 WS Cubs: 5

The Dodgers are the second team (2016 Blue Jays) to not throw a CG in the regular season and then throw one in that postseason 
But TOR's CG was a loss and only 8 IP
So the Dodgers are the first to do so in a win 
h/t @Spokes_Murphy
Since ERA became official in both leagues in 1913, only one MLB pitcher has had a 6-start span at any point (reg or post) with:
5-0 or better record
sub-1.00 ERA
50+ strikeouts
15 or fewer hits allowed
That pitcher is Blake Snell over his last 6 starts (3 reg, 3 post).

Blake Snell of the Dodgers is the first MLB pitcher to face the minimum through 8.0 innings of a postseason game since Don Larsen in his 1956 perfect game.

Jorge Polanco of the Mariners is the first player in MLB history to have a go-ahead hit in the 5th inning or later in 3 consecutive postseason games.

Blake Snell has won his last four postseason games, with more strikeouts than innings pitched in each game. It's the longest such streak in MLB postseason history.

Jacob Misiorowski of the Brewers is the second rookie in MLB history to earn a win without starting in each of the first two games of his postseason career, joining Francisco Rodriguez, who did so with the Angels in 2002.

This Tigers-Mariners Game 5 is the fourth winner-take-all game in MLB postseason history to go 12+ innings, joining Rockies over Cubs (2018 WC, 13 inn), Royals over A's (2014, WC, 12) and Senators over Giants (1924, WS Gm7, 12).

Kerry Carpenter is the first MLB player to reach base five times and hit a home run in a winner-take-all postseason game since Babe Ruth in 1926 (World Series Game 7).

Tarik Skubal is the first player in MLB history to strike out 13 batters in a game twice in the same postseason.

Schadenfreude 371 (A Continuing Series)


Brian Cashman's Biggest Challenge Is Fixing The Yankee Offense
Bill Madden, Daily News, October 11, 2025 

Now that another Yankee season has concluded prematurely without a championship trophy, the usual finger-pointing begins and fans in every corner of Yankeeland are looking for culprits. But I'm here to say in this latest playoff elimination at the hands of the Blue Jays the blame should fall squarely on the players themselves.

In short, the Blue Jays proved themselves to be a better team — and that was not the fault of Yankees GM Brian Cashman. He did everything he could . . .

You could certainly make the case — as I have — that no GM in baseball had a better year than Cashman . . . 

What the AL Division Series — and actually their regular season matchups in which the Yankees were 5-8 against the Blue Jays — came down to was a matter of Toronto being the best team in baseball in terms of making contact and putting the ball in play and the Yankees one of the worst. During the season the Jays' batters had the most hits and second lowest strikeouts in the majors.

By contrast, the Yankees had the third most strikeouts behind only the Rockies and Angels, and the 12th most hits. In addition, the Yankees hit 83 more homers than the Jays during the season but scored only 43 more runs.  When it came to clutch hitting, the Jays led the majors hitting .292 with runners in scoring position as opposed to the Yankees who ranked 12th at .255.

Although on paper it could be argued the Yankees had a quality player at every position . . . the fact remained they were still the same home run-or-bust offense they've been for the last few years. And it was much the same in the ALDS as the Jays out-hit the Yankees 37-24 in the four games and struck out only 34 times to the Yankees' 50 — 12 of them by Anthony Volpe.

Which brings us to what comes now for Cashman in his effort to rectify the one over-riding Yankee flaw that seemingly shows up way too many times in the regular season and especially against good pitching in the postseason – too many damn strikeouts and two few multi-hit rallies. If Cashman could be blamed for anything this year it was his blind loyalty to Volpe, who hit .212 with 150 strikeouts and just 43 walks in one of the historically worst seasons ever by a major league shortstop. And his 73.3 strikeout percentage in the ALDS was the worst mark ever in a divisional series (minimum 15 plate appearances).

This cannot continue. . . .

What the Yankees need more than anything else is a leadoff hitter, who makes consistent contact and doesn't strike out. They're . . . looking at turning over left and center field to the kids (Jasson Dominguez and Spencer Jones). But again we're talking more strikeouts — Dominguez had 115 as opposed to 41 walks as a part-timer this year and Jones . . . had a disturbing 179 strikeouts [in AA and AAA]. . . .

