Los Angeles Times

Dodgers f inish off Rays in six games

Dodgers defeat Rays and end a drought by winning their first World Series championsh­ip since 1988.

- By Jorge Castillo

They go from dormant to dominant after Tampa Bay pulls starting pitcher Snell in sixth inning.

ARLINGTON, Texas — All year long, from February when they reported for spring training and the coronaviru­s outbreak was a concept beyond imaginatio­n, until Tuesday night, the Dodgers believed this was the year. It became an unpreceden­ted year with unparallel­ed circumstan­ces, but this was the year those hovering ghosts — produced by annual anguish the last seven years — would vanish. This was the year they would add another round of World Series highlights to the reels that grow grainier each passing autumn. This was the year and this was the team to finally end a championsh­ip drought going on 32 years.

It happened Tuesday night inside Globe Life Field, a cavernous, new building 1,400 miles away from their home, in front of 11,437 people after a 60- game regular season and expanded postseason that delivered a year unlike any other. It happened when Julio Urías struck out Willy Adames looking to end Game 6 of the World Series and spark a celebratio­n millions of children, teenagers and adult Dodgers fans — now mothers and fathers and aunts and uncles — had never experience­d.

It f inally happened. The Dodgers beat the Tampa Bay Rays, 3- 1, to win the series, four games to two, and claim their f irst World Series championsh­ip since 1988, the franchise’s seventh title and sixth since moving to Los Angeles.

“I’ve been saying ‘ World Series champs’ in my head over and over again,” said Clayton Kershaw, the central f igure in the Dodgers’ heartbreak since they won their first of eight straight division titles in 2013. “I can’t put it into words yet. I’m just so, so thankful to be a part of this group of guys, and so very thankful that we get to be on the team that is bringing back a World Series to Dodger fans after 32 years. They’ve waited for a long time.”

It didn’t happen according to the script. Tony Gonsolin, the rookie right- hander tasked to start the biggest game of his life, allowed one run in just 12⁄ innings. But six

3 relievers logged 71⁄ scoreless in

3 nings to reach the end while the offense produced just enough after Rays manager Kevin Cash chose to pull ace pitcher Blake Snell in the sixth inning despite his dominance.

The decision backfired. The Dodgers immediatel­y scored two runs to take the lead and added a third on Mookie Betts’ home run in the eighth inning. It was the only offense they needed to hoist the piece of metal they’ve coveted in the decades since Kirk Gibson hobbled around the bases.

Shortstop Corey Seager, the National League Championsh­ip Series most valuable player, was named World Series MVP after going eight for 20 with two home runs and five runs batted in. Seager finished the postseason with eight home runs, tied for second most in a single postseason.

By ending the season Tuesday, the Dodgers might have saved Major League Baseball’s bubble, created to avoid allowing the coronaviru­s to infect teams, from bursting before naming a champion.

Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner, one of the club’s mainstays, was removed from the game before the start of the eighth inning, with his team six outs from the championsh­ip. A reason wasn’t given but it was later revealed that MLB demanded Turner be removed after it learned he tested positive for COVID- 19.

Turner wasn’t on the field when Commission­er Rob Manfred, months removed from hearing the Dodgers emphatical­ly condemn his handling of the Houston Astros’ sign- stealing scandal, presented the trophy to the team that the Astros defeated for their 2017 championsh­ip. But Turner later emerged for the celebratio­n on the f ield. He held the trophy. He hugged Kenley Jansen and went around shaking hands.

Boos rained on Manfred when he was announced. They grew so loud he paused before continuing his presentati­on. The Dodgers’ principal owner, Mark Walter, spoke first, reading a speech. Then president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman stepped to the microphone.

“We’re bringing the trophy home,” Friedman said. “It’s been too long.”

Manager Dave Roberts was next. He thanked the players on the f ield, the veterans one by one, and others who weren’t there to experience the thrill. “This is our year,” he said to roars.

The hike to the summit began in February when Betts and David Price, acquired from the Boston Red Sox in a trade, were presented in a press conference at Dodger Stadium. The next day pitchers and catchers reported for spring training where the initial conversati­on centered on the Astros’ cheating scandal.

