Freeman’s walk-off homer lifts Dodgers over Blue Jays in 18-inning World Series epic

A picture


It took Freddie Freeman three chances to get it just right.When the Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman drove a fastball deep into centerfield in the bottom of the 13th inning, the home fans at Dodger Stadium groaned as the ball nestled into Toronto Blue Jays center fielder Daulton Varsho’s glove – making Game 3 of the 2025 World Series just the fifth World Series game to ever reach the 14th inning.Two innings later, Freeman hit the ball even harder, but not quite high enough as Varsho chased it down before it could reach the center field wall.The two teams were now playing the second-longest World Series game of all time.ScheduleBest-of-seven series.

All times Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4).Fri 24 Oct Game 1: Toronto Blue Jays 11, LA Dodgers 4Sat 25 Oct Game 2: LA Dodgers 5, Toronto Blue Jays 1Mon 27 Oct Game 3: LA Dodgers 6, Toronto Blue Jays 5 (18 innings)Tue 28 Oct Game 4: Toronto Blue Jays at LA Dodgers, 8pmWed 29 Oct Game 5: Toronto Blue Jays at LA Dodgers, 8pmFri 31 Oct Game 6: LA Dodgers at Toronto Blue Jays, 8pm*Sat 1 Nov Game 7: LA Dodgers at Toronto Blue Jays, 8pm**if necessaryHow to watch• In the US, all games will be broadcast on FOX.If you have a cable/satellite subscription with FOX included, you can also stream via the FOX Sports app.• In Canada, the English-language broadcast is on Sportsnet while the French-language broadcasts are on RDS and TVA Sports.The games are also streaming on Sportsnet+ (English-language).

• In the UK, the official broadcaster is TNT Sports.A subscription to their service or their app is required.• In Australia, the rightsholder is the local branch of ESPN Australia and related platforms.Finally, in the bottom of the 18th inning, the breakthrough came.Leading off, Freeman hit a fastball from Blue Jays reliever Brendon Little for a walk-off home run, leaving Varsho to do nothing but dangle from the center field wall as Freeman rounded the bases with his arms hoisted.

The Dodgers now lead the series 2-1 and are two wins away from retaining the World Series.On a night full of broken records, Freeman made sure that the Dodgers merely tied the one for longest World Series game ever played in terms of innings.It was the second-longest in terms of minutes played, at 6hr 39min (the record was set in another game featuring the Dodgers, against the Red Sox in 2018).Freeman also became the first player in baseball history to win two different World Series games with a walk-off home run after ending Game 1 of last year’s World Series with a grand slam.“To have it happen again a year later,” Freeman said, “It’s kind of amazing and crazy.

”Freeman’s heroics complemented a historic and seemingly inconceivable statistical night from Shohei Ohtani, who became the first player to reach base nine times in a postseason game and the first player since 1906 to have four extra-base hits in a World Series game.Two of those hits were home runs, one of which tied the game in the seventh inning.After that second home run of the night, the Blue Jays walked him in five consecutive plate appearances: four of them intentionally and one on four pitches.“He’s a unicorn,” Freeman said of Ohtani after the game.“We’re still running out of words to describe a once-in-a-10-generational player.

”Ohtani, as he often does when asked about his greatness, deflected from his own accomplishments to emphasize the team’s victory,“What I accomplished today is in the context of this game,” Ohtani said through an interpreter, “and what matters the most is we flip the page and play the next game,”As local time crossed midnight, he added: “I want to go to sleep as soon as possible,”Ohtani’s seventh-inning home run would be the last run scored for nearly four hours before Freeman ended the game in the 18th,The subsequent 11 innings featured remarkable feats of offensive futility.

It was the first time that both teams had at least 15 hits in a World Series game.But they managed just four hits in 26 at-bats with runners in scoring position and combined for 14 strikeouts in extra innings.The teams surpassed the prior record for number of men left on base: the Blue Jays left 19 on, while the Dodgers stranded 18.The record for a single team entering the night was 15.Between the 10th and 18th innings, the teams combined to leave 20 runners on base.

Every position player on the Blue Jays had an at-bat in Monday night’s game and they broke the record with 67 at-bats in a World Series game.“It was one of the greatest World Series [games] of all time,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.“I’m spent emotionally.”It was a historic battle of attrition that caused Justin Bieber to leave the game early and will reshape how both teams approach the rest of the series.The Dodgers and Blue Jays used every available arm in their bullpen and combined to throw an astonishing 609 pitches.

Blue Jays relief pitcher Eric Lauer recorded more outs (14) than his team’s starting pitcher, Max Scherzer (13).The winning pitcher – Will Klein – threw 72 pitches over four innings, more than Scherzer and far eclipsing his previous professional career high of 56.That outing came in 2021 when he was a member of the minor league Quad Cities River Bandits.“I looked around in the bullpen and my name was the only one still there,” Klein said with a laugh.“I was just going to go until I couldn’t.

”Had Freeman not homered, the Dodgers were ready to turn to Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who was just two days removed from his 105-pitch complete game win in Game 2.Yamamoto had never thrown on short rest in his MLB career, but was warming up before Freeman’s homer.The hitting struggles that both teams endured in the late innings masked a thrilling battle over the first nine.There were six runners thrown out on the bases over the first 10 innings.Both teams had runners thrown out at third base and home plate and the Blue Jays scored a go-ahead run in the seventh after the ball ricocheted off a TV crew member holding a parabolic microphone.

Clayton Kershaw, possibly making the final appearance of his decorated 18-year career, induced a key groundout after entering the game with the bases loaded and two outs in the 12th inning.“I don’t think we’re physically tired.I think you’re just mentally tired because you’re in it every pitch, and every pitch means something in the World Series and in the playoffs,” Freeman said after the game.“So I think we’re all emotionally and mentally drained.”The Blue Jays, meanwhile, were left to contemplate pushing the reigning champions to their limit, and still walking away with nothing to show for it.