It's what Cashman does about the hitting that will once again determine how far they go in October.
So . . . the Yankees getting humiliated in the ALDS "was not the fault" of the team's General Manager, who "did everything he could". In fact, "no GM in baseball had a better year", so presumably none of the other 29 GMs could have constructed the Yankees' 2025 roster any better than Cashman.

AND YET . . . the MFY's lineup was "still the same home run-or-bust offense" that their fans have loudly complained about for years. Indeed, Cashman has let "the last few years" go by without addressing the team's "over-riding" "flaw" of "too many damn strikeouts and two few multi-hit rallies". (That's "too few multi-hit rallies", Bill and Bill's editor.)

So "once again", Yankee fans have to wait and see if Cashman at last will turn his attention to something he has been either ignoring for years or consistently failing to fix, despite that "flaw" being blindingly obvious to everyone who watches the team. I don't know, Bill, it sounds to me like Cashman's culpability in the Yankees' chronic postseason failures (16 consecutive YEDs (and 24 of the last 25 seasons) at this point) is not nothing.

Madden's thesis is that Cashman is all but blameless for his team's poor showing – the blame rests "squarely on the players" – but he spends almost all of his piece outlining how Cashman – with access to seemingly endless amounts of money – brought these blame-worthy players together and put them on the field.

You can't blame players for not doing what they are incapable of. If the Yankees need to abandon their masterplan of "too many damn strikeouts and two few multi-hit rallies", someone in charge of the roster should sign players who don't strikeout too damn much and can hit for a higher average. 

It seems as though Cashman and Boone will keep on doing the thing that fails everytime and hope that blind luck brings them a different result. That's fine with me, because I take great pleasure in the Yankees' chronic misfortune.

October 12, 2025

One Of These Four Teams Will Win The 2025 World Series: Brewers, Blue Jays, Dodgers, Mariners

This is not a thoughtful and incisive overview of the ALCS and NLCS. I was looking up some things yesterday and figured I'd share them rather than not.

First of all, I was extremely pleased to watch the Blue Jays hardly break a sweat while humiliating the Yankees. But then I thought . . . shit, the Blue Jays are now really close to going to the World Series. . . . which means they could actually win the World Series. . . . But then I thought, I no longer live outside Toronto (and am extremely unlikely to ever set foot in Skydome again) and the few Blue Jays fans I would encounter on the west coast are not the annoying know-nothing assholes in Ontario. . . . But I would rather see any of the other three teams remaining win it all.

My preferences, in order:

Mariners (how can I root against a team with the Big Dumper on it?)
Dodgers (Roberts . . . Mookie . . . Ohtani . . . but they won last year)
Brewers (not the Blue Jays; franchise debuted as the Seattle Pilots)
Blue Jays (superb job humiliating the Yankees, but you can all fuck off now)

Normal Endorsement: with Scuttlebutt Beer to produce Big Dumper beer.
Unusual Endorsement: with Honey Bucket ("a leader in portable sanitation services")

The 2025 World Series will feature a matchup that has never happened before. This would have been a bigger deal if interleague play did not exist. But it does. In 2025, the Mariners and Blue Jays each played both the Brewers and Dodgers. And they have done that for the past three seasons. (So that's ruined.)

Mariners

2021: vs Dodgers: 1-3
2023: vs Dodgers: 0-3 / vs Brewers: 0-3
2024: vs Dodgers: 0-3 / vs Brewers: 1-2
2025: vs Dodgers: 0-3 / vs Brewers: 1-2

Blue Jays

2022: vs Brewers: 1-2
2023: vs Brewers: 2-1 / vs Dodgers: 2-1
2024: vs Brewers: 1-2 / vs Dodgers: 1-2
2025: vs Brewers: 1-2 / vs Dodgers: 1-2

2021-25:

Blue Jays vs Brewers: 5-7 / vs Dodgers: 4-5
Mariners vs Brewers:  2-7 / vs Dodgers: 1-12
Brewers vs Blue Jays: 7-5 / vs Mariners: 7-2
Dodgers vs Blue Jays: 5-4 / vs Mariners: 12-1

