Blue Jays Crush Dodgers with Explosive Sixth Inning to Win Game 1 of the World Series
Ohana Magazine – After 32 years of waiting, Toronto baseball fans finally tasted the electric thrill of a World Series game and it was worth every second. On Friday night, the Toronto Blue Jays stormed back to defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers 11–4, taking Game 1 of the Fall Classic at a roaring Rogers Centre.
Early on, it seemed like the Dodgers were ready to continue their dominant postseason run. They led 2–0 heading into the bottom of the fourth inning, poised for their fourth consecutive series-opening win. But in classic October fashion, momentum can flip in an instant and it did when Dalton Varsho smashed a game-tying homer that reignited Toronto’s fire.
From that moment on, the Jays owned the night. Their offense exploded, their crowd thundered, and their long-dormant championship spirit came alive once more.
The Sixth Inning That Changed Everything
Baseball thrives on moments and the Blue Jays delivered one of the biggest in franchise history. In the bottom of the sixth inning, the team unleashed a nine-run barrage that flipped the game and possibly the series on its head.
It began with Ernie Clement, who redeemed an earlier baserunning error with a go-ahead RBI single. Then came the avalanche: hit after hit, as Toronto piled on runs before Addison Barger stepped up to the plate as a pinch hitter.
With the count full, Barger crushed a fastball deep into the right-field stands a grand slam that blew the game wide open and sent the stadium into chaos. According to Fox Sports, it was the first pinch-hit grand slam in World Series history.
Catcher Alejandro Kirk added the exclamation point with a two-run homer to make it 11–2, and the Rogers Centre crowd erupted into chants that could be heard blocks away.
As someone who’s followed this team through its highs and lows, this inning felt like a catharsis the payoff of patience, faith, and relentless energy from a fan base that’s stood by for decades.
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Shohei Ohtani Responds, but It’s Too Late
Even in defeat, greatness shines. In the top of the seventh, Shohei Ohtani, the Dodgers’ superstar two-way player, reminded everyone why he’s baseball’s most captivating figure. He crushed a two-run homer deep into left field, cutting the lead to 11–4.
But that was as close as Los Angeles would get. The Dodgers’ offense, which had been near-perfect all postseason, struggled to recover after Toronto’s offensive explosion. Toronto’s bullpen, led by Eric Lauer, shut the door with Lauer striking out Mookie Betts to end the game.
Ohtani’s late surge might serve as a warning for Game 2, but for now, Toronto’s statement win set the tone: the Blue Jays aren’t just happy to be here they’re here to win.
The Stats and History Behind the Win
Toronto’s victory was more than emotional; it carried serious statistical weight. Historically, 23 of the last 27 World Series winners have gone on to claim the title after winning Game 1.
For the Dodgers, the loss felt foreign. Before this game, they’d dropped only one postseason matchup in 2025. Yet the momentum might not be on their side teams that swept their League Championship Series (LCS), as Los Angeles did against Milwaukee, are 0–5 in the World Series when facing opponents who went the full seven games, as the Blue Jays did against Seattle.
Starting pitchers told part of the story. Dodgers ace Blake Snell began strong but faltered in the sixth, surrendering five earned runs before being pulled. For Toronto, rookie Trey Yesavage looked composed in his World Series debut, striking out five batters over four innings and setting the tone before handing things off to a lights-out bullpen.
It was a reminder that postseason baseball isn’t just about star power it’s about timing, teamwork, and toughness.
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The Unexpected Hero
Baseball has a way of turning role players into legends overnight, and Addison Barger may have just lived his moment. The 25-year-old utility player’s pinch-hit grand slam instantly became one of the most iconic plays in Blue Jays postseason history.
Speaking to Fox after the game, a visibly emotional Barger admitted he could barely remember the moment.
“It was so hard to gather my thoughts,” he said. “It was just a blackout moment crazy.”
Barger’s humility mirrors the Blue Jays’ identity: confident but grounded, hungry but joyful. He also gave credit to the team’s chemistry.
“We’re having fun every day. We know the Dodgers are great, but we just try to play our game,” Barger said.
For a player who wasn’t even in the starting lineup, his swing changed the course of a World Series a testament to how deep and determined this Toronto team truly is.
We Have the Best Fans in Baseball
The Toronto Blue Jays are Canada’s team, and the entire country seemed to celebrate in unison on Friday night. Rogers Centre roared, city streets buzzed, and social media flooded with images of jubilation.
“We have the best fans in baseball,” Barger said after the game. “A whole country is behind us. We feel that energy every night.”
For Toronto, this isn’t just a sports story it’s a national moment. After three decades of waiting since their back-to-back championships in 1992 and 1993, the Blue Jays are once again playing for history.
With Game 2 set for Saturday at 8 p.m. ET, one thing is clear: this team has momentum, belief, and the heart of a champion.


