New Photo - Who is pitching Game 7? Expect the unexpected in Dodgers-Blue Jays World Series finale

Who is pitching Game 7? Expect the unexpected in DodgersBlue Jays World Series finale Gabe Lacques, USA TODAY November 1, 2025 at 12:31 AM 0 Who is pitching Game 7? Expect the unexpected in DodgersBlue Jays World Series finale TORONTO Kevin Gausman needed a minute to get back up to speed on the lore of World Series Game 7, and his potential part in it. He stands just 6 feet, 2 inches, not 610, and throws righthanded, not a southpaw.

- - Who is pitching Game 7? Expect the unexpected in Dodgers-Blue Jays World Series finale

Gabe Lacques, USA TODAY November 1, 2025 at 12:31 AM

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Who is pitching Game 7? Expect the unexpected in Dodgers-Blue Jays World Series finale

TORONTO - Kevin Gausman needed a minute to get back up to speed on the lore of World Series Game 7, and his potential part in it.

He stands just 6 feet, 2 inches, not 6-10, and throws right-handed, not a southpaw. Nobody will ever accuse the Toronto Blue Jays ace of resembling Randy Johnson, the Hall of Fame left-hander who famously served as the closer in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series, earning the save one night after getting the win in Game 6.

Zero days rest. Gaus, what do you think?

"I'm in. Hell yeah," Gausman, who pitched six superb innings in Game 6, tells USA TODAY Sports. "I gotta go get ready for it, though. I gotta go (ice and heat) and do some things before I leave tonight to put myself in position to be ready.

"But yeah, whatever they need, I'm all hands on deck."

Max Scherzer reacts in the dugout after being relieved in the fifth inning of Game 3.

The call to arms is necessary because the Los Angeles Dodgers' six-batter, third-inning blitz of Gausman provided all their scoring in a 3-1, Game 6 victory, and because a ninth-inning Blue Jays rally got short-circuited by a baserunning gaffe.

Gausman pitched gallantly otherwise, but in a Game 7, the leashes will be shorter for both clubs, the strategy even more granular.

What can we expect once the final baseball game of the year jumps off shortly after 8 ET Saturday night? Only that little is guaranteed.

For starters: Mad Max in a Game 7 sequel

This much we do know: The last man to start Game 7 of the World Series for the winning club will have the ball in his hands again.

Yet what can Max Scherzer - the 41-year-old version of Mad Max - provide the Blue Jays?

The recent returns are, well, OK.

Scherzer ran the leadoff leg for the Blue Jays in the 18-inning, nearly seven-hour Game 3 marathon. He recorded 13 outs capably, but yielded home runs to the Shohei Ohtani and Teoscar Hernández. He nodded his head in agreement when manager John Schneider came to get him in the fifth inning, a 180 from his rage against the analytics machine when Schneider checke on him in ALCS Game 4.

Scherzer will be on tilt from the first pitch. Yet against a Dodgers lineup that found a modicum of footing in Game 6, he may not like it when Schneider comes a-callin' early in Game 7.

The Ohtani Rules

What a fascinating dynamic: Shohei Ohtani loves routine, and his two-way playing brilliance demands that full rest makes him at his best. Yet here we are, World Series Game 7 and the Dodgers' projected starter, Tyler Glasnow, had to record three outs to save the day in Game 6.

OK, so it only required three pitches. But Glasnow, too, is a creature of habit, and the Dodgers will go to bed after Game 6 not knowing how Glasnow may respond for Game 7.

That makes Ohtani starting almost a given. Why? Well, the designated hitter rules revised to accommodate Ohtani (and any other unicorns who may follow in his footsteps) decree that if he starts a game, the Dodgers will not lose their DH privileges even whe he comes out. That's not the case later in the game, when L.A. might be tempted to use Ohtani to put out a fire or take down a dangerous pocket of hitters to begin an inning.

Or, serve as the closer and give up a game-tying run, further handcuffing the Dodgers in extra innings.

So, expect it to be Sho-and-Go for L.A.

Fresh starts

Hey, we all love the "12 guys with their spikes on in the bullpen" fire station mentality of a Game 7. Yet there's a real good chance we'll see many, or even a majority, of starters as Game 7 unfolds.

A quick usage report, in order of ostensibly most rested:

Shane Bieber, RHP, Blue Jays: Pitched 5 1/3 innings, throwing 81 pitches in winning Game 4 on Oct. 28. He will be on three days' rest. He has not pitched in relief since 2019, and never in the playoffs.

Ohtani, RHP, Dodgers: Started opposite Bieber and threw 93 pitches over six innings, giving up a home run to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. He has not pitched on three days' rest in the big leagues.

Trey Yesavage, RHP, Blue Jays: Pitched seven innings, striking out 12 in epic Game 5 victory to put Toronto up 3-2 in the Series. Has just eight games of major league experience, none in the bullpen. Would be pitching on two days' rest. Yet is barely a year removed from college baseball, where starting on Friday and closing on Sunday might be de rigeuer if the ol' ballcoach demands it.

"After I was done, I was like, 'What's next?'" Yesavage said late Saturday night of his Game 5 heroics. "I was hoping we could take care of business and it wouldn't be a question.

"But here we are. Let's see what happens tomorrow."

Blake Snell, LHP, Dodgers: Pitched fairly well opposite Yesavage in Game 5, once he got past the two homers given up on his first three pitches, and will alos be on two day' rest. Snell lasted into the seventh inning, but the ask would be far less in Game 7. Has zero relief appearances in the regular season, but pitched out of the bullpen twice in the 2019 ALDS against Houston. Could be tempting to use in an extended pocket against Torontos Nos. 5-9 batters, which include left-swinging Daulton Varsho, Addison Barger and Andrés Giménez.

