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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, top 2nd

FOX calls Yesavage the second youngest World Series starter, and I’ll take their word for it. The kid gets Hernandez to bounce to short – Gimenez whips a throw over to second for the first out, but the throw over to first base is not in time.

So it’s a 6-4 force out before Max Muncy lifts the first Dodgers hit into left field! Smith moves to second, and so it’s two on and one out for Kike Hernandez, who has a habit of making things happen in the postseason.

How about now?

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, top 2nd

Yesavage walks Smith, which is never a good way to start off an inning. Now here comes Hernandez, a once beloved Blue Jays outfielder who comes back to Toronto in the wrong uniform.

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, top 2nd

It’ll be Smith, Hernandez and Muncy coming up for LA.

Yesavage falls behind 2-0 against the hard-hitting Dodgers catcher.,

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

Varsho pops up to center – it’s easy for Pages who puts it away and ends the Jays threat. Not before Snell runs up 29 pitches though, many of which came under duress. Still, Toronto must take advantage of their scoring opportunities, and that didn’t happen. Dodgers skipper Dave Roberts will be quite happy about that result.

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Updated at 20.38 EDT

Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

Kirk lays off ball four in the dirt and the bases are loaded! FOX TV tells us this is the most pitches Snell has thrown in a single inning in his four playoff starts.

Here’s Varsho, up looking for some runs!

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

Kirk nearly dumps a blooper into right field, but it’s foul. This will be pitch 25 coming up!

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

Kirk wastes a fastball, fouling it back into the stands. And another! The Jays are working Snell’s pitch count to perfection here.

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

Snell is just a bit off balance, and Smith heads out for a quick chat to settle his man down some.

Kirk runs the count full – how will it end?

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

Snell falls behind 2-0. Then misses high with a fastball to run the count to 3-0.

Does Bichette have the green light? Yes he does, and Bichette pokes a ground ball through the right side of the infield for a base hit! Vlady heads to third, and the Jays have runners at the corners with two outs!

Here comes the dangerous Alejandro Kirk, all 5’8” and 250lbs of him!

The guy is a monster – can he come through here?

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

Snell uses two change ups to help him run the count full. Vlady wastes a pitch to the left side extending the at-bat, before laying off a breaking ball in the dirt. That means Vlady has walked, and here comes Bichette to the plate with a runner on first!

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, bottom 1st

George Springer, whose historic Game 7 three-run blast helped to send the Jays to the World Series begins his Fall Classic with a bouncer to short, which is easy for Betts, who throws to first for the first out.

Then David Schneider follows with another bouncer to Betts, which is simple enough to handle – that’s an easy second out.

Now here comes the only Canadian citizen on the Toronto Blue Jays roster, the Montreal born Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

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Michelle De Clair is impressed!

“We just struck out Ohtani!! Giddy-up! This game is off to a great start!”

From where she’s sitting, that’s the truth, Ruth.

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, top 1st

Savage is ahead 1-2 before Freemen bounces gently to second base. It’s a grounder not hit hard enough to test Bichette’s knee, and it’s an easy third out.

Three up and three down for the kid, who passes an early gut check with flying colors! Here come the Blue Jays!

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, top 1st

Another 2-2 count, Yesavage deals a slider away, and Betts is able to lay off the pitch. Now the full count offering is chopped to shortstop – Gimenez makes the stab, throws over to first, in time to get Betts.

Two up and two down for the inexperienced rookie who seems poised and in control. Now Freddie Freeman is stepping in.

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Dodgers 0-0 Blue Jays, top 1st

The count is even at 2-2 before Ohtani waves at a nasty splitter! Strike three! Ohtani is retired, so now all you have to do is get by Mookie Betts, who has been rolling for two months after an uncharacteristically poor season by his lofty standards.

The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani strikes out to open Game 1. Photograph: David J Phillip/APShare

Updated at 20.23 EDT

Here we go!

The World Series is underway! Yesavage, a tender 22 year of age, delivers a fastball inside and in the dirt to Ohtani…gulp.

Incidentally, the Dodgers are apparently just 1-11 in the opening games of the World Series, according to FOX TV in the US. Kind wild, isn’t it?

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First pitch is coming up really REALLY soon – please stand by!

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E-mails

David Athya has written in:

“I think all the neutrals want a 7 game thriller. The Dodgers starting pitching was scarily good against the Brewers but with Bichette returning the Jays have more depth in their line up. Also some of the Dodgers hitters have yet to catch fire. I guess I’m talking myself into a Toronto win tonight to get the series off to a flier.”

They have to get this first game for reasons explained earlier!

Regular Roger Kirkby says:

“Hi Dave, what a set of playoffs we have had to get here, one of the best set of games to end up with two teams left. It’s had it all, pitching, batting and errors. It’s amazing how games change from bobbing along nicely then an error and one team smells blood. It can happen to any player and they must all dread it. Who’s gonna win it all? It’s hard to say. And that’s why I love baseball.”

