2025 World Series Game 7

2025 World Series Game 7
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 R H E
Los Angeles Dodgers 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 5 11 0
Toronto Blue Jays 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 14 0
DateNovember 1, 2025
VenueRogers Centre
CityToronto, Canada
Managers
Umpires
MVPYoshinobu Yamamoto, pitcher
Attendance44,713
Time of game4:07
Ceremonial first pitchPaul Molitor
Jack Morris
TelevisionFox (United StatesEnglish)
Fox Deportes (United States – Spanish)
Sportsnet (Canada – English)
Citytv (Canada – English)[a]
TVA Sports (Canada – French)
NHK[b] (JapanJapanese)
MLB International (International – English)
TV announcersJoe Davis, John Smoltz, Ken Rosenthal, and Tom Verducci (Fox)
Adrián García Márquez, Edgar González, Carlos Álvarez, Jaime Motta, and Michelle Liendo (Fox Deportes)
Dan Shulman, Buck Martinez, and Hazel Mae (Sportsnet)
Denis Casavant and Karl Gélinas (TVA Sports)
Tetsushi Sakanashi and So Taguchi (NHK)
Dave Flemming and Ryan Spilborghs (MLB International)
RadioESPN (United States – English)
TUDN (United States – Spanish)
Sportsnet (Canada – English)[c]
CJCL (TOR – English)
KLAC (LAD – English)
KTNQ (LAD – Spanish)
Radio announcersJon Sciambi, Jessica Mendoza, Eduardo Pérez, and Buster Olney (ESPN)
Alberto Ferreiro, Luis Quiñones, Eduardo Sánchez, and Jesús Acosta (TUDN)
Ben Shulman and Chris Leroux (Sportsnet, CJCL)
Stephen Nelson and Rick Monday (KLAC)
Pepe Yñiguez and José Mota (KTNQ)

On November 1, 2025, the Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays played a series-deciding Game 7 of the 2025 World Series to determine the champion of the Major League Baseball season that year. The Dodgers defeated the Blue Jays 5–4 in eleven innings, clinching their second consecutive World Series title after their 2024 victory over the New York Yankees. With their win, the Dodgers became the first team since the 19982000 Yankees to win consecutive or more World Series titles.[2][3] It was the fifth time in World Series history that a Game 7 went into extra innings, only the third time in history (and first since 1997) that a Game 7 lasted at least eleven innings, and just the second instance in which the visiting team won (the first being 2016).[4][5]

The game's ending, which featured a game-tying home run by Miguel Rojas in the top of the ninth inning (the first such instance in World Series Game 7 history in which a game-tying home run was hit that late in the game), a series-saving catch by Andy Pages in the bottom of the ninth (thus preventing a potential walk-off victory for the Blue Jays) and a series-winning home run by Will Smith in the eleventh (the first time ever in World Series Game 7 history in which a go-ahead home run was hit in extra innings), was considered by many to be one of the greatest in baseball history[6][7] and resulted in the Dodgers winning their third championship in six seasons. Following the game, many analysts and writers said that the Dodgers' victory in the series, coupled with their previous World Series wins in 2020 and 2024, cemented their status as a MLB dynasty.[8][9]

Background

The Dodgers had come into the Series as clear favorites due to their star power,[10] but the Blue Jays had home-field advantage due to finishing the regular season one game ahead of the Dodgers. Toronto won Game 1 in a rout off the backs of a nine-run sixth inning, just one run shy of the record for most runs in a single World Series inning.[11] Yoshinobu Yamamoto responded with a complete-game victory for the Dodgers in Game 2, the first such game in a World Series since Johnny Cueto in 2015.[12] With the series shifting to Los Angeles, The Dodgers won Game 3 in 18 innings on a Freddie Freeman walk-off home run, which tied the record for longest World Series game by innings.[13] The Blue Jays regained control of the Series in Games 4 and 5 by roughing up a struggling Dodgers' bullpen; in Game 5, Blue Jays starter Trey Yesavage set a rookie World Series record for strikeouts with 12.[14][15] The Dodgers won game 6 in Toronto after escaping a bizarre ninth-inning jam and forced the Series' decisive seventh game.[16]