Gausman, Blue Jays and Yoshinobu Yamamoto, RHP, Dodgers: The Game 6 combatants. We'll see how Gausman's contrast therapy turns out come mañana. "Everyone that is active on the roster," says manager John Schneider, "will be available to pitch. Maybe even Kev."

As for Yamamoto, the Dodgers' $325 million prized arm and Game 2 and Game 6 winner? Not so much. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said everyone was available, yet when asked about Yamamoto, replied, "Not Yamamoto. Sorry."

No worries. Yamamoto's not about to be accused of being a slacker by anyone. We hope, anyway.

1 / 42025 World Series: All the best moments from Dodgers vs. Blue Jays Game 6Former Toronto Blue Jays star Devon White throws out the ceremonial first pitch before Game 6.The leverage guys

It's almost not even worth pondering whether the throw-til-you-blow sickos in the bullpen are available. Yeah, they all are.

But for kicks, let's just see how many times these dudes have already thrown in this World Sereis, and how effective they've been, in order of highest leverage:

Blue Jays: Jeff Hoffman - 3 games, 1.09 WHIP, two days' rest; Chris Bassitt - 4 games, 0.40 WHIP, no days' rest; Louis Varland - 4 games, 1.61 WHIP, no days' rest; Seranthony Dominguez - 4 games, 1.36 WHIP, no days' rest; Mason Fluharty - 4 games, 2.50 WHIP, no days' rest.

Dodgers: Rōki Sasaki - 2 games, 2.25 WHIP, zero days' rest; Blake Treinen - 3 games, 3.00 WHIP, two days' -rest; Justin Wrobleski - 3 games, 0.55 WHIP, no days' rest; Anthony Banda - 4 games, 2.33 WHIP, two day's rest; Emmet Sheehan - 2 games, 2.67 WHIP, four days' rest.

The rest

Anyone you haven't seen yet likely played significant roles in the 18-inning Game 3 epic, though only a couple of those guys have gotten into multiple games. Is America ready for another Will Klein-Eric Lauer extra-innings death match, only this time with the entire season on the line?

Can't imagine the heart can take too much more of that. Which reminds us: Game 7 will absolutely, positively be the final game of Clayton Kershaw's decorated career. Odds are against him providing us one more October - er, November - memory, though as we've seen, the game scripts in this Series have been unpredictable.

"I feel great. We're just we're going to leave it out there," says Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. "I don't think that the pressure, the moment's going to be too big for us.

"We got to go out there and win one baseball game. We've done that all year. Everyone's bought in. So I don't know how the game's going to play out, but as far the moment, winning a game, I couldn't be more excited to get to sleep and wake up to play a baseball game tomorrow."

Good luck with the sleep portion of that.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Who is pitching Game 7? Dodgers-Blue Jays World Series 'all hands on deck'

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Who is pitching Game 7? Expect the unexpected in Dodgers-Blue Jays World Series finale

Who is pitching Game 7? Expect the unexpected in DodgersBlue Jays World Series finale Gabe Lacques, USA TODAY November...
New Photo - Blue Jays Trolled as Old Yankees Roast Resurfaces After World Series Blunder Threatens Heartbreak

Blue Jays Trolled as Old Yankees Roast Resurfaces After World Series Blunder Threatens Heartbreak Sourav Kumar GhatakNovember 1, 2025 at 12:43 AM 0 CREDIT: IMAGO / Imagn Images ©CREDIT: IMAGO / Imagn Images If you look back at the Blue JaysYankees rivalry this year, it's been all about Toronto's dominance on the field. They took the season series 8–5 and even knocked the Yankees out of the ALDS. But off the field, the Yankees didn't exactly stay quiet. We've heard plenty of backandforth from broadcasters on both sides.

- - Blue Jays Trolled as Old Yankees Roast Resurfaces After World Series Blunder Threatens Heartbreak

Sourav Kumar GhatakNovember 1, 2025 at 12:43 AM

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CREDIT: IMAGO / Imagn Images ©CREDIT: IMAGO / Imagn Images

If you look back at the Blue Jays–Yankees rivalry this year, it's been all about Toronto's dominance on the field. They took the season series 8–5 and even knocked the Yankees out of the ALDS. But off the field, the Yankees didn't exactly stay quiet. We've heard plenty of back-and-forth from broadcasters on both sides. And with just one game left in the World Series, it's clear this rivalry is nowhere near cooling down.

And now, just as the Jays' sloppy baserunning cost them Game 6, an old comment from their own broadcaster, Buck Martinez, made back in September, has come back to bite them. "The Yankees," Martinez said, "They're not a good team. I don't care what their record is. They have a lot of wild pitches, they make a lot of mistakes in the field, and they don't run the bases very well."

Can you relate the statement to what the Jays did tonight in Game 6? You are not alone if you can, because SI's Joe Randazzo also found an uncanny resemblance.

Notably, the Blue Jays went into Game 6 with a 3–2 series lead and just one win away from being crowned champions. But things unraveled fast. It started with a questionable call to intentionally walk Shohei Ohtani, which opened the door for a three-run inning by the Dodgers.

Still, the Jays had a shot late. Down 3–1 in the ninth, Addison Barger ripped a double that put two runners in scoring position with no outs.

