Los Angeles Dodgers won the World Series
Washington, Oct 31 (PL) Los Angeles Dodgers won their eighth title in the history of Major League Baseball in the United States after sensationally defeating the New York Yankees in the early hours of this morning.
With the World Series 3-1 in favor of the Dodgers, the Yankees started the fifth game at full speed, to the point of taking a 5-0 lead before the third inning, and loudly exploiting rival starter Jack Flaherty.
However, the Dodgers appealed to the epic and managed to tie the duel in the fifth chapter, with a five-run rally, largely due to the erratic defense of The Bew Yorkers, which ruined the huge work of right-hander Garrit Cole.
Despite the blow, the Yankees regained control of the game in the sixth inning and once again believed in victory; however, the Dodgers finished off the job with two runs in the top of the eighth to take the trophy.
A separate paragraph for righties Blake Treinen and Walker Buehler, who kept the Yankees without runs in the last third of the game, until finally sentencing them with a strikeout of Alex Verdugo.
That was the greatest comeback in history to win a World Series defining game.
The Dodgers won their eighth World Series crown all-time, second in the last five seasons, and fourth against the New York Yankees.
Freddie Freeman won the World Series Most Valuable Player award after compiling four home runs and 12 RBIs, two of them in the fifth and deciding game.
Shohei Ohtani, who played the entire championship series injured, won his first Major League title in his first season with the Dodgers after signing a 10-year, 700-million-dollar contract.
Dave Roberts, the winningest manager of the last decade in the Majors, added his second World Series trophy and announced after the coronation that the team will be much more powerful in 2025.
This great five-game victory over the New York Yankees could be the definitive start of a Los Angeles Dodgers dynasty in Major League Baseball.
The Yankees, curiously, the team with the most titles in the history of the Major League Baseball, 17, deepened their drought of trophy conquests, which already stretches 15 years, until 2009.