(Arlington) Corey Seager and Adolis Garcia hit the first homers and Nathan Eovaldi hit seven in seven innings to post another decisive win for the Texas Rangers, this time 7-1 over the Baltimore Orioles to complete the sweep.
The Rangers, deprived of the American West Division title by a loss to the Seattle Mariners on the final day of the regular season, have since won their five playoff games. Thus, they reach the American championship for the first time since 2011.
The Orioles have won 101 games this season, an AL record, and have never been defeated in a regular-season series. They have now lost eight straight in the playoffs.
Seager, who opened the scoring with a solo home run in the first, broke Barry Bonds’ second-round record with nine hits in three games.
The Orioles issued an intentional walk to Seager to load the bases in the second and Mitch Garver’s double gave the Rangers a 3-0 lead.
A free pass in the fourth made Seager the first player to get nine in three-section series games. That’s one more than Bonds with the San Francisco Giants in 2003.
Garcia’s home run in the third added three runs to the score, making it 6-0. He threw a shot past Dean Kremer as the Israeli-American pitcher made his career debut in the playoffs.
Nathaniel Lowe also hit a solo home run, this time in the sixth.
Eovaldi won both games, which allowed the Rangers to reach the next round of the playoffs. This time, 76 of his 98 pitches were in the strike zone, allowing no walks. He allowed just one point.
It was the Rangers’ first playoff game at Globe Life Field, which opened in 2020, and was chosen as a neutral site for several playoff games due to the COVID-19 pandemic that same year.
The Los Angeles Dodgers spent most of October 2020 at this stadium, with Seager being named the most valuable player of the NL Championship Series and World Series. A year later, the shortstop left for Texas with a 10-year contract and $325 million in his pocket.
Ralph Bean is a writer for Sportish. Ralph has written about sports news for the last two years, and is currently an author on the site. He enjoys writing about sports, and hopes to cover more stories in the future.
(Montreal) After a 32-year drought, the Toronto Blue Jays found themselves in the World Series and it’s safe to say that they thrilled baseball fans across the country, and even more: the Queen City team became, during the two weeks of the Major Baseball final series, a topic of discussion beyond the scope of the sport.
Here’s a look at last season in MLB.
Jays just short
On April 29, the Blue Jays had just suffered a 10-2 loss to the Boston Red Sox, their eighth loss in nine games, falling to 13-16, in fourth place in the American League East. Coach John Schneider’s name was one of the favorites among those who were likely to lose their jobs at the various sports betting sites. The same Schneider, with practically the same cast, changed the game.
The Jays won 81 of their next 133 games to finish the season at an American-best 94-68, atop the East, defeating the New York Yankees in a tiebreaker.
Led by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. – imperial in the playoffs, with offensive averages of .397/.494/.795, five doubles, eight home runs, 15 RBIs and 20 walks, including six intentional ones, after signing a 14-season contract worth US$500 million – the Jays eliminated the Yankees in the division series and the Seattle Mariners in the championship series, where Vlad was also named the player par excellence.
PHOTO JON BLACKER, CANADIAN PRESS ARCHIVES
Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
But in the World Series, against the Los Angeles Dodgers, the team fell short. Up 3-2 in the series and with the final two games played in Toronto, the Jays were unable to take the Commissioner’s Trophy north of the border.
It remains to be seen whether the team can have the same success in 2026, especially since, at the time of this writing, Bo Bichette and veteran Max Scherzer are free agents. The team, however, secured the services of starter Dylan Cease for the next seven years for 210 million and right-hander Cody Ponce, MVP of the Korean Baseball Organization, South Korea’s top league, for three years.
Title defense
The Dodgers successfully defended their title as World Series champions, becoming the first team since the Yankees dynasty at the end of the last century to achieve the feat.
If we expected Shohei Ohtani – far from disappointing with three home runs and five RBIs – it was another Japanese who stole the show, Yoshinobu Yamamoto.
PHOTO FRANK GUNN, CANADIAN PRESS ARCHIVES
The Los Angeles Dodgers were crowned World Series champions for the second consecutive season.
The right-hander mystified the Jays’ attack by recording three wins in two games in this World Series. He first pitched his second consecutive complete game in the playoffs before pitching six innings in Game No.the 6 and two and two thirds innings in relief in game nthe 7 to get victory.
Yamamoto was deservedly named World Series MVP, becoming only the second Japanese man to win the title, after Hideki Matsui of the Yankees in 2009.
However, the Jays led 4-2 with five outs left in this final meeting. Solo homers by Max Muncy, in the eighth, against young sensation Trey Yesavage, and by Miguel Rojas, after a strikeout in the ninth, against Jeff Hoffman, however, forced overtime.
At 11andWill Smith even gave the Rogers Center a cold shower, pushing the offer of Shane Bieber, a beautiful acquisition at the trade deadline, just to the left of the field to give the Californians the victory.
Ohtani and Judge
For the second year in a row, Ohtani and Aaron Judge were named the National and All-American MVPs – a third consecutive title for Ohtani and a third in four seasons for Judge.
PHOTO BRYNN ANDERSON, ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES
Shohei Ohtani
Both players put up statistics that left no doubt about their selection, although the race in the American was tighter with the 60 home runs of Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh.