Now, with runners on second and third, the Dodgers made a bold move. They pulled rookie closer Roki Sasaki and brought in Tyler Glasnow, who was supposed to start a potential Game 7. Glasnow shut it down… First, a pop-up from Ernie Clement, then a flyout from Andres Gimenez. And then finally, the disaster!!!

Barger strayed too far off second, and Kike Hernandez nailed him on the basepaths to end the game. An unwarranted move to gift the Dodgers a double-play when there should have been only one out.

And just like that, a brutal baserunning mistake cost the Jays their championship moment. What's worse is that Buck Martinez's old comment about the Yankees came back to haunt them at the worst possible time.

The Blue Jays are back to basics for Game 7

Well, with the World Series now tied, all eyes are on the do-or-die Game 7. And guess what, the Blue Jays are turning to their battle-tested veteran, Max Scherzer, hoping he's got one more big performance left in him. If you remember, Scherzer started Game 3, giving up three runs over 4⅓ innings. So yes, he's not in his prime anymore, but he's shown he can still deliver when it matters, like his strong outing in the ALCS (5⅔ innings, two runs).

Meanwhile, there might even be some good luck in play. Why? Because the last time a Game 7 closed out a World Series was back in 2019, and guess who was on the mound? Max Scherzer, pitching for the Nationals, went on to beat the Astros 6–2. So, the Jays would love nothing more than to see history repeat itself.

That said, their bats will have to wake up…

Toronto's powerful offense was silent in Game 6. They just managed one run, and even a veteran like Scherzer can't win without run support. So now, after Buck Martinez's old comments about the Yankees' baserunning came back to haunt the Jays, they'll be hoping his jab about the Yankees' lack of home runs doesn't come true for them next.

The post Blue Jays Trolled as Old Yankees Roast Resurfaces After World Series Blunder Threatens Heartbreak appeared first on EssentiallySports.

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Blue Jays Trolled as Old Yankees Roast Resurfaces After World Series Blunder Threatens Heartbreak

Blue Jays Trolled as Old Yankees Roast Resurfaces After World Series Blunder Threatens Heartbreak Sourav Kumar Gha...
New Photo - Jasmine Paolini 'Taken Ill' Just a Day Before Aryna Sabalenka Clash at WTA Finals

Jasmine Paolini 'Taken Ill' Just a Day Before Aryna Sabalenka Clash at WTA Finals Sayantan RoyNovember 1, 2025 at 12:50 AM 0 TENNIS : Finale Dames Tournoi de Cincinnati 18/08/2025 Finale Dames Iga Swiatek, Pologne vs Jasmine Paolini, Italie, Tournoi de Cincinatti 2025 PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxFRAxBEL Copyright: xx ©IMAGO/PsnewZ The desert air in Riyadh felt charged with anticipation. Cameras were being polished, player banners fluttered in the indoor breeze, and the world's top eight women prepared to wage their final battle of the season.

- - Jasmine Paolini 'Taken Ill' Just a Day Before Aryna Sabalenka Clash at WTA Finals

Sayantan RoyNovember 1, 2025 at 12:50 AM

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TENNIS : Finale Dames - Tournoi de Cincinnati - 18/08/2025 Finale Dames Iga Swiatek, Pologne vs Jasmine Paolini, Italie, Tournoi de Cincinatti 2025 PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxFRAxBEL Copyright: xx ©IMAGO/PsnewZ

The desert air in Riyadh felt charged with anticipation. Cameras were being polished, player banners fluttered in the indoor breeze, and the world's top eight women prepared to wage their final battle of the season. Jasmine Paolini, Italy's pocket rocket and one of the brightest revelations in the last couple of years, was supposed to walk into the WTA Finals like a woman ready to finish what she started—a season of breakthroughs, heart, and grit. But sport, as ever, has its dramatic timing. Just a day before the long-awaited opener against Aryna Sabalenka, a whisper turned into news: Paolini has been taken ill.

Last year, Paolini played 63 matches and won 42 out of them, but this year, she has already played 64 matches and has a win percentage (71.9%) much better than the previous year. Although she has failed to reach the quarterfinals of any of the four major tournaments this year, her form at the WTA 1000 events has been truly exceptional. Paolini won the title in Rome and then reached the final at the Cincinnati Open, where she was defeated by Iga Swiatek by a 5-7, 4-6 margin. In the previous month, she reached the QF at the China Open and the semifinals at the Wuhan Open and Ningbo Open. Owing to her stellar performance in the last few months, Paolini secured a spot in the 2025 WTA Finals, and she was all set to start her doubles campaign alongside her compatriot Sara Errani on Saturday at 3:30 pm local time (8:30 am ET). Following that, she is scheduled to play against the world number one, Sabalenka, in the singles event, but…

Jasmine Paolini was unable to complete her media commitments on Friday after becoming unwell towards the end of her practice session. Hence, she was then advised to take some rest. But her fans are now a bit concerned about her participation at the WTA Finals, since there isn't much time left before she hits the court.According to the presenter, Gigi Salmon's statement to Sky Sports, "I managed to speak to 22 out of a possible 24 players. The two players missing were the Italians and the top seeds in the doubles, the Roland Garros champions, Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini." She further clarified, "That's because Paolini was taken ill at the end of her practice earlier today, and the tournament director recommended that she take it easy, doesn't do any media interviews today, and just rest."

Tennis – French Open – Roland Garros, Paris, France – June 3, 2024 Italy's Jasmine Paolini reacts during her fourth round match against Russia's Elina Avanesyan REUTERS/Lisi Niesner

Having said that, she wished Paolini a speedy recovery, as there isn't much time left before their match against Asia Muhammad and Demi Schuurs in the doubles. For a player who built her year on resilience and rhythm, the timing could not be more brutal. We'll keep a close eye on whether she manages to show up in the doubles and singles events or not. But talking about her journey to the WTA Finals, how does Paolini look at her performance this season, though?