The Mariners finished atop the AL West standings for the first time since 2001, when they won an astonishing 116 games. In 2025, they won 90 games, their most wins in a full season since 2003

Mariners Seasons Winning 90+ Games

2001 116-46
2003 93-69
2002 93-69
2025 90-72
2022 90-72
2021 90-72

In 2022, Seattle was one of the wild card teams, making their first postseason appearance in more than two decades. They beat the Blue Jays in the ALWC 4-0 and 10-9. And then they lost three straight ALDS games to the Astros 8-7, 4-2 and 1-0 (18 innings).

Mariners in the Postseason

1995 Lost ALCS 2-4 to Cleveland, won ALDS 3-2 (Yankees)
1997 Lost ALDS 1-3 to Orioles
2000 Lost ALCS 2-4 to Yankees, won ALDS 3-0 (White Sox)
2001 Lost ALCS 1-4 to Yankees, won ALDS 3-2 (Cleveland)
2002 Lost ALDS 0-3 to Astros, won ALWCS 2-0 (Blue Jays)
2025 ALCS vs Blue Jays, won ALDS 3-2 (Tigers)

Blue Jays' Winningest Seasons, All-Time

1985 99-62 Lost ALCS 4-3 to Royals
1992 96-66 Won World Series 4-2 (Atlanta), won ALCS 4-2 (Athletics)
1987 96-66 2.0 GB in ALE
1993 95-67 Won World Series 4-2 (Phillies), won ALCS 4-2 (White Sox)
2025 94-68 ALCS vs Mariners, won ALDS 3-1 (Yankees)

Blue Jays in the ALCS

1985 Lost 3-4 to Royals
1989 Lost 1-4 to Athletics
1991 Lost 1-4 to Twins
1992 Won 4-2 over Athletics, won World Series 4-2 over Atlanta
1992 Won 4-2 over White Sox, won World Series 4-2 over Phillies
2015 Lost 2-4 to Royals, won ALDS 3-2 (Texas)
2016 Lost 1-4 to Cleveland, won ALDS 3-0 (Texas), won ALWC 1-0 (Orioles)
2025 ALCS vs Mariners, won ALDS 3-1 over Yankees

The Brewers Have Played In Four Divisions

1969 AL West (6-team division; Seattle Pilots)
1970-71 AL West (6-team division)
1972-76 AL East (6-team division)
1977-93    AL East  (7-team division)
1994-97 AL Central (5-team division)
1998-2012 NL Central (6-team division)
2013-25    NL Central (5-team division)

Brewers in the Postseason

1981 Lost ALDS 2-3 to Yankees
1982 Lost World Series 3-4 to Cardinals, won ALDS 3-2 (Angels)
2008 Lost NLDS 1-3 to Phillies
2011 Lost NLCS 2-4 to Cardinals, won NLDS 3-2 (Diamondbacks)
2018 Lost NLCS 3-4 to Dodgers, won NLDS 3-0 (Rockies)
2019 Lost NLWCG 0-1 to Nationals
2020 Lost NLWCS 0-2 to Dodgers
2021 Lost NLDS 1-3 to Atlanta
2023 Lost NLWCS 0-2 to Diamondbacks
2024 Lost NLWCS 1-2 to Mets
2025 NLCS vs Dodgers, won NLDS 3-2 (Cubs)

It's well-known that the Dodgers are playing in the postseason for the 13th consecutive season, but I 'm shocked to see that the Brewers have been a postseason team in seven of the last eight seasons, but they have been bounced so early (a 1-8 record from 2019-23), their presence has hardly registered.

October 9, 2025

Schadenfreude 370 (A Continuing Series)


UPDATE: All NY tabloid back pages now uploaded. Also: SuperVlad photo!







Hilarious! Not once, not twice, not three times, not four times, but an amazing FIVE TIMES!!!!!







Yankees' Season Comes To Bitter End With Lifeless ALDS Game 4 Dud
Andrew Battifarano, Post

Another fall of discontent has arrived.

The Yankees have gotten there in many different ways over the past 16 years, but the all-too-familiar end result came crashing in with a thud on Wednesday night in The Bronx.

