Where EAST meets the Northwest

BACK-TO-BACK CHAMPS. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (#18) of the Los Angeles Dodgers
celebrates with Will Smith, right, after the team defeated the Toronto Blue Jays
in Game 7 of baseball’s World Series in Toronto. In the 11th inning of the game,
Yamamoto induced a game-ending double play that cemented the Dodgers’ second
consecutive title and his World Series MVP award. (Chris Young/The Canadian
Press via AP)

Yoshinobu Yamamoto (#18) of the Los Angeles Dodgers gestures during the
pivotal Game 6 of the series, in which the Dodgers forced the series into Game 7
by holding off the Blue Jays in the ninth inning. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

Shohei Ohtani celebrates a double against the Blue Jays during the eighth
inning in Game 6 of baseball’s World Series. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)
From The Asian Reporter, V35, #11 (November 3, 2025), page 12.
Dodgers win World Series in 11 innings to become first repeat
champion in 25 years: Key moments in Game 7
TORONTO (AP) — Late homers by Miguel Rojas and Will Smith rallied the Los
Angeles Dodgers past the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in 11 innings Saturday night —
one of the wildest Game 7s in World Series history.
Los Angeles overcame 3-0 and 4-2 deficits and escaped a bases-loaded jam in
the ninth to become baseball’s first repeat champion since the 1998-2000 New
York Yankees won three titles in a row.
Here are the top moments from the epic Game 7:
Bo Bichette chases Shohei Ohtani off the mound
The Blue Jays took an early 3-0 lead when Bichette connected against Ohtani
for his first homer since September 2nd — a few days before sustaining a left
knee injury that sidelined him until the World Series and still hampered him
throughout.
Ohtani was pitching on three days of rest, and although he was up to 100.9
mph with his fastball, his command was shaky and he appeared to run out of steam
in the third. After fielding Nathan Lukes’ sacrifice bunt, he threw a wild pitch
to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and allowed Bichette’s homer on the next pitch, his
51st and last of the night.
Benches clear after Andrés Giménez is plunked
Both benches and bullpens cleared after Dodgers left-hander Justin Wrobleski
hit Giménez on the right hand with a pitch in the fourth inning. Wrobleski had
already thrown two high-and-inside fastballs to Giménez with his first and
fourth pitches before hitting him with a 96.4 mph fastball with one out.
After the players returned to their benches and bullpens, the umpires huddled
briefly before crew chief Mark Wegner issued a warning to both teams. Play
resumed after a four-minute break between pitches.
Miguel Rojas becomes a postseason hero
Max Muncy trimmed Toronto’s lead to 4-3 with a solo homer in the eighth, and
that also guaranteed Ohtani would bat in the ninth. But the two-way superstar
didn’t have to be the hero, after all.
Rojas hit the first tying home run in the ninth inning or later of a World
Series Game 7, according to Stats Perform. His one-out drive off Jeff Hoffman
was just his second home run since the All-Star break and his second in 20
career postseason games.
The Dodgers narrowly escape the bottom of the ninth
Blake Snell allowed two Toronto baserunners, prompting Dodgers manager Dave
Roberts to bring in Yoshinobu Yamamoto a day after he threw 96 pitches in a Game
6 victory. Yamamoto hit Alejandro Kirk with a pitch, loading the bases, before
the Dodgers escaped with two helter-skelter defensive plays.
With the infield playing in to prevent the winning run, Rojas fielded Daulton
Varsho’s grounder to second base and nearly fell over. He gathered himself and
threw home, but the toss briefly pulled Smith off the plate. Smith’s toe barely
reconnected with the plate in time to get the forceout, a call confirmed by
video review.
Then center fielder Andy Pages, who had just been inserted off the bench to
provide better defense, collided with left fielder Kiké Hernández while catching
Ernie Clement’s long fly on the left-center warning track. Pages held on for the
final out of the inning despite knocking Hernández to the ground.
The Blue Jays strand three runners in the 10th
Los Angeles loaded the bases with one out in the 10th inning, but Seranthony
Domínguez got two quick outs to escape. Giménez threw out Mookie Betts at home
plate on Pages’ grounder to shortstop, then Guerrero fielded Hernández’s
grounder to first and flipped to Domínguez covering the bag on a close play.
Will Smith enters World Series lore
Smith set a record for most innings caught in a single World Series with 74,
and he helped ensure he wouldn’t have to catch a 75th with his solo shot in the
11th.
Smith hit a 2-0 slider from Shane Bieber into the Blue Jays’ bullpen in left
field, giving the Dodgers their first lead of the night. It was the first
extra-inning homer in a World Series Game 7.
Yamamoto closes it out
Guerrero doubled off Yamamoto leading off the bottom of the 11th and advanced
to third on Isiah Kiner-Falefa’s sacrifice bunt, and Toronto got the potential
winning run on base when Addison Barger walked.
Yamamoto then induced a game-ending 6-6-3 double play from Kirk, cementing
the Dodgers’ second consecutive title and his World Series MVP award.
* * *
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