Jasmine Paolini draws a comparison between her performance in 2024 and 2025

There are seasons that build a player, and then there are seasons that test everything they've built. For Jasmine Paolini, 2024 was the year she stepped into tennis' brightest spotlight—consistency, composure, and a fearless surge that carried her deep into the brightest stages. But fast-forward to 2025, and the tone is different. Last year, she reached two major finals (French Open and Wimbledon), but this year has been a bit tricky for the Italian.

Earlier this year, in an interview with Tennis365, when she was asked about how difficult it was for her to take it forward from where she left it last year, she said, "I think the key is always to trust the process, trust the work you are doing. You have to put the work in to improve every time you go on court because if you keep the same level, you are going down. You always have to improve. That's the key to staying at this level. I like being here, so I want to stay. This year has been a bit less consistent than last year, but it has still been a good year."

Following that, in an interview with Sky Sports, she further added, "Last season was truly incredible, fantastic. It wasn't easy to play as well as last year, but I think I managed it, perhaps with less consistency. I won in Rome, which is a dream for Italians." She also spoke about the importance of being consistent at this level and admitted, "This year, it was hard to change coaches, but at the same time, I feel like I've grown a lot."

And like all great competitors, Paolini understands that success isn't a straight line. The champions are not the ones who rise, but the ones who rise again when the climb steepens. According to former pro CoCo Vandeweghe, Jasmine Paolini has gone "under the radar" this season. She also heaped praise on how Paolini has managed to maintain a fair bit of consistency in the later part of the season, especially. Coming to her predictions for the WTA Finals, Vandeweghe said, "Jasmine Paolini is always going to be a dangerous player coming in the round robin, because you have multiple chances to try and qualify and win in your group."

But do you know that the qualification for the WTA Finals would've been a bit difficult for the Italian star without this particular rule…We saw Paolini getting relieved of a point deduction this year, but players like Iga Swiatek (173), Aryna Sabalenka (130), Coco Gauff (10), and others have been handed a point deduction. Speaking on this, Polish tennis journalist Dominik Senkowski shed light on how Paolini edged out Mirra Andreeva for a coveted spot, thanks to a rarely invoked rule.

According to him, "Jasmine Paolini was not penalized with points deduction from the ranking—unlike, for example, Swiątek or Sabalenka. The Italian played in 5 and not 6 WTA 500 tournaments this year. The WTA informed me that the lack of penalty stems from the fact that Paolini withdrew from Adelaide for medical reasons." He further elaborated on how this loophole allowed her to strategically skip the Pan Pacific Open in Tokyo. Meanwhile, Andreeva scrambled to make up points by entering the Tokyo draw but was unable to compete at this event due to visa complications.

Fortune favors the brave? Well, surely Jasmine Paolini has been quite brave this season on the courts. But can she now showcase yet another moment of bravery by overcoming all the hurdles and starting the WTA Finals campaign on a positive note?

The post Jasmine Paolini 'Taken Ill' Just a Day Before Aryna Sabalenka Clash at WTA Finals appeared first on EssentiallySports.

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Jasmine Paolini ‘Taken Ill’ Just a Day Before Aryna Sabalenka Clash at WTA Finals

Jasmine Paolini 'Taken Ill' Just a Day Before Aryna Sabalenka Clash at WTA Finals Sayantan RoyNovember 1, 2025...
New Photo - World Series 2025: For once, a Blue Jays rally comes up short as Dodgers force Game 7 with wild ninth inning

World Series 2025: For once, a Blue Jays rally comes up short as Dodgers force Game 7 with wild ninth inning Jordan ShustermanNovember 1, 2025 at 1:22 AM 0 TORONTO — "Put the ball in play, and good things happen." It's a classic hardball mantra that has proven especially poignant for the Toronto Blue Jays, the team that was the most difficult to strike out in the regular season and the one that has spent October tormenting opposing pitchers.

- - World Series 2025: For once, a Blue Jays rally comes up short as Dodgers force Game 7 with wild ninth inning

Jordan ShustermanNovember 1, 2025 at 1:22 AM

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TORONTO — "Put the ball in play, and good things happen."

It's a classic hardball mantra that has proven especially poignant for the Toronto Blue Jays, the team that was the most difficult to strike out in the regular season and the one that has spent October tormenting opposing pitchers. The Jays have consistently made contact via sizzling line drives and softly hit bloopers and every kind of batted ball in between, racking up runs en route to the doorstep of a World Series title.

But on Friday at Rogers Centre — in the final frame of a devastating 3-1 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers in World Series Game 6 — the Blue Jays put two tantalizing balls in play, only to be left coldly unrewarded. Had good things happened on Addison Barger's laser beam to the outfield fence or Andrés Giménez's flare into shallow left field, the city of Toronto might very well be planning a parade right now. Instead, Toronto and its fans will prepare for the unrivaled drama of a Game 7 on Saturday.

No major-league team has authored more come-from-behind victories than the Blue Jays in 2025 — 49 in the regular season, plus another five in October — and Toronto appeared to be cooking up another comeback in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 6. With a two-run lead, Dodgers rookie enigma Roki Sasaki was on the mound for Los Angeles seeking the final three outs after delivering a scoreless eighth inning. After getting leadoff man Alejandro Kirk into a quick 0-2 hole on fastballs at 99 and 98 mph, Sasaki uncorked a wayward splitter that hit Kirk in the left hand, giving him a free trip to first base. Myles Straw pinch-ran for Kirk, and Barger came up as the game-tying run with nobody out.