A thrilling comeback in Game 3 . . . only delayed the crushing disappointment that came with Game 4.

The offense . . . went silent at the worst time, the Yankees mustering just six hits against a parade of relievers in a 5-2 loss to the Blue Jays in front of a restless sellout crowd . . .

[T]he Yankees are going home after the ALDS, with the Blue Jays winning the series 3-1 . . . 

At the beginning of the postseason, Aaron Boone said that he felt as good about this team as any he had managed in his eight years at the helm. And yet . . . these Yankees ended the same as each of the last 15 iterations: coming up short. . . .

[T]he Yankees spent Wednesday searching for the big hit – or any hits, really. . . .

The Yankees stranded eight runners over the final four innings, only adding to the pain as they watched the game and their season slip through their fingers in slow motion.

Cam Schlittler . . . pitch[ed] into the seventh inning with a 2-1 deficit. He generated what should have been an inning-ending double play, but Andrés Gimenez's grounder shot off Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s glove and sailed into center field, putting runners on the corners.

Nathan Lukes made the Yankees pay, lining a two-run single off Devin Williams that gave the Blue Jays some breathing room at 4-1.

After Chisholm had stranded a pair of runners in the bottom of the sixth, Trent Grisham had another chance to get the Yankees back in it in the seventh with two on and two out. But Grisham . . . capped off a rough postseason (4-for-29) by popping out in foul territory.

The Blue Jays added an insurance run in the eighth . . . further quieting a crowd that was starting to come to grips with reality.

The Yankees offered one last gasp in the bottom of the eighth, loading the bases with two outs, only for Austin Wells to fly out against closer Jeff Hoffman.

The pesky Blue Jays lineup gave the Yankees pitching staff one more night of frustration in a series full of it. It had beat up on the Yankees' starters in the first three games, as Luis Gil, Max Fried and Carlos Rodón combined to last just eight innings while giving up 15 runs.

Schlittler . . . did what none of Gil, Fried or Rodón could do by recording an out in the fourth inning.  . . .



Jazz Chisholm's Costly Error Pushes Yankees Season To The Edge
Justin Terranova, Post

Shoddy Yankees defense in an elimination game — we've seen this movie before.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. allowed the Blue Jays to break a 2-1 game open in the seventh inning on Wednesday night in The Bronx when the second baseman botched an inning-ending double play ball.

With one out and new Yankees killer Ernie Clement on first base, Andres Gimenez hit a one-hop bullet up the middle that deflected off Chisholm's glove and into center field.

The error ended Cam Schlittler's night . . . Devin Williams replaced the young righty, and after striking out leadoff man George Springer, Nathan Lukes lined a two-run single to left to increase Toronto's lead to 4-1.

On the Fox broadcast, analyst John Smoltz claimed the ball on Chisholm's miscue "exploded" off the edge of the grass, and that made the play more difficult for the second baseman.

The veteran was coming off an up-and-down Game 3 when he fell asleep on a relay throw, allowing a Blue Jays run to score . . . 

The Yankees dealt with an offseason of criticism after several brutal defensive blunders allowed the Dodgers to rally in Game 5 of the World Series to end the 2024 season.

Yankees Doomed By Missed Opportunities As Season Ends With ALDS Game 4 Loss To Blue Jays
Peter Sblendorio, Daily News

For the Yankees, the scene was all too familiar.

For the second year in a row, opponents spilled out of the visitors' dugout and mobbed each other on the Yankee Stadium grass.

Last year, it was the Los Angeles Dodgers who clinched their World Series title in the Bronx.

On Wednesday night, it was the Toronto Blue Jays doing the celebrating after defeating the Yankees in Game 4 of the ALDS.

But for the Yankees, the result was ultimately the same. . . .

"You don't like seeing somebody celebrate on your field," Aaron Judge said . . .

The Blue Jays — the Yankees' Achilles heal all season — proved again to be the superior team by winning the ALDS, 3-1.

Toronto outscored the Yankees, 34-19, over the four games, but Wednesday night's clincher was much more about missed opportunities by the Yankees . . .

The Blue Jays deployed a bullpen game, and the Yankees managed only six hits against eight Toronto relievers.