I do say Jays in seven!

John Keefe gets right to the point:

“Go Jays Go!”

Clean and concise. I like it!

Richard Woods has a word or two:

“As a Jays fan who has followed the downs and ups of this team over the past few years until the drama and joy of this season, may I suggest the most significant improvement has been the outstanding hitting? Fewest strikes out in the majors, consistent significant contact with two strikes, production up and down the order. That hasn’t happened by accident, so in all the talk of players who have made a difference to the team this season may I recognise the addition of David Popkins to the coaching staff?”

I agree, and consider Mr Popkins recognized.

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National Anthems

Why on this night do we hear two national anthems rather than one? Well son, because Toronto is in Canada and Los Angeles is in the United States.

Pharrell Williams and a choir called Voices of Fire are singing the anthems tonight, because Nickleback presumably weren’t available.

This rendition of the The Star-Spangled Banner sounds more like a Christmas song than the national anthem. Awful! I give it a 3/10.

O Canada isn’t much better, maybe a 3.5/10.

This is no good!

A general view of the interior of the Rogers Center during the playing of the national anthems. Photograph: Emilee Chinn/Getty ImagesShare

Updated at 20.16 EDT

O Canada!

Canada and the US share a long border and a long history, most of which has been friendly. Sure, there was that border dispute back in 1844, which was actually between the US and the UK, but mostly, it’s been peaceful. Now we have a tariff dispute that has really rubbed Canadians the wrong way, and so this series certainly has a bit more spice than it might have under more normal circumstances. Ontario has been making news by running a commercial spot featuring President Ronald Reagan speaking about free trade, trying to highlight what they believe are bizarre, punishing tariffs against their oldest ally. They’ve even run it during the ALCS, which is excellent ad placement. I’m sure the American audience will be watching it tonight, bringing another dimension to an already enticing match-up

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Starting Lineups!

Los Angeles Dodgers

1. Shohei Ohtani, DH

2. Mookie Betts, SS

3. Freddie Freeman, 1B

4. Will Smith, C

5. Teoscar Hernandez, RF

6. Max Muncy, 3B

7. Kike Hernandez, LF

8. Tommy Edman, 2B

9. Andy Pages, CF

And Blake Snell on the hill for LA.

Here’s the lineup for John Schneider’s Toronto Blue Jays

1. George Springer, DH

2. Davis Schneider, LF

3. Vladimir Guerrero, 1B

4. Bo Bichette, 2B – running gingerly out of the dugout

5. Alejandro Kirk, C

6. Daulton Varsho, CF

7. Ernie Clement, 3B

8. Myles Straw, RF

9. Andres Gimenez, SS

And Trey Yasavage on the hill for Tdot.

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Updated at 20.08 EDT

Changes

Slugger Bo Bichette, out since September with a knee injury is back in the lineup, a substantial boost for a team that had little issue scoring this postseason. According to Steve Phillips, former Mets GM and current pundit, Bichette looked absolutely awful running, limping around the bases. So of course, he’s not only playing, but starting at second base, a position he hasn’t played in earnest since suiting up for the AA New Hampshire Fisher Cats in 2018. But hey, you can’t argue with logic!

Meanwhile, one of the few trustworthy arms Dodgers manager Dave Roberts has in his bullpen, Alex Vesia, will not be in uniform due to a “deeply personal family matter”.

The Dodgers released this statement:

“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 entire Dodgers organization is sending our thoughts to the Vesia family, and we will provide an update at a later date.”

I hope whatever that is can be resolved, but clearly he will be missed.

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The starters

Trey Yesavage is on the hill for the Jays, with all of three regular season games in the can in his young career. Toronto’s former no1 pick stunned the Yankees, who believed incorrectly they would stomp all over the rookie in Game 2 of the AL Division Series. The kid struck out out 11 in 5.1 innings in a game that was pure unadulterated joy for haters of the Bronx Bombers. Yesavage was hit hard in Game 2 v Seattle, but came back strong, going 5.2 innings while striking out seven in a Game 6 win at the Rogers Center.

LA’s starter Blake Snell needs no introduction, having won Cy Young Awards in both leagues. Once criticized for being a five inning pitcher incapable of hurling deep into games, Snell has pitched into the eight inning once and the seventh inning twice in five postseason starts, which is most definitely scary.

How has he performed at the Rogers Centre? He’s made eight starts, struck out 43 batters in 37.2 innings, and pitched to a 2.63 ERA. Most of those starts were with the Tampa Bay Rays, the Jays AL East rivals, and Snell’s record was 3-3 ion those starts. He’s also fresh, having made just 11 starts in the 2025 regular season while sidelined with injuries.

Grounds crew members prepare the field ahead of Game 1. Photograph: Frank Gunn/APShare

Updated at 20.17 EDT

It’s a numbers game

Here’s another stat set I heard on the radio today on my way home from the day gig. The last four teams to sweep their league championship series and then faced a team that went seven games in their league championship series, all lost!