Barger fouled off two fastballs and watched two splitters that sailed outside, bringing the count to 2-2. Sasaki came again with the heat, and Barger didn't miss it, connecting with the 99-mph offering. The ball jumped off Barger's bat at 105.5 mph and soared toward the left-center-field wall.

What happened next was entirely novel to everyone in the Blue Jays dugout, including those who have called Rogers Centre home for years.

As center fielder Justin Dean turned his back and raced towards the wall, it quickly became clear that the ball was not going to be caught. But rather than soaring into the seats for a home run or ricocheting off the wall for a run-scoring double, an unthinkable third outcome occurred: The ball crash-landed directly into the base of the fence, wedging itself between the ground and the padding that covers the wall.

When this happens — and it does happen on occasion at certain ballparks, though not at Rogers Centre to the recollection of any current Blue Jay — the rulebook states that the play can be blown dead and the hit declared a ground-rule double if the fielder puts his hands up upon seeing the stuck ball. Had Dean reached for the ball and attempted to play it from its stuck position, it could have been ruled a live ball. But left fielder Kiké Hernández immediately threw his arms up when the ball reached its unlikely landing spot, prompting Dean — who had entered the game as a ninth-inning defensive upgrade — to do the same. That led left-field umpire John Tumpane to signal that the ball was indeed a ground-rule double, meaning Straw could advance only two bases, rather than coming around to score Toronto's second run.

Tumpane's call did little to quiet the elation Barger's batted ball sparked among the 44,710 spectators. Not only had Straw seemingly come around to score, but also Barger — not seeing where the ball had landed — just kept running, racing all the way to home plate to amplify the chaos further. The bulk of the crowd believed Barger had just tied the game with an improbable inside-the-park home run and reacted accordingly. Then reality slowly set in as the ground-rule double was confirmed by the crew of umpires and understood by both dugouts, sending Barger back to second and Straw back to third.

[Get more Toronto news: Blue Jays team feed]

"I could tell the ball was gonna beat Dean. So I dropped my head, I picked up Carlos, and he waved me home," Straw recalled later. "I scored, and then I turned around. I was like, 'OK, Barger is probably gonna be at second.' I turned around and see Barger coming, and I was like, 'Oh, my gosh. What's going on?' …

"No one's ever really seen the ball do that here, myself included. It was tough, I was hoping they didn't put the arms up because I think that would have been a live ball if he grabbed it. But they did the right thing as an outfielder — you're supposed to do that, and that's the right call."

Said Barger: "I couldn't really see the ball, like trapped or anything. I just saw them wave their hands, so I'm just gonna keep running and see what they call it. That's pretty much it. I saw at the wall. I didn't really see after that. Just kept going, just in case."

"Been here a long time," manager John Schneider said postgame. "I haven't seen a ball get lodged ever. Just caught a tough break there. He put a really good swing on that pitch."

Daulton Varsho said it is "impressive" for a ball to get lodged under the wall in Toronto 😳 pic.twitter.com/rlMCqgYjaO

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) November 1, 2025

With that play finally resolved, Barger had done his part to keep the rally alive, but the two-run deficit remained. Thus concluded Sasaki's night, with his command clearly wavering as his pitch count climbed, prompting the entrance of Tyler Glasnow to try to clean up the mess and secure the final three outs.

Up came Ernie Clement with two runners in scoring position and zero outs. Glasnow's first pitch was a 96-mph sinker that ran up and in sharply on Clement's hands. Clement swung anyway and popped up weakly to first base, offering zero opportunity for either baserunner to advance.

For perhaps any other hitter on either roster, swinging at Glasnow's first pitch in this situation would come off as unnecessarily risky and overeager. But this ultra-aggressive approach has done wonders for Clement all month, as the fan-favorite infielder has racked up a whopping 27 hits, the third-most ever in a single postseason behind only 2020 Randy Arozarena (29) and his superstar teammate Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (28). Seven of Clement's hits have come on the first pitch of an at-bat, and another five have come on the second. His result against Glasnow was untimely, but it's difficult to argue with the process that has yielded so much recent success.

Next Giménez came to the plate, with the ever-dangerous Springer looming large on deck. Glasnow again attacked with a sinker, this one running away from the left-handed Giménez. Giménez swung at the pitch on the outer half and connected poorly with the end of his bat, splintering a small piece of lumber on contact and sending the ball floating toward left field.

Hernández, playing notably shallow in left field, bolted toward the ball as it parachuted to the grass. Barger, watching the flight of the ball to see if it would land and allow him to score the game-tying run or at least advance to third, was stopped roughly halfway between second and third. As Hernández sprinted in at full speed and closed in on the ball, Barger realized, though not quickly enough, that he needed to get back to the bag.

Hernández caught the ball in stride and threw quickly to second base, where Miguel Rojas made a nifty snag on the throw, which skipped off the dirt, just a blink before Barger's hand made it back to the bag.

Double play. Game 6 over. Game 7 tomorrow.

"I was being too aggressive, trying to score, you know, trying to tie up that game if that ball drops," Barger said afterward. "He got a good read on the ball and made a good play."

Said Schneider: "It's a tough read. Kiké playing shallow and one out, you're thinking score. He made a really good play. It's such a tweener. He made a good play, good throw. Good play by Rojas, too. Wild. Wild way to finish it, for sure.