A week later, after the subject died down, Betts addressed his new team with a f ive- minute clubhouse speech the morning of its second day of full- squad workouts. He stressed sweating the details. His message resonated and accountabi­lity became a theme. “It set the tone,” Roberts said. Then, on March 12, MLB shut down operations. For nearly four months, the Dodgers worried that the best roster they’d assembled in recent memory wouldn’t have the chance to win a championsh­ip. They got their chance and reconvened in July. Price, penned as the team’s No. 3 starter, opted out before summer camp, but the Dodgers stampeded through the clubs west of the Mississipp­i on their schedule anyway.

They f inished with the highest win percentage by any team since 1954 to win their eighth consecutiv­e division title. Several Dodgers said this was the best team they had played on. They f inally were ready to conquer October.

The stage was set for them, after sweeping two rounds and going to seven games in the NLCS, to make their mark against the best team in the American League.

Gonsolin threw Tuesday night’s f irst pitch at 7: 09 local time after Vin Scully informed the masses it was “time for Dodger baseball” on the big screen. The right- hander’s night ended early.

Randy Arozarena, the scalding hot slugger fueling the Rays’ offense, f licked a slider off the plate outside the other way for a solo home run in the first inning. It was Arozarena’s 10th home run of the playoffs — two more than any other player hit in a single postseason.

Gonsolin was pulled with out and two on in the second inning and Arozarena on deck.

Dylan Floro entered with a specific plan in mind: Arozarena’s weakness is the changeup and Floro throws a good one. The righthande­r stuck to the blueprint. He struck out Arozarena with three changeups and escaped.

Snell wasn’t dealing with any kind of trouble. The left- hander allowed one baserunner through five innings. He compiled nine strikeouts without a walk on 69 pitches. He was utterly dominant. Then he gave up a single to Austin Barnes, the Dodgers’ No. 9 hitter, and Cash emerged from the third- base dugout.

Snell knew what was coming. The Rays reached the World Series by f irmly sticking to the numbers to maximize matchups and optimize run prevention. And the numbers say getting through a lineup a third time is difficult for a pitcher. So Cash emerged to pull Snell despite the fact that he was overpoweri­ng a loaded lineup.

Cash made his decision with the top of the Dodgers’ lineup due up. Betts, Seager, and Turner are a dangerous trio, but they were 0 for 6 with strikeouts against Snell. Danger didn’t appear imminent. Cash didn’t care and Snell was angry. He shouted expletives when he saw his manager walking his way. He gave Cash the ball and left the f ield heated. The Dodgers were handed a gift.

“It was kind of a sigh relief,” Betts said. “He was rolling.”

Right- hander Nick Anderson replaced Snell even though Betts batted just .200 against lefthander­s during the regular season and had the unusual struggles continue through the playoffs. Betts cracked a 95- mph fastball down the left- field line for a double.

Barnes then scored on a wild pitch. Betts followed him when Seager hit a groundball to f irst. The Rays’ infield was drawn in, but Betts, as he did in Game 1, dashed home on contact and beat the throw with a headfirst slide.

The Dodgers, dormant minutes earlier, were alive and well, energized by Cash’s decision to pull his best pitcher. Betts gave them a little more breathing room when he blasted a leadoff home run off Nick Fairbanks in the eighth inning. Betts screamed toward the roof as he rounded f irst base and teammates spilled out of the dugout. The Dodgers felt it coming.

Urías, once a teenaged phenom, took it from there. He jogged to the mound in the ninth inning to resounding cheers to finish the job.

“We won a World Series!” Kershaw said. “I can't believe it. It just feels good to say. I’m gonna keep saying it a few more times.”

 ?? MOOKIE BETTS Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? howls after hitting a homer for an insurance run in the eighth inning. Betts, the star acquired before the season, also scored the go- ahead run.
MOOKIE BETTS Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times howls after hitting a homer for an insurance run in the eighth inning. Betts, the star acquired before the season, also scored the go- ahead run.

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