The fact Game 7 was played at Rogers Centre instead of Dodger Stadium was due to perhaps the most consequential game of the 2025 regular season, being the third game of the Dodgers-Blue Jays series from August 8-10 at Dodger Stadium. In the August 10 game, the Dodgers blew a late-game lead in the eighth and a tie in the ninth;[17] had they won that game, Los Angeles would have had home-field advantage and a preverbal Game 7 would have taken place at Dodger Stadium.

Pia Toscano sang the American national anthem and Noah Reid sang the Canadian national anthem.[18] Jack Morris and Paul Molitor threw out the ceremonial first pitch.[19] Blue Jays' Game 7 starter Max Scherzer was matched against two-way player Shohei Ohtani, making his first start ever on three days' rest.[20] Scherzer became the oldest pitcher to start a winner-take-all World Series game.[21] Coincidentally, Scherzer also started in the last Game 7 of a World Series in 2019, while a member of the Washington Nationals.[22] This was Toronto's second Game 7 of the 2025 MLB postseason, after defeating the Seattle Mariners at the Rogers Centre, highlighted by George Springer's 7th inning three-run home run that turned a 3–1 deficit into a 4–3 lead and eventual win.[23] With Game 7 taking place on November 1, it was the eight year anniversary of the Dodgers last World Series Game 7 in 2017, a game they lost 5–1 at home to the Houston Astros in a World Series that would later become mired in controversy.[24][25]

Game

In the bottom of the second inning, Ohtani escaped a two-out bases-loaded jam by striking out Andrés Giménez to keep the game scoreless. In the bottom of the third inning, a single by George Springer and a walk to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. preceded a three-run home run by Bo Bichette to give the Blue Jays a 3–0 lead. Ohtani pitched 2+13 innings, allowing five hits, three runs, and walking two batters while striking out three.[26]

Reliever Justin Wrobleski (left) and Andrés Giménez (right) were involved in a benches-clearing incident in the 4th inning.

In the bottom of the fourth inning with one out, Dodgers' reliever Justin Wrobleski nearly hit Giménez with two inside pitches – the second of which Giménez appeared to throw his arm at intentionally in an attempt to get hit[27] – before a third inside pitch did hit Giménez, and resulted in a benches-clearing incident when Giménez argued with Wrobleski. During the incident, closer Jeff Hoffman got into a shouting match with several Dodger players, including Kirby Yates, who was not even on the active roster. According to Dodger reporter David Vassegh, multiple Dodgers screamed at Hoffman saying, "you don't want to get in this game".[28] Once the umps got everyone settled down, Wrobleski allowed a single but eventually finished the inning without allowing a run. Days after the World Series ended, social media personality Jomboy investigated the benches-clearing incident and came to the conclusion that Giménez was at fault, as it appeared he intentionally tried to get hit by the pitch.[29]

Scherzer allowed a one-out single in the fifth inning before exiting; he pitched 4+13 innings, allowing four hits, one run, and walking one batter while striking out three. He was relieved by Louis Varland, who with his 15th appearance of the playoffs, set a record for most pitching appearances in a single postseason.[30] Varland allowed another hit but also escaped the jam without allowing a run.[31] In the top of the sixth inning, the first two Dodgers reached base off Jays reliever Chris Bassitt, with Mookie Betts eventually scoring on sacrifice fly by Edman to cut the Blue Jays' lead to 3–2. In the bottom of the seventh, utility player Ernie Clement led off with a single against Game 3 starter Tyler Glasnow, stole second, and scored on a Giménez RBI double to extend the lead to 4–2.[32]