The Blue Jays had done what they do best, putting the ball in play when they needed to most with a World Series title within reach. But as it turns out, good things don't always happen.

"Ultimately ended up second and third with nobody out with guys that make contact, and just didn't get it done," Schneider said.

Toronto's fateful failed rally in the ninth was the dramatic end to a ballgame that featured few other run-scoring opportunities and was the first game of this World Series without a home run from either team. For three hours, the Dodgers and Blue Jays engaged in an ultra-tense affair befitting the high-pressure stakes of any Game 6, with one team one win away from a championship and the other desperately trying to stave off elimination.

Coming off a sensational complete-game performance in Game 2, right-hander Yoshinobu Yamamoto took the mound with the task of extending the Dodgers season and once again rose to the occasion. While Toronto did a better job of inflating his pitch count to ensure Yamamoto's exit after six innings — an awfully early departure by his recent standards — the Blue Jays' bats mustered minimal offense against the Dodgers' righty outside of George Springer's two-out RBI single in the third. Otherwise, Yamamoto repeatedly and masterfully dodged trouble, coaxing inning-ending double plays in the first and fourth and striking Daulton Varsho out with a nasty splitter to strand two baserunners in a scoreless sixth.

Yamamoto's final line from his two World Series starts: 15 innings, 9 hits, 2 runs, 1 walk, 14 strikeouts. Pretty good.

Meanwhile, Blue Jays starter Kevin Gausman mostly matched Yamamoto's effort, tying a World Series record with eight strikeouts through the first three innings, thanks in large part to his spectacular splitter that was racking up whiffs. But things got away from Gausman in the third. After Shohei Ohtani was intentionally walked with a runner on second and two outs, Will Smith made Gausman pay with a double to left field to open the scoring. A five-pitch walk to Freddie Freeman loaded the bases for Mookie Betts, who finally found the big hit he's been looking for with a two-run single on a poorly located fastball from Gausman to make it 3-0 Dodgers.

Betts' single, Smith's double and Tommy Edman's double earlier that inning accounted for three of Los Angeles' four hits in Game 6, with Ohtani adding a double in the eighth. That's two straight games for the Dodgers producing four total hits following their ugly offensive showing in Game 5 that pushed their season to the brink. But on a night when the Blue Jays bats couldn't find a way to break through, three runs on four hits turned out to be enough to extend Los Angeles' season another day.

Now all that's left is Game 7, a game that guarantees great theatre in any context but promises to be especially enthralling given the expected starting pitchers: 41-year-old future first-ballot Hall of Famer Max Scherzer going up against, in all likelihood, Ohtani on short rest for the first time in his career. Both will have the chance to add to their extensive legends, but it feels just as likely that the game will be decided by whatever combination of arms enters after them.

With Saturday's outcome, a season that began for these teams in Glendale, Arizona, and Dunedin, Florida, in mid-February will end in Canada on the first day of November. It will be the 2,477th game of 2025, the largest combined total between the regular season and postseason in MLB history.

"It's going to be fun," Schneider said. "It's going to be three or four or five hours of mayhem and great baseball. But these guys are going to be ready for it. Hopefully they get to slow some things down but enjoy it.

"It's Game 7 of the World Series at your home stadium. I mean, what the hell else do you want?"

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Source: "AOL Sports"

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Published: November 01, 2025 at 10:27AM on Source: ERIUS MAG

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World Series 2025: For once, a Blue Jays rally comes up short as Dodgers force Game 7 with wild ninth inning

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New Photo - Vampire Diaries creators talk season 1's Katherine twist, the fan response that left them 'aghast'

There was one particular Damon moment that backfired on the writers. Vampire Diaries creators talk season 1's Katherine twist, the fan response that left them 'aghast' There was one particular Damon moment that backfired on the writers. By Samantha Highfill :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/SamanthaHighfillauthorphoto0917254112e875604542d49744a27de908d183.jpg) Samantha Highfill Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at , where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television. EW's editorial guidelines August 4, 2021 9:00 a.m. ET Every story needs a good villain.

There was one particular Damon moment that backfired on the writers.

Vampire Diaries creators talk season 1's Katherine twist, the fan response that left them 'aghast'

There was one particular Damon moment that backfired on the writers.

By Samantha Highfill

Sam Highfill author photo

Samantha Highfill

Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at **, where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television.

EW's editorial guidelines

August 4, 2021 9:00 a.m. ET

Every story needs a good villain. And for the beginning of *The Vampire Diaries*, Damon Salvatore (Ian Somerhalder) was that villain, the big bad brother who followed Stefan (Paul Wesley) home to Mystic Falls to make his life — or eternity — miserable. (And then there was Damon's whole plan to free the series' next villain from a tomb that she wasn't actually in, but we'll get to that.)

In the early days of the series, *Vampire Diaries* co-creators Kevin Williamson and Julie Plec worked to discover Damon's voice, finding inspiration from within. "It's just that inner voice that is so snarky, all the things you wanna say out loud but you can't," Williamson says during episode 1 of *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries*.

The result was an arrogant (and glib) Salvatore who delivered a handful of enigmatic one-liners in season 1, including Plec's personal favorite: Standing on a roof, Damon refuses to tell Stefan his evil master plan. When asked what he's up to, he responds, "That's for me to know and you to dot dot dot." And it turns out, that line was Plec and Williamson's way of answering a network note... or 10.

"For the first three or four episodes, any time anyone read a script at the network they were like, 'Yes, but what's Damon's drive? What does Damon want?' And we were like, 'Oh my God, he just wants to be an a--hole,'" Plec says with a laugh.

