World Series, Los Angeles Dodgers and Blue Jays
Digest more
Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Alex Vesia is not on the team's roster for the World Series. The team released the roster on Oct. 24, the same day that the World Series kicked off; The Dodgers lost to the Toronto Blue Jays 11-4 in Game 1.
That was a terrible, no good, very bad Game 1 of the World Series. All the Dodgers can do is shake it off and come out strong in Game 2.
Star, who hadn’t played since spraining his left knee in early September, singles early, walks to begin a nine-run sixth inning and makes a nice defensive play in his first game
The Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 11-4 ( box score) on Friday night in Game 1 of the World Series. The Dodgers struck first and the two sides eventually entered the bottom of the sixth tied, but the Blue Jays scored nine runs behind a history-making Addison Barger grand slam and turn a tight contest into a boat race.
Since falling behind the San Diego Padres two games to one in the 2024 NLDS, the Dodgers carried a 19-4 postseason record into last night's game. This is the first time they've trailed a series since after Game 3 of that series vs. the Padres. What was it like in Toronto for Game 1? We’ll let Andy McCullough set the scene ...
A historic Friday night pitching collapse by the Los Angeles Dodgers against the Toronto Blue Jays left the defending MLB champions facing a 0-1 World Series deficit.
The World Series got officially underway on Friday night, and while most people thought the Los Angeles Dodgers were going to handle the Toronto Blue Jays like
At Game 1 of the World Series in Toronto on Friday, overt politics were absent. Unity between the two nations was on display before the first pitch.
After the Blue Jays took Game 1 of the World Series in convincing fashion, the Dodgers cut Canada deep with one tweet.