In the top of the eighth inning, Max Muncy hit a solo home run off Game 5 starter Trey Yesavage to cut the Dodgers' deficit to 4–3, which prompted the Jays to bring in closer Jeff Hoffman for the four-out save.[34][35] Ernie Clement hit a leadoff double off Emmet Sheehan in the bottom of the eighth inning, setting a record for hits in a MLB postseason with 30.[36] Dodger Game 5 starter Blake Snell entered in relief; Giménez hit a sharp lineout to drawn-in Muncy at third base, and Snell recorded two more outs to strand Clement at second. In the top of the ninth inning, with the Blue Jays two outs from a championship, Miguel Rojas hit a one-out, two-strike home run off of Hoffman to improbably tie the game at 4-4. Rojas, who had been put in the line-up for a struggling Andy Pages after Game 5, had not had a hit since the Wild Card Series one month ago. Rojas became the first player in MLB history with a game-tying home run in the ninth inning or later of a World Series Game 7.[37] According to ESPN Insights, the Blue Jays had a 91.7 percent chance to win Game 7 before the homer.[38]

In the bottom of the ninth inning, Snell attempted to force the game into extra innings. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. flied out to center on a 3–0 count (narrowly missing a championship-winning home run) before Bo Bichette singled and was pinch-run for by Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Addison Barger drew a walk to bring Alejandro Kirk to the plate; the Dodgers countered by replacing Snell with Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who had thrown 96 pitches the previous night. On the second pitch, Kirk was hit in the arm to bring Daulton Varsho to the plate with the bases loaded and one out. With the infield in, Varsho hit a grounder to second baseman Rojas, who stumbled as he fielded the ball but recovered to throw to Smith in time to force out Kiner-Falefa at home for the second out. The Blue Jays unsuccessfully challenged the call; the replay confirmed Smith's foot touched the plate just before Kiner-Falefa's foot slid in.[40] Clement came up with two out and the bases loaded and hit a fly ball to the warning track in left-center field, sending left fielder Enrique Hernández back to attempt what appeared to be a difficult over-the-shoulder catch in order to save the game. However, Dodgers center fielder Andy Pages, inserted as a defensive replacement before the prior at bat, ranged over and made the catch while colliding with Hernández to escape the jam. Andy Pages had to run 121 ft (37 m) in just 5.5 seconds, and his catch was regarded as one of the greatest and most critical in baseball history.[41]

Seranthony Domínguez was sent to pitch for Toronto in the 10th. Mookie Betts drew a one-out walk before Max Muncy delivered a single and Teoscar Hernández drew a walk to load the bases, but the Jays got out of the jam with their own force out at home plate on a grounder hit by Pages, followed by a grounder to Guerrero Jr. by Enrique Hernández on which a covering Domínguez was just able to beat him to first base. With another chance to secure a walk-off win, the Blue Jays instead went down in order to send the game to the 11th inning to make it the first Game 7 to go past the tenth since 1997 and the third overall. Shane Bieber pitched for Toronto in the 11th, and Will Smith hit a two-out home run off Bieber to give Los Angeles a 5–4 lead, also becoming the first player to hit an extra-inning home run in a World Series Game 7.[44] This was, at the time, the fourth biggest play in terms of Championship Win Percentage Added (CWPA) in MLB history, a record which would be broken in the bottom of that very inning.[45] In the bottom of the 11th, Guerrero Jr. lined a leadoff double into the left field corner before Kiner-Falefa laid down a sacrifice bunt to advance Guerrero to third base with one out. Barger then drew a walk to set up Kirk at the plate with runners on the corners. On an 0–2 pitch, Kirk hit a broken-bat ground ball to Dodger shortstop Betts, who stepped on second and threw to Freeman at first to complete the game, series, and season-ending double play.[35] That play overtook Will Smith’s homer earlier in the inning as the fourth biggest play in terms of CWPA.[45] The plate appearances for Barger and Kirk were baseball's first golden pitches—a situation where either team could win a championship on that pitch—since the 2016 World Series. Toronto went 3-for-17 with runners in scoring position, tying the record for most runners stranded on base in a World Series Game 7 set in 1924 by the New York Giants.[46] The Dodgers became the first team to repeat as champions since the New York Yankees won three straight between 1998 and 2000.[47]