So, the writers worked it into the script, with Stefan serving as the voice of the network, constantly asking the same question: What does Damon want? Until, finally, Damon tells him that it's "for me to know and you to dot dot dot." (Get it?)

But as season 1 continued, fans started to fall for Damon's evil ways a bit too much, so much so that Williamson and Plec felt the need to reset some things at the start of season 2. "We can't have a lovable villain," says Williamson. "That's great and that's a fan-favorite character, but that doesn't bring you real storytelling and real stakes."

Plec adds, "We had this magnificent villain who could do no wrong in the eyes of the audience and we thought, 'Let's give him something really wrong that is unforgivable so we can buy ourselves another year of Damon as the villain and Stefan as the hero.'" With that in mind, they had Damon snap Jeremy's (Steven R. McQueen) neck at the end of the season 2 premiere. But the fan response was not what Plec and Williamson had intended.

"They [were like], 'Poor Damon, poor Damon, he's so misunderstood! He just loves Elena so much,'" Plec recalls. "We were aghast. We were like, 'What have we wrought? We have basically accidentally created the poster couple for toxic masculinity.' The women loved him and we couldn't understand it at all. That was a moment."

Thankfully, Damon wasn't the show's only villain by that point. As Williamson puts it, "Every time one of the villains turned nice, we brought in a new one." And that's just what happened at the end of season 1, when, in one of the series' biggest twists, Katherine Pierce (Nina Dobrev) shows up, kisses Damon, and then waltzes into Elena's house and removes Uncle John's (David Anders) fingers.

The Vampire Diaries

Nina Dobrev as Katherine Pierce on 'The Vampire Diaries.'. The CW

"That set the standard for *Vampire Diaries*," Plec says of the season 1 finale twist. "That finale set the standard of: We always have to fight to get to as close to this amazing awesome twist and cliffhanger ending as we possibly can. We can never let our audience down with a finale. We put so much pressure on ourselves for eight years to make sure that we never failed a finale. There were some that were better than others, but we took our finales seriously."

And to think, it wasn't always the plan for Dobrev to play both characters. "It didn't occur to us originally that Nina should play Elena and Katherine," Plec says of what would become the Petrova doppelgangers. "In the books, they called it a striking resemblance. I remember Italia Ricci, who had tested for Elena early on, comes up to us at Comic-Con after the show gets picked up she's like, 'I am putting myself in front of you to say I would like to play Katherine Pierce.'"

But by that point, Dobrev's photo had already been used for the 1864 snapshot of the curly-haired doppelganger, and a few episodes later, she'd take on both roles and nothing in Mystic Falls would ever be the same.

Listen to the full podcast episode below and stream all eight seasons of *The Vampire Diaries *on Netflix.

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com.**

**Related content:**

- We drank three rounds with *Vampire Diaries *stars Paul Wesley and Ian Somerhalder

- Today will be different: An oral history of* The Vampire Diaries* pilot

- Best. of the Decade: *The Vampire Diaries* delivered a perfect love triangle in its third season

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

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Source: "EW EW"

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Published: November 01, 2025 at 10:19AM on Source: ERIUS MAG

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Vampire Diaries creators talk season 1's Katherine twist, the fan response that left them 'aghast'

There was one particular Damon moment that backfired on the writers. Vampire Diaries creators talk season 1's Kather...
New Photo - Vampire Diaries star Paul Wesley on Stelena's season 2 split: I was 'dealing with my own stuff' o...

Wesley, Nina Dobrev, and Julie Plec discuss season 2 on EW's Binge podcast. Vampire Diaries star Paul Wesley on Stelena's season 2 split: I was 'dealing with my own stuff' on screen Wesley, Nina Dobrev, and Julie Plec discuss season 2 on EW's Binge podcast. By Samantha Highfill :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/SamanthaHighfillauthorphoto0917254112e875604542d49744a27de908d183.jpg) Samantha Highfill Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at , where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television. EW's editorial guidelines August 6, 2021 9:00 a.m.

Wesley, Nina Dobrev, and Julie Plec discuss season 2 on EW's Binge podcast.

Vampire Diaries star Paul Wesley on Stelena's season 2 split: I was 'dealing with my own stuff' on screen

Wesley, Nina Dobrev, and Julie Plec discuss season 2 on EW's Binge podcast.

By Samantha Highfill

Sam Highfill author photo

Samantha Highfill

Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at **, where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television.

EW's editorial guidelines

August 6, 2021 9:00 a.m. ET

Katherine Pierce's season 1 arrival in Mystic Falls changed everything for *The Vampire Diaries*… and for actress Nina Dobrev. Suddenly, Dobrev went from playing Katherine occasionally in flashbacks to pulling full-time double duty on the series as present-day Katherine and, of course, Elena.

"The first episode was just a couple flashbacks, and then they introduced her more and more, so I got to figure her out over the first season, and then season 2, once she was back and in the flesh and she was in a lot more of the episodes, it was crazy schedule-wise shooting both of the roles," Dobrev says in episode 2 of *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries*.

But Katherine's arrival didn't just make things crazy behind the scenes. Within the world of the show, the doppelgänger instantly created chaos, particularly for Stefan (Paul Wesley) and Elena. Katherine's goal was simple: She wanted the happy couple to split.

Stefan and Elena tried to fool her at first, but when that didn't work, Jenna (Sara Canning) ended up in the hospital, and Stefan and Elena were forced to realize that Katherine always gets her way. The result was one of the series' most devastating breakup scenes, which Wesley still remembers vividly.