The Yankees stranded at least two baserunners in the sixth, seventh and eighth innings, the last of which ended when Austin Wells, who represented the tying run, flew out with the bases on the first pitch he saw . . .

The Yankees finished 1-for-6 with runners in scoring position and left 10 men on base.

"We didn't execute when we needed to," Giancarlo Stanton said. . . .

Schlittler surrendered an RBI single to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in the first inning and a sacrifice fly to George Springer in the fifth, the latter of which gave Toronto the lead for good.

But the Blue Jays didn't pull away until the seventh inning, when Jazz Chisholm Jr. booted a one-hopper off the bat of Andres Gimenez. Had Chisholm come up with the ball, he could have turned an inning-ending double play.

Instead, the error put runners at the corners and ended Schlittler's night. Both runners would score on Nathan Lukes' two-out, two-run single against Devin Williams, which gave Toronto a 4-1 lead.

"I didn't think it was gonna play the way it played," Chisholm said. . . . "Can't get it out of my head . . ." . . .

Guerrero went 9-for-17 (.529) with three home runs, nine RBI and a 1.609 OPS in the ALDS, further cementing his status as a Yankee killer. . . .

"The ending's the worst, right?" manager Aaron Boone said.

Aaron Judge's Scorching Playoffs Ends Without A Last Best Chance To Save Yankees' Season
Dan Martin, Post

Aaron Judge . . . couldn't keep the Yankees alive.

And another historic season from the slugger ended without a World Series title. . . .

[H]e never got his best chance to alter the game on Wednesday, as with runners on first and second and two out and the Yankees down by three runs in the seventh, Trent Grisham continued a miserable postseason by popping out to shortstop Andrés Giménez, who made a terrific catch down the line in foul territory to end the inning and keep Judge in the on-deck circle.

By the time he came up again, the Yankees trailed by four as he led off the bottom of the eighth and struck out. . . .

[Judge singled twice] but too few of his teammates joined him in the finale, as the Yankees failed to get much going offensively — even with Toronto going with a bullpen game. . . .

[This] October exit . . . was no fault of Judge's and that hasn't always been the case, something that's been well chronicled since his October slump began in 2018.



The Ugly Truth That You Can't Ignore About These High-Priced Yankees
Jon Heyman, Post

The $320 million Yankees are an October failure once again. No other way to look at it . . .

This year they couldn't even survive a junior circuit without a juggernaut.

They were ushered out by a bargain Blue Jays bullpen. They pitched poorly the first two games of the ALDS, then didn't hit enough in an unsatisfying 5-2 defeat before a very sad, sold-out crowd . . .

So to summarize: They went out without a division title, then followed up with a losing record in the postseason . . . 

The highest-priced AL team is too talented to be ushered out of the playoff derby in four mostly unsightly, unhappy division series games, too talented to fail to show up strong for their second round.

That's what they'll surely tell themselves . . . 

No reason this series should have been a rout. But it was that. The Blue Jays outscored the Yankees 33-19. They split here at Yankee Stadium, but let's not forget the Jays decimated the Yankees two games Up North. . . .

This team should not have gone out like so many others, as a quick casualty. This team has big names. . . .

[T]hey didn't get it done when they had to. . . .

Judge hit a home run that will become part of Yankee lore [JoS: No, it won't.] . . . 

Judge calls his teammates "the boys." Whatever you call them, collectively they didn't do enough.

As a team, they simply got outplayed and outclassed. . . .

Better to begin thinking about what they can make of themselves next year.

Next year. That's supposed to be the rallying cry of a perennial also-ran . . . 

Yet, this is where they are. They are in the very spot they've been 15 of the past 16 years, out way too soon. [JoS: I gotta tell ya, Jon, that sounds like "a perennial also-ran".]

They didn't hit like they can. And they didn't pitch like any playoff team should. . . .

Folks were figuring this was a toss-up. Then they started playing.

The $218M ace Max Fried didn't get an out in the fourth inning in Game 2. And he lasted longer than Luis Gil the game before. And longer than Carlos Rodón did in Game 3 on Tuesday.

