Los Angeles Dodgers Survive Longest World Series Game, Clinch 2-1 Series Lead Behind Freeman's Walk-Off Homer
In an epic 18-inning thriller that pushed the longest game in World Series history since 2018 against Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers outlasted Toronto Blue Jays 6-5 to take a commanding 2-1 series lead. The Dodgers' victory was sealed by Freddie Freeman's walk-off home run in the 18th inning.
Shohei Ohtani, who hit two homers and added two doubles, had a remarkable postseason performance with nine hits, five walks (four intentional), including his fifth home run of the last two playoff games at Los Angeles. The Blue Jays' Teoscar Hernandez also hit a home run, but his teammates were unable to contain Ohtani's explosive offense.
The Dodgers took an early 1-0 lead on Hernandez's fifth postseason homer in the second inning, before Ohtani gave them a 2-0 advantage with a solo shot down the right field line in the third. The Blue Jays tied it up at 2-2 in the fourth on a three-run homer from Alejandro Kirk.
The Dodgers regained the lead at 4-4 in the fifth, thanks to an RBI double by Ohtani and a two-out RBI single by Freeman. However, the Blue Jays retied it at 5-5 in the seventh on a solo homer by Ohtani.
In the 18th inning, Freeman finally broke the deadlock with his walk-off home run against left-hander Brendon Little, making Will Klein (1-0) the winner and securing the Dodgers' series lead. The Blue Jays had used nine pitchers but were unable to contain the Dodgers' onslaught of 10 pitchers, including a scoreless outing by Clayton Kershaw.
The game lasted six hours and 39 minutes, the second-longest World Series contest in terms of time. Game 4 is scheduled for Tuesday in Los Angeles, with Ohtani facing off against Toronto right-hander Shane Bieber.
In an epic 18-inning thriller that pushed the longest game in World Series history since 2018 against Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers outlasted Toronto Blue Jays 6-5 to take a commanding 2-1 series lead. The Dodgers' victory was sealed by Freddie Freeman's walk-off home run in the 18th inning.
Shohei Ohtani, who hit two homers and added two doubles, had a remarkable postseason performance with nine hits, five walks (four intentional), including his fifth home run of the last two playoff games at Los Angeles. The Blue Jays' Teoscar Hernandez also hit a home run, but his teammates were unable to contain Ohtani's explosive offense.
The Dodgers took an early 1-0 lead on Hernandez's fifth postseason homer in the second inning, before Ohtani gave them a 2-0 advantage with a solo shot down the right field line in the third. The Blue Jays tied it up at 2-2 in the fourth on a three-run homer from Alejandro Kirk.
The Dodgers regained the lead at 4-4 in the fifth, thanks to an RBI double by Ohtani and a two-out RBI single by Freeman. However, the Blue Jays retied it at 5-5 in the seventh on a solo homer by Ohtani.
In the 18th inning, Freeman finally broke the deadlock with his walk-off home run against left-hander Brendon Little, making Will Klein (1-0) the winner and securing the Dodgers' series lead. The Blue Jays had used nine pitchers but were unable to contain the Dodgers' onslaught of 10 pitchers, including a scoreless outing by Clayton Kershaw.
The game lasted six hours and 39 minutes, the second-longest World Series contest in terms of time. Game 4 is scheduled for Tuesday in Los Angeles, with Ohtani facing off against Toronto right-hander Shane Bieber.