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HERE WE GO: Yankees, Dodgers start blockbuster duel

‘The stars will be out, the eyeballs will be watching, and hopefully we can deliver a great series.’
All eyes will be on Japanese sensation Shohei Ohtani when the Los Angeles Dodgers collide with the New York Yankees in the World Series on Saturday (Manila time).
All eyes will be on Japanese sensation Shohei Ohtani when the Los Angeles Dodgers collide with the New York Yankees in the World Series on Saturday (Manila time).KATHARINE LOTZE/agence france-presse
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LOS ANGELES (AFP) — The most eagerly anticipated World Series showdown in decades gets under way here Friday (Saturday in Manila) as the Los Angeles Dodgers take on the New York Yankees in what promises to be a baseball blockbuster for the ages.

The star-studded collision between two of the sport’s most iconic franchises is the 12th World Series involving the historical rivals and comes some 43 years after their last Fall Classic showdown in 1981.

All eyes will be on the Dodgers’ Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani, the record-breaking phenomenon regarded as the best all-round player since the legendary Babe Ruth.

Ohtani is part of an array of talent who will take the field at Dodger Stadium at 5:08 p.m. for Game 1 of the best-of-seven series.

As well as Ohtani, the Dodgers boast former Most Valuable Players such as Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, while the Yankees have home run king Aaron Judge and a big-hitting line-up that includes Giancarlo Stanton and Juan Soto.

“Dodgers-Yankees, two pillar franchises in the sport, with a lot of history, going back a long, long time,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said on Thursday.

“It’s certainly special. I think everyone can identify with the Dodgers, can identify with the Yankees, and just what that means worldwide. Excited to be a part of it.”

Boone’s Dodgers counterpart Dave Roberts also noted the global appeal of the showdown.

“It is worldwide,” Roberts said.

“I think that’s what’s going to make this World Series so special, so unique.”

The galaxy of stars on the field is likely to be matched by a constellation of A-listers watching from the stands.

Hollywood stars such as Brad Pitt and Tom Hanks have frequently been spotted at Dodger Stadium while the Yankees boast supporters such as actor Denzel Washington and hip-hop mogul Jay-Z.

“The stars will be out, the eyeballs will be watching, and hopefully we can deliver a great series,” Boone said.

It all adds up to the kind of must-watch sporting event that will delight Major League Baseball’s executives, who have reported sharp double-digit television ratings increases during the postseason.

So far, average television viewing figures have jumped 18 percent from last year’s average of 2.82 million per game to 3.33 million.

While this year’s World Series is unlikely to match the record average of viewers for a Fall Classic — 44.3 million tuned in for each game of the 1978 series — it is likely to obliterate the record-low 9.08 million who watched last year’s series between the Texas Rangers and Arizona Diamondbacks.

The presence of Dodgers ace Ohtani has also opened up a new international frontier, with Major League Baseball revealing that record 12.9 million Japanese viewers tuned in for the Dodgers’ recent National League Division Series decider against the San Diego Padres — roughly 10 percent of Japan’s entire population.

“That’s an unbelievable number, a huge audience,” MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said.

“Ohtani has really, really driven interest in the game internationally.”

Manfred believes this year’s World Series evokes baseball’s golden age, when the sport was truly America’s pastime and had yet to be usurped by the National Football League and National Basketball Association.

“The history of Yankee-Dodgers is great for our fanbase,” Manfred said.

“You look back and think of Sandy Koufax playing against Mickey Mantle, of Joe DiMaggio playing against Jackie Robinson. And now you’ve got Aaron Judge against Shohei Ohtani.”

Accordingly, World Series tickets have become the hottest commodity in sport since the Dodgers confirmed their place in the championship finale with victory over the New York Mets on Sunday.

According to ticket aggregator TicketIQ, games in Los Angeles are averaging around $3,100 on secondary markets; games in New York come in at an eye-watering average of $4,875.

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