SHOHEI Ohtani and the Los Angeles Dodgers aim to become the first team to win back-to-back World Series crown in more than two decades when they battle the Toronto Blue Jays starting Saturday (Manila time). LUKE HALES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
SPORTS

Chasing history

Agence France-Presse

LOS ANGELES (AFP) — The Shohei Ohtani-powered Los Angeles Dodgers will attempt to become the first team in 25 years to win back-to-back World Series on Saturday (Manila time) when they face a Toronto Blue Jays side determined to end a decades-long title drought.

Twelve months after outgunning the New York Yankees in a blockbuster Fall Classic, the Dodgers are on the cusp of a second straight Major League Baseball championship.

The Blue Jays head into Friday’s Game 1 at Toronto’s Rogers Center with home advantage in the best-of-seven series due to their superior regular season record.

But the star-studded Dodgers lineup start as the clear favorites to win a ninth World Series crown, and their third in five years.

Japanese ace Ohtani is the center-piece of an expensively assembled team which critics have accused of “ruining” baseball, which unlike many professional sports in North America, does not have a salary cap.

The Dodgers, who spent lavishly to improve their roster following last season’s World Series victory, are happy to be cast as villains.

“Before this season started, they said the Dodgers are ruining baseball,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts quipped after his team completed a 4-0 sweep of the Milwaukee Brewers to book their World Series berth. 

“So let’s get four more wins and really ruin baseball,” Roberts added.

Few would bet against Roberts and the Dodgers following through on that promise.

In Ohtani, the Dodgers have the reigning MLB Most Valuable Player, a pitching and hitting unicorn who is inarguably the best player on the planet, possibly even of all-time. 

The 31-year-old electrified Dodger Stadium in last Friday’s series-clinching win over the Brewers, belting three home runs and striking out 10 batters in what many have described as the greatest single performance in history.

The Dodgers offensive firepower also includes former former Most Valuable Players Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, while on the pitching mound, the team’s starting rotation of Blake Snell, Yoshinobu Yamamato and Tyler Glasnow, along with Ohtani, have dominated since the playoffs got under way.

“The Toronto Blue Jays are a very, very deep team,” said Derek Jeter, a member of five New York Yankees World Series-winning teams between 1996 and 2009, and the last side to win back-to-back titles.

“But the Los Angeles Dodgers are a juggernaut. They’re playing as well as I’ve seen any team play in years. It’s going to be competitive. Toronto’s going to give them problems. But the Dodgers are as good I’ve ever seen.”

Toronto manager John Schneider, though, insists his team are relishing the challenge of taking on the champions.

The Blue Jays advanced to the World Series for the first time in 32 years on Monday after defeating the Seattle Mariners 4-3 in a thrilling Game 7 duel in Toronto.

In Vladimir Guerrero Jr., the Blue Jays have the most in-form slugger of the postseason with the 26-year-old blasting six home runs in the playoffs. 

George Springer, who hit the winning home run in Monday’s win over Seattle, also offers offensive power, as well as experience of victory over the Dodgers, having been a part of the Houston Astros’ 2017 World Series triumph that was tarnished by the sign-stealing scandal.

“To get to where you want to go, you got to beat the best,” Schneider said of facing the Dodgers.