The Vampire Diaries

Paul Wesley on 'The Vampire Diaries'. The CW

"I remember doing at least four [takes] that were, like, pretty good," Wesley says on the podcast. "I also was dealing with a couple things in my personal life, so I didn't really want to go to dark places because I was trying to keep my head above water in real life, frankly. And so [director John] Behring kept pushing me. Maybe he sensed I was going through something and so he really wanted that on screen, and I remember just getting a little bit angry at him, even though it was his job. I would do the same as a director. When you're creating film or television, the whole point of it is to be honest and pure."

Ultimately, Wesley says he went to his "personal place" and channeled real-life emotion for the heartbreaking scene. "That crying, that whole breakup was [me] dealing with my own stuff, essentially, on screen. And then I remember after we shot it I was a little relieved, but then also a little bit angry that I had to deal with that and then I had to go home and deal with that," Wesley says. "But at the end of the day, it's on screen, it works so great for the scene, and I would do it again in a heartbeat."

For more on season 2 — and how the show has found a second life in quarantine — listen to the full *Binge* episode below. You can stream all eight seasons of *The Vampire Diaries *on Netflix.

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com.**

**Related content:**

- *Vampire Diaries* creators talk season 1 Katherine twist, the fan response that left them 'aghast'

- We drank three rounds with *Vampire Diaries *stars Paul Wesley and Ian Somerhalder

- Today will be different: An oral history of* The Vampire Diaries* pilot

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

Original Article on Source

Source: "EW EW"

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Source: EW

Published: November 01, 2025 at 10:19AM on Source: ERIUS MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Vampire Diaries star Paul Wesley on Stelena's season 2 split: I was 'dealing with my own stuff' o...

Wesley , Nina Dobrev, and Julie Plec discuss season 2 on EW's Binge podcast. Vampire Diaries star Paul Wesley on Ste...
New Photo - Vampire Diaries boss Julie Plec explains why Klaroline could never happen today

Plus, the relationship Plec plotted for five years that never happened. Vampire Diaries boss Julie Plec explains why Klaroline could never happen today Plus, the relationship Plec plotted for five years that never happened. By Samantha Highfill :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/SamanthaHighfillauthorphoto0917254112e875604542d49744a27de908d183.jpg) Samantha Highfill Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at , where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television. EW's editorial guidelines August 11, 2021 9:00 a.m.

Plus, the relationship Plec plotted for five years that never happened.

Vampire Diaries boss Julie Plec explains why Klaroline could never happen today

Plus, the relationship Plec plotted for five years that never happened.

By Samantha Highfill

Sam Highfill author photo

Samantha Highfill

Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at **, where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television.

EW's editorial guidelines

August 11, 2021 9:00 a.m. ET

Audiences love to root for a bad boy, but it's one thing when the bad boy is a troubled teen from the wrong side of the tracks and something else entirely when he's a 1,000-year-old vampire responsible for the deaths of countless people. And yet, when Klaus Mikaelson (Joseph Morgan) visited Caroline Forbes (Candice King) on her birthday during *The Vampire Diaries*' third season, a new ship was born.

"Candice had chemistry with everybody, and Caroline, as a result, had chemistry with everybody," *Vampire Diaries* executive producer Julie Plec says in episode 3 of *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries*. But the writers had no idea when they were crafting that scene — in which Klaus goes to heal Caroline after he told a sired Tyler (Michael Trevino) to bite her — that it would become something greater. "I think that [scene] birthed the chemistry, as opposed to the other way around," Plec says.

From that point on, the Klaroline ship was a fan favorite, and although it led to many great moments on the series, it's one thing Plec admits would never fly today. "It's so toxic," she says. "That little romantic relationship would never get through a writers' room today because it's just unbelievably f---ed up, but boy was it good."

Vampire Diaries

Candice King and Joseph Morgan on 'The Vampire Diaries'. the cw

Speaking of ships, during the podcast Plec also reveals the one relationship that she plotted for five years before realizing it wasn't going to happen. Specifically talking about the season 3 episode "The Reckoning," in which Matt (Zach Roerig) and Bonnie (Kat Graham) share some poolside scenes — and Bonnie saves Matt from drowning — Plec says those scenes gave her an idea. "I shipped Bonnie and Matt from that day, and in my head, the end of the series would be a flash-forward that Bonnie and Matt had gotten together and had a family," she says.

For years, Plec kept that idea in her back pocket. "I held onto that in my head until we were breaking the series finale and broke an entire version of the series finale that had that, that Bonnie found her happiness with Matt Donovan and they had everything they'd ever wanted, a family, a human family, and beautiful Bennett-Donovan children running around," she says. "And then we decided not to go into actual flash-forwards in the future. We jumped into peace instead." And just like that, Plec's idea died.

For more, listen to the podcast episode in full below:

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com.**

**Related content:**

- *Vampire Diaries* star Paul Wesley on Stelena's season 2 split: I was 'dealing with my own stuff' on screen

- *Vampire Diaries* creators talk season 1 Katherine twist, the fan response that left them 'aghast'

- We drank three rounds with *Vampire Diaries *stars Paul Wesley and Ian Somerhalder

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

Original Article on Source

Source: "EW EW"

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Source: EW

Published: November 01, 2025 at 10:19AM on Source: ERIUS MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Vampire Diaries boss Julie Plec explains why Klaroline could never happen today

Plus, the relationship Plec plotted for five years that never happened. Vampire Diaries boss Julie Plec explains why K...

 

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