Together the three of them didn't even combine for a complete nine innings. That's the saddest stat of the sorry week.

The Yankees didn't hit enough either, at least not when it counted. . . .

Next year should work out better, really it should.

Yankees Are Stuck In An Endless Loop — And It's Getting Harder To Believe They'll Ever Figure It Out
Joel Sherman, Post

These days, the only thing around the Yankees that has a ring to it is the familiarity of falling short this time of year.

The Yankees are now through a 16th straight season without a title. . . .

[T]heir season concluded with another team triumphantly celebrating on The Bronx grass. 

The Yankees once more are in their endless loop, trying to convince themselves and others that they really have the ingredients to be a champion as the title drought drives on. And as it becomes a little harder each year to believe that it is in them . . .

"It's the worst conversation to have," Giancarlo Stanton said of the annual explanation of why the Yankees have fallen short. . . .

The Yankees were eliminated Wednesday night in division series Game 4. The Blue Jays won behind their offensive style — relentlessly putting the ball in play . . . The Yankees lost without delivering enough of what they do best — putting the ball over a fence. . . .

An overmatched Anthony Volpe, a regressed Trent Grisham, Ben Rice and Jazz Chisholm Jr. combined for nine hits in this series — or the same number as the pesky Ernie Clement, who symbolizes Toronto's tenaciousness mode. The Blue Jays force you to keep playing the ball, which the Yankees did remarkably well — until they didn't. Until Chisholm made a seventh-inning error . . . two unearned runs . . . score[d] and the door to a cold Yankees winter was again being walked through. . . .

[T]here is a familiarity to it now for the Yankees. . . . 

Judge's dramatic Game 3 three-run homer [became] a feel-good pit stop for the Yankees rather than a series-changer. It helped provide just an extra 24 hours of life for the team . . . Chisholm said was coming into October to "step on necks." [They] lasted seven playoff games and won three of them. . . .

So we will get the familiar outcry that comes with this time of year — that the Yankees must fire Brian Cashman and Boone . . . [But] under this version of the House of Steinbrenner, that duo has the job security of Supreme Court justices. . . . [T]he Yankees did not lose this division series because of managing. . . .

Judge will be 34 in April . . . Stanton turns 36 next month. Gerrit Cole turned 35 last month . . . [T]he sands are beginning to run thin to change the mantra away from "Wait Till Next Year." . . .

Volpe looked as lost as ever, striking out in all three at-bats in Game 4 to make it 16 in 26 at-bats this postseason. . . . 

The Yankees again figured out how to get to the biggest games. But again didn't win enough of them. . . .

For a 16th straight season, not good enough.


The Yankees Are Becoming Next Year's Team Far Too Often
Mike Vaccaro, Post

"Wait till next year!" 

That's what the Yankees are right now. They are Next Year's team. 

Cody Bellinger struck out at 10:31 p.m., and that slammed the trunk on the 2025 Yankees, meaning it's now 16 years without a World Series championship. . . .

Hal Steinbrenner might not express his anger the way his father did. But let his own words from earlier this year speak for the man: "If you think it doesn't make me sleepless-at-night furious when we fall short of our goals … let me put it this way: Tell me you don't know me without telling me you don't know me." 

That's hollow consolation right now, as hollow as the 94 wins the Yankees piled up across the regular season . . .

[Aaron Judge:] "You didn't win. It's not what you want." 

Said Aaron Boone: "The ending is the worst." . . .

What's going to rankle a lot of Yankees fans . . . and what ought to chafe Steinbrenner, Brian Cashman and Boone the most — is that for the second straight season they weren't just eliminated by a better team, but by a team that by its own fundamentally sound standards exposed those same deficiencies in the Yankees. 

Last year it was the Dodgers . . . This time . . . it was the Blue Jays, a team it seemed the Yankees never quite believed was as good as its record . . . even as they seized control of this series before finally closing it out. 

The Jays, 1 through 9, specialized in quality at-bats. . . . The Jays don't have the black hole in their lineup of Anthony Volpe and Austin Wells [and Ryan McMahon] . . . 

The Jays run the bases better. They play defense better . . . They do everything better except hit home runs — and they did that pretty well, too . . . So the Jays have a date on Sunday against either the Mariners or the Tigers, four out of seven to win a pennant. 