Their manager, John Schneider, denied it was a catastrophic blow, though.“It sucks that it’s late right now, we got to come back and do it again tomorrow, but these guys are going to be more than ready,” Schneider said.“The Dodgers didn’t win the World Series today – they won a game.”The two teams return to Dodger Stadium for Game 4 on Tuesday, when Ohtani will take the mound to start his first World Series game as a pitcher against former Cy Young Award winner Shane Bieber.Ohtani has struck out 19 hitters in 12 postseason innings and sports a 2.

25 ERA over those two starts.He will start even though he was on base nine times and was receiving an IV after the game.“He’s spent.He was on base nine times tonight running the bases,” Roberts said after the game.“But, yeah, he’s taking the mound tomorrow.

He’ll be ready.”
cultureSee all
A picture

From White Teeth to Swing Time: Zadie Smith’s best books - ranked!

How do you follow a smash hit like White Teeth, which, as everyone now knows, sold for a six-figure sum while the author was still at university, and turned Zadie Smith into a literary superstar and poster girl for multi­culturalism at 24? With a novel about a pot-smoking Chinese‑Jewish autograph hunter, the dangers of fame and the shallowness of pop culture, of course.The Autograph Man begins in full wisecracking throttle with three boys in the back of a car on their way to watch a wrestling match between Big Daddy and Giant Haystacks at the Royal Festival Hall. As 12-year-old Alex-Li Tandem gets Big Daddy’s autograph (the start of an obsession), his own daddy drops dead from a brain tumour. Unfortunately, the rest of the novel doesn’t quite live up to the prologue. The critical heavyweights of the time didn’t pull their punches: “A poky, pallid successor” (Michiko Kakutani, who had rapturously reviewed White Teeth, in the New York Times), “cartoonish” and full of “misplaced ironies and grinning complicities” (James Wood in the LRB)

A picture

Ardal O’Hanlon: ‘I fell asleep on stage once – I could hear someone doing my material, got annoyed and woke up’

What’s the longest word you can make out of the letters A-R-D-A-L-O-H-A-N-L-O-N in 30 seconds?“Anal” springs to mind, because I was doing a show in Limerick in Ireland and the stage manager genuinely thought my name was Anal. He called me over the Tannoy [PA system]: “Could Anal please come to the stage door?” But there must be a bigger word than that. I’m usually good at Countdown. This is quite annoying. This is how I define myself – by my ability to conjure up words from random letters

A picture

My cultural awakening: A Jim Carrey series made me embrace baldness – and shave my head on the spot

I was a mess of insecurities, trying to hide thinning hair, worried I was ageing too quickly. Then a scene in the TV show Kidding changed everythingGrowing up, I was obsessed with Jim Carrey. I was just entering my teens when The Mask came out, and I can still picture myself watching Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls on TV one weekend afternoon, absolutely howling at the silliness of it. His elastic facial expressions, the energy, the stunts – it was the perfect tenor of humour for a young boy.By the time I was in college, I had moved on to his more thoughtful films

A picture

From Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere to IT: Welcome to Derry – your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Jeremy Allen White channels the Boss in a hotly tipped new biopic, and Pennywise the clown returns to terrorise unsuspecting children in a spooky horror prequel seriesSpringsteen: Deliver Me from NowhereOut now The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White plays the Boss in this buzzed-about Bruce Springsteen biopic focusing on the period when he was making his 1982 album Nebraska (so, post-Born to Run but pre-Born in the USA), with Jeremy Strong playing critic turned producer Jon Landau.The MastermindOut now Kelly Reichardt returns with an art heist movie inspired by a real robbery in 1970s Massachusetts, in which two Gauguins, a Picasso and a Rembrandt were nicked. Here, it’s Arthur Dove paintings that catch the eye of Josh O’Connor’s art thief James Blaine Mooney.ParaNormanOut now An odd dearth of family films has left a gap in the market into which this rerelease of 2012’s animated adventure ParaNorman has decided to slip. Norman Babcock (Kodi Smit-McPhee) is the misfit 11-year-old who speaks with the dead, enabling a spooky adventure to unfold in time for Halloween

A picture

John Deere obituary

My father, John Deere, who has died aged 89, was the arts director of Nottingham county council for 20 years. A passionate advocate for the arts, he was appointed to the post in the council’s newly established leisure services department in 1975, following the national reorganisation of local authorities.There, for 20 years, he transformed the artistic life of Nottinghamshire through development and funding of arts activities across the county. In the town of Retford, he supported the internationally famous Cantamus girls choir and, in Mansfield, the Mansfield Palace theatre.Events ranged from concerts by world-renowned musicians such as Vladimir Ashkenazy, André Previn and the pianist John Ogdon, a native of Nottinghamshire, to poetry readings by established poets such as Aeronwy Thomas, Dylan’s daughter

A picture

Timely assurance from Lear’s Kent | Letters

The passing of John Woodvine (Obituary, 13 October) reminded me of the time when four of us University of East Anglia students went to the Norwich Theatre Royal to see the Actors’ Company touring King Lear in June 1974.We were early and went for a something to eat at a newly opened “burger” style restaurant with booths and partitions so you couldn’t see who was at adjacent tables – a novelty at the time. The service was very slow and we were concerned that we would be late for the theatre.Suddenly a head appeared over the partition and said: “Don’t worry – they won’t start without me!” It was John Woodvine, who turned out to be the Earl of Kent and was the first to speak in the play. Needless to say we made it in time