The Dodgers have been on ice for around a week after winning four straight v Milwaukee, while the Jays went the distance against Seattle.

Baseball is bizarre in the sense that rest really isn’t all that helpful, at least to lineups. Hitters, who are creatures of habit, need to hit every day to keep their timing in tact. Sitting around for a few days is OK, but nything more than that is clearly a net negative. I was at the 2006 World Series when the Tigers swept Cleveland and had to wait for the Cardinals who beat the Mets in seven. The Tigers lost in five game and were a total train wreck at the plate, batting .199 and scored just 11 runs.

LA say they’ve been keeping warm by playing split squad games and feel good, but given the history, do you think the Dodger bats will be ready for Game 1?

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You are looking live…

…at our rolling coverage of Game 1 of the World Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays!

On a plane? Camping in the mountains with no access to a radio? In the Gobi desert with no television? Good news, I’m going to personally guide you through this opening act to the Fall Classic.

Can we be honest with each other? It’s been a long time since I’ve been this giddy about a World Series. I am absolutely 100% brought in on this set providing each and every one of us top-shelf, elite October baseball, no question. It’s gonna happen, you just watch, or read.

We’ve got the Dodgers, with all their pomp, circumstance and star power, v a Toronto baseball team with some thumpers of their own. They actually care about putting the ball in play and avoiding strikeouts! And can even pitch a little bit as well. Yes indeed, this series has it all, and when you sprinkle in the tension between the U.S. and Canada, it has even a little more than that!

Of course, the Dodgers and their traveling team of all-stars, a ballclub that has the five best players in all of baseball – two of which are Shohei Ohtani – do have the edge here. So yeah, Toronto must get off to a good start, establish their offense early, get to that LA bullpen and at the very least, walk out of the Rogers Centre with at least one win in the two first games. Actually, now that I think about it, it’s really the first game that must be won. Why? Because the stats say so. World Series winners have taken Game 1 63% of the time. In the Wild Card era, 24 of 30 teams to win first won it all. Such numbers are extremely difficult to poke holes in.

Do the Jays have a chance? Oh, definitely, and Toronto fans tempted to bow their heads and pray pre-game should know they don’t need a divine strike to win this thing, because they have both the right style of play to counter the Dodgers, and they also have a few formidable horses of their own. Sure, LA is starting Blake Snell tonight, Yoshinobu Yamamoto tomorrow, Tyler Glasnow in Game 3 and finally, Ohtani in Game 4. It’s a formidable rotation, but win a game in Tdot, steal a game in LA, and you’re right back north of the border for a Game 6. That’s what we want – a long dramatic series to take us into winter, please!

So gear up for what I believe will be a long, drama-filled World Series. That means getting your beers, peanuts and cracker jacks ready, which should be done now while there’s still time! You can also join the blog and send me all your thoughts and feelings. E-mail me right here and I’ll put your name in pixels – your mom will be so proud!

More to come. Stick with us!

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David will be here shortly. In the meantime here’s a look at our experts’ predictions for the 121st Fall Classic.

Dodgers 4-2 Blue Jays. This will be a closer series than people expect. Expect the Blue Jays to score at least one lopsided victory after knocking out one of the vaunted Dodgers starting pitchers early in the game. The problem for the Blue Jays will be an inconsistent bullpen, not their starting pitching, that will struggle against a patient group of veteran Dodgers hitters. GB

Dodgers 4-1 Blue Jays. It feels predestined that the Dodgers will win. If they have a weakness, it’s their bullpen (a shaky 4.27 ERA in the regular season) – but the return to fitness of Sasaki and his devastating splitter should help them stabilize things if anything starts to go wrong. Meanwhile Toronto need absolutely everything to go right. Maybe they can ride Guerrero and Gausman to one upset, but four wins is an enormous ask. AE

Dodgers 4-3 Blue Jays. Their rotation depth is unmatched, their stars rested and Ohtani’s presence elevates the entire lineup’s confidence. This should be a cakewalk for the Dodgers, but baseball is funny sometimes. Toronto’s offense will make the most of their home-field advantage, but the Dodgers’ combination of starting pitching, discipline and star power will simply prove too much to prevent baseball’s first repeat champion in a quarter-century. BAG

Blue Jays 4-3 Dodgers. Yamamoto, Snell, Ohtani, Glasnow? What are you supposed to do with these guys? They’ve been so good, their beleaguered bullpen only pitched seven innings in their sweep of the Brewers. That’s positively old school by LA. It’s hard to imagine Toronto pulling it off, but now, really try. Imagine Bichette returning to the lineup and picking up where he left while Guerrero and Springer stay white hot. How about Gausman pitching twice at the Rogers Centre where the Jays are so hard to beat? Contact hitters waste pitches and put the ball in play: anything can happen and it does. Suddenly we’re in Game 7 when Addison Barger touches them all in the 10th inning, helping the Jays to their first title since 1993. Not bad, eh? DL

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