The Yankees? 

The Yankees have next year. . . .

That's how it's been for Next Year's darlings, the Yankees, for 16 straight years, going on 17. And for who knows how many more?

SUPERVLAD LAUNCHING HIMSELF TOWARDS THE PLATE!




Vladimir Guerrero Channels David Ortiz To Mock Yankees In Beer-Soaked Blue Jays Celebration
Michael Blinn, Post

On the heels of their 5-2 win in Game 4 of the ALDS at Yankee Stadium –  advancing them to the American League Championship Series – Toronto slugger Vladimir Guerrero twisted the knife in a postgame interview from the clubhouse on Fox on Wednesday night.

"Daaaaaaa Yankees lose!" he said after being showered with beer in the raucous scene, channeling former Red Sox great David Ortiz.

That drew laughter from Ortiz, a noted Yankees hater, who didn't need much pleading to get Guerrero to repeat himself.

Yankees icons Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez were less enthused on the FS1 panel.

If there is any Yankees pain that comes with the words, it's secondary to that inflicted by the first baseman in the four-game series.

He batted an absurd .529 in the series (9-for-17) with three home runs, nine RBIs and a 1.609 OPS to continue his longstanding torment of the Bronx Bombers.

Guerrero – who has held a decades-long grudge against the Yankees – wasn't alone in his trolling.

Blue Jays manager John Schneider implored his team to "Start spreading the news, bitches!" Before they blasted Frank Sinatra's "New York, New York" and then sprayed everyone and everything down in the visitors' locker room at the Stadium with champagne and beer.







Tormented By Toronto All Year, The Yankees' Season Comes To A Fitting And Disappointing End
Gary Phillips, Daily News

The Yankees . . . entered the playoffs as one of the hottest teams in baseball . . .

Then came those pesky Blue Jays in the ALDS.

Tormented by Toronto all year, the Yankees saw their season end with a Game 4 loss . . . after losing two laughers north of the border and delaying elimination with a win on Tuesday. . . .

[In] the Yankees' clubhouse, Boone called it a "beat-up room" . . . By the time reporters entered the space, cardboard boxes and half-packed suitcases sat in front of nearly every locker. The screech of packing tape and metallic zippers replaced the voice of George Benson, whose 1980 hit, "Give Me The Night," has become a staple of the Yankees' post-win playlist.

Then there were players, whose comments were loaded with sorrow after yet another season ended without a title. . . .

Giancarlo Stanton, who hit an uncharacteristic .192 this postseason . . . "The frustration adds each year and each time we gotta come up and do this."

Anthony Volpe, mostly at a loss for words after striking out 13 times in four ALDS games, kept calling the Yankees' early exit "brutal." Max Fried . . . regretted that he wouldn't have a chance to redeem himself for his Game 2 clunker. . . .

Unable to overcome their latest bout with adversity — the Bombers left the bases loaded in the eighth and totaled 10 stranded runners — the Yankees could only watch in distress as their division rivals celebrated on their home turf. It felt somewhat fitting, their season snuffed out by Toronto as the untidy play that plagued the team all summer reared its ugly head. . . .

With their postseason now over, the Yankees went 6-11 against the Jays overall. That includes losing 8-of-9 games at the Rogers Centre . . . Toronto exploded for a record-setting 23 runs there between Games 1 and 2 of the ALDS. . . .

The Yankees, meanwhile, came up short in their attempts to avenge last year's World Series loss, a messy showing that had the bottom of the Dodgers' victorious roster mocking them all offseason. Fresh off another letdown, the Yankees are left to contemplate the future . . .

[T]ime is of the essence.

Judge . . . only has so many prime years left . . . Stanton and Gerrit Cole, who didn't throw a pitch this year thanks to Tommy John surgery, aren't getting any younger, either. Both are 35 . . .

Clarke Schmidt will also miss time in 2026 after his own Tommy John procedure . . .

The bullpen will be a major offseason project, as the unit routinely struggled from start to finish this season. . . .

[J]ust how many of those players will the Yankees want back . . .?

At first glance, the response may be "not many" . . .