Ohtani maintained .282/.392/.622 averages with 55 home runs (second-highest total in the Nationals) and 102 RBIs. Judge, in turn, had the best slashline in the Majors at .331/.457/.688. His adjusted attendance/power average (OPS+) of 215 was the fourth-best in major league history for a right-handed hitter, after hitting his best (225) last season.
In Ohtani’s case, it’s his fourth MVP award: two with the Dodgers, two with the Los Angeles Angels. All four were obtained unanimously.
Mixed season for Quebecers
The last campaign was not easy for the Quebecers in Major Baseball, where only Otto Lopez, from the Miami Marlins, still holds a regular position.
And Lopez doesn’t appear to be about to lose his job after a breakout sophomore campaign with the Marlins. Used mainly as a shortstop in the 143 games he played, he maintained averages of .246/.305/.368. He also set personal bests in hits (134), home runs (15), RBIs (77) and runs scored (66) while maintaining a .977 save percentage.
On the other hand, both Édouard Julien, from Minnesota, and Abraham Toro, from Boston, failed to establish themselves definitively in the big leagues this season.
Julien was used in just 64 games for the Twins, and even though he has increased his averages (.220/.309/.324) from last year, it is questionable whether that will be enough for him to maintain his place on the 40-man Massachusetts team at the start of training camp.
Toro had a great training camp and when the Red Sox struggled with injuries, he was one of the first called up in early May. After a promising start, his production dropped and he ended his MLB stint in August with .239/.289/.371 averages in 77 games.
Women’s time!
Baseball followed in the footsteps of other major sports with the creation of the first professional women’s league, the Women’s Pro Baseball League (WPBL), where Quebecers are already in the spotlight.
The first four teams on the new circuit – Boston, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco – recently held their first draft session, consisting of six rounds, during which each club drafted five players, totaling 20 per round and 120 overall.
Of that number, five are from Quebec, including the first Quebecer called up, first baseman Andréanne Leblanc, from Mont-Saint-Hilaire, 32 in total, for the San Francisco club. The others are Maïka Dumais (Boston), Ela Day-Bédard (San Francisco), Élodie Ciamarro (New York) and Sarah Beaulieu (New York).
Of the 30 players called up by the four clubs, 15 will get a contract to play in the inaugural season, which will be held over seven weeks, including playoffs, on a neutral field, at Robin-Roberts Stadium, in Springfield, Illinois. The season will begin in August 2026.
Ralph Bean is a writer for Sportish. Ralph has written about sports news for the last two years, and is currently an author on the site. He enjoys writing about sports, and hopes to cover more stories in the future.
(Phoenix) Merrill Kelly is officially back with the Arizona Diamondbacks, finalizing a two-year, $40 million deal on Friday.
The 37-year-old right-hander spent the first six and a half seasons of his career with the D’Backs.
In July of this year, the team traded him to the Texas Rangers at the trade deadline.
His overall performance was 12-9 and a 3.52 ERA in 2025.
Kelly could become the Diamondbacks’ No. 1 starter.
Corbin Burnes is recovering from Tommy John surgery and free agent Zac Gallen is not expected to return.
A native of Scottsdale, Kelly played for Arizona State in the NCAA.
He played a key role in helping the D’Backs reach the World Series in 2023.
He earned his team’s only victory in that year’s fall classic, as Texas won in five games.
Relying mainly on a vast repertoire of six pitches, Kelly debuted in the MLB in 2019, at the age of 30. Before that, he played four seasons in South Korea.
Ralph Bean is a writer for Sportish. Ralph has written about sports news for the last two years, and is currently an author on the site. He enjoys writing about sports, and hopes to cover more stories in the future.
(Washington) Ani Kilambi, just 31 years old, was named general manager of the Washington Nationals on Thursday.
The former Philadelphia Phillies member is the latest young talent to join Nationals president of baseball operations Paul Toboni in Washington.
Kilambi was an assistant general manager for the Phillies, where he has worked since 2021. Before that, he worked for more than five years with the Tampa Bay Rays.
Kilambi thus obtains the position that was held for more than 15 years by Mike Rizzo, who became general manager of the Nationals in 2009, before adding the title of president of baseball operations in 2013.
Rizzo was fired in July as the Nationals headed toward their sixth straight losing season. Coach Dave Martinez was fired at the same time.
Rizzo and Martinez were at the helm in 2019 when the Nationals won the World Series, but the team hasn’t had a winning season since. The Nationals finished with a 66–96 record in 2025, placing 14thand of the 15 clubs in the National League.
Mike DeBartolo took over as interim general manager following Rizzo’s departure and oversaw the selection of 17-year-old infielder Eli Willits with the first pick in the Major League Amateur Draft in July.
Toboni, 35, was hired at the end of September to lead Nacional; He was previously assistant general manager of the Boston Red Sox. He brought with him Blake Butera, who, at 33, became the youngest major league manager since the 1970s.
There is a lot to do to turn things around for the Nationals, who need talent and depth to rebuild their Major League roster as well as their affiliates.
Toboni’s first move on the free agent market came Monday, when the Nats agreed to a one-year, $5.5 million pact with left-handed pitcher Foster Griffin, a deal conditional on a medical exam. Griffin has played in Japan the past three seasons.
Ralph Bean is a writer for Sportish. Ralph has written about sports news for the last two years, and is currently an author on the site. He enjoys writing about sports, and hopes to cover more stories in the future.