Yoshinobu Yamamoto won the World Series Most Valuable Player Award, the first pitcher to win the award since Stephen Strasburg in 2019.[48] Yamamoto recorded three wins and 15 strikeouts with a 1.02 ERA.[49][50] Yamamoto was the first pitcher to get three road wins in a World Series (Games 2, 6, and 7), and the second since 1968 to be credited with three wins in a World Series, joining Randy Johnson in 2001.[51]

Some consider this game as one of the greatest games of professional baseball ever played,[52][53][54] as well as crowning the 2025 Fall Classic as one of the greatest World Series of all time.[55][56] Overall, Game 7 had three of the top twelve World Series plays of all-time according to win probability added (WPA)—Rojas and Smith home runs and the ground ball double-play to end the game. No other World Series had more than one in the top 12.[57]

Aftermath

While hailed as one of the best World Series ever, Toronto's defeat was subsequently called one of the most devastating losses in World Series history, comparable to the 1986 Red Sox and 2011 Rangers, both of whom were one-out away from clinching a championship (Texas was one-out and one strike away twice, while Boston was up 5-3 with two-outs and no one on base).[58] However, those near championships occurred during a Game 6 and the Red Sox and Rangers still had a Game 7 left to play. Toronto’s occurred in a Game 7 and they were two outs and inches away from winning, but could not finish the job.[59] This was the city’s first loss in the championship round in one of the four major sports leagues since the 1960 Stanley Cup Final.[60]

Isiah Kiner-Falefa out at home plate in the ninth inning became one of the most dissected plays in World Series history. After the game, IKF received heavy criticism as many felt he should have scored on the play, which would have given the Blue Jays the walk-off World Series win.[61][62] Blue Jays manager John Schneider defended IKF for the short lead, emphasizing the desire to not get picked off in the event of a line drive to third base.[63] Before the 2026 season, MLB released a report regarding IKF’s out at home plate, and concluded the play was not as close as replay made it seem.[64]

Sportsnet analyst Caleb Joseph also received some criticism after discrediting the Dodgers' win in the post-game show after Game 7. "It’s gonna sound like sour grapes, and I don’t really give a shit. I think the better team did not win this series... I don't think the Baseball Gods got it right", he stated.[65] Kikè Hernández responded on Instagram by jokingly writing, "I’M SO HAPPY THE BETTER TEAM DIDN’T WIN!" with a picture of him holding the World Series trophy.[66] A week after the series, Blue Jays outfielder Davis Schneider offered a more humble take, stating, "If we played better, we would've won. The Dodgers deserved the win."[67] On Mookie Betts' podcast after the Dodgers' World Series parade, some Dodgers admitted, including Kikè Hernández, the team had been on the brink of defeat at several times during the Series.[68]

Conversely, the Dodgers win intensified claims that they were "ruining" baseball, due to their extremely large payroll many other teams cannot match.[69] These claims continued in the off-season when the Dodgers outbid the Blue Jays (and Mets) for star outfielder Kyle Tucker on January 15, 2026, signing him to one of the richest contracts in sports history with an average annual value (AAV) of over 60 million dollars per season.[70] By turning down the Blue Jays 10 year, $350 million contract, Tucker was the first player in MLB history to turn down a $300 million offer.[71] The race to sign Tucker continued the off-season rivalry between the Blue Jays and Dodgers after both competed to sign Shohei Ohtani in 2023, Teoscar Hernández in 2024, and rights to Roki Sasaki in early 2025.[72][73]

Bo Bichette would leave the Blue Jays in the off-season by signing a free-agent contract with the New York Mets. His three-run home run against Ohtani, which seemed like the game-winner until Miguel Rojas' home run in the 9th, was the biggest hit of his Blue Jays career by WPA.[74][75]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Simulcast of the Fox feed
  2. ^ Games 1 and 4 on NHK G and NHK BSP4K
    Games 2 and 3 in NHK BS
    All games also streamed on NHK ONE[1]
  3. ^ Simulcast of the CJCL feed

References

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