 
																										
													
													
												Welcome to the NHL rookie experience: How this season’s class has navigated life on and off the ice
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 Kristen Shilton, ESPN NHL reporterMar 14, 2024, 07:00 AM ET Close- Kristen Shilton is a national NHL reporter for ESPN.
 
HOCKEY PLAYERS KNOW the power of a good video session.
It’s how they study an opponent. Critique their own game. And — thanks to years of recorded highlights available online — admire the exploits of superstars past and present.
Yes, video study is an integral part of an athlete’s day. So it’s no wonder that Columbus Blue Jackets rookie Adam Fantilli has leaned into that again in confronting a whole new life frontier.
“So I’m learning to cook. I’m working on it,” he told ESPN recently. “I have to watch the YouTube videos. I can do, like, a steak and veggies, potatoes; pasta and fish are easy. But when I get a little bit exotic with it? That definitely means watching. I can pretty much do it all, just takes more time to get creative.”
Welcome to the NHL rookie experience.
It’s more than just figuring out how to play in the toughest league on earth. Rookies are navigating extreme on-ice expectations while mastering how to live alone for the first time, finding work-life balance, keeping up with frenzied travel schedules and facing all the real-world pressures of growing up — and growing into their best selves as players and people.
“It’s pretty eye-opening, playing in this league,” Maple Leafs forward Matthew Knies said. “It’s challenging to have juice and have energy every day to show up and just be prepared and be willing to sacrifice your body every day and get better. It’s challenging and it’s a lot of fun at the same time.”
Players have spent their rookie seasons searching for a secret sauce to keep them dialed in at home and the rink. Many have been guided by older teammates. Others count on family support. There’s a formula to it for everyone — with some common threads. Those ties that bind are revealed here by nearly a dozen of the NHL’s best freshmen.
“To be honest with you, the best part now is I just get to do what I love for a longer period of time throughout the day,” said Fantilli, the third pick in the 2023 draft. “It’s my job. I’m coming from college [at the University of Michigan] where I had to focus on school half the time and that was taking time away from hockey. But now I can just take all of that time and focus on opponents, focus on myself and just put all my efforts into hockey.”
ROOKIES CAN BECOME ENTHRALLED by the more grandiose parts of professional life.
Buffalo Sabres forward Zach Benson — going straight from the Western Hockey League to a top-six NHL slot — was mesmerized by one in particular.
“I mean, we’re riding on a plane instead of a bus up here? That is life-changing, for sure,” he said. “There’s definitely been some big, huge changes in my life and they’re definitely good changes.”
Case in point: Benson’s living situation. Just like that awe-inspiring upgrade in transportation, Benson’s head was spinning over his luxury five-star dwelling — until something even better than that came along.
“It was pretty crazy living in a hotel to start the season. It was so, so nice,” he said. “They make your room every day. It’s hard to complain. But I’m just moving out of there now and moving into [Sabres’ defenseman] Rasmus Dahlin‘s house. He just offered it, him and his girlfriend. It’s pretty hard to turn that down.”
Benson — who has scored six goals and 18 points through 54 games — isn’t the only one who got an assist from a teammate in that department. Fantilli became acclimated to Columbus while living with Patrik Laine for a few weeks (“he’s an awesome personality”) , and Knies spent all of two nights in a hotel after he landed in Toronto before Leafs captain John Tavares invited him to bunk at his place.
“John opened his doors and was like, ‘Hey, I want you to live with our family,'” Knies recalled. “I checked out with his wife, so that was good. I’d been staying there the whole time, and I actually just got a place of my own. That’s a first. At school [playing for the University of Minnesota], I had a roommate, so this will be the first space of my own. I haven’t really moved everything yet. It’s pretty hectic trying to get settled when we’re playing.”
Brock Faber can relate. The Minnesota Wild standout — who’s second behind Connor Bedard in rookie scoring, with 37 points through 65 games — spent the summer rooming with teammate Sam Walker before seeking out solo accommodations. Faber found a spot easily enough. Making it feel like home is a work in progress.
“I’m just in an apartment here all by myself, first time ever having no roommates,” he said. “I’m enjoying it. But, yeah, still trying to set up the place a little bit. The season started and I did a good job moving in before that, got a good chunk of things, but I’m still missing a few. It’s a busy season, so it’s tough to get it all done.”
Being by their lonesome may be uncharted waters for some rookies. It’s old hand for Anaheim Ducks first-year center Leo Carlsson. What’s not so familiar is being separated from his family by an ocean.
“I’ve been living on my own [in California], but I lived by myself for three years in Sweden before this [while playing in the Swedish Elite League],” he said. “But my parents were maybe one hour away from that place I was living then. I saw them all the time. And now it’s like a 12-hour flight for them. So that’s different. But at least I’m more used to the alone time.”
The same can’t be said for Ridly Greig. The Ottawa Senators rookie — a consistent contributor with nine goals and 21 points — is sharing space alongside teammates Jake Sanderson and Jacob Bernard-Docker, preferring their collective chaos to recharging by himself.
“It’s a lot of fun; it’s always nice having both of them around to hang out and chitchat or watch movies together or whatever you want to do,” he said. “I moved away from home when I was 16 [to play in the WHL] so I had those four years of experience away from my family and that helped to definitely make this a smooth transition. It’s still a bit different going from living with billets [local families who players live with] to on your own with teammates, though. It’s good to have those guys.”
Grieg may be used to not having his parents around physically, but they’re never far from his mind. There’s nothing simple about stepping into a full-time NHL role and Greig fell under a massive leaguewide spotlight in February when his slapshot into an empty net against Toronto drew a crosscheck to the face from Morgan Rielly. The play earned Rielly a five-game suspension and offered Greig new attention he didn’t anticipate.
Whatever the struggle is though, Grieg knows how best to handle it.
“I definitely lean on my dad. I call him a lot,” said Greig. “Whenever I want to pick his brain or whatever it is, he definitely helps me a lot. Not only with ideas for on the ice, but just the mental side of things too.”
FABER CAN SKATE CIRCLES around almost anyone.
But he’s entirely direct about the tough parts of professional life.
“There are positives [throughout the season], but there’s some bad, too,” he said. “It’s a hard league. You’re making mistakes. There’s a lot of travel and back-to-backs. Stuff like that can make things harder. There’s really both sides to the NHL for sure.”
Carlsson felt that, too. Anaheim picked their forward second overall in 2023, an investment immediately producing high expectations. The 19-year-old has responded with a respectable nine goals and 23 points through 40 games, in between missed time nursing a sprained right knee. Carlsson wasn’t fazed by the setbacks though; he’d never tried to predict how Year 1 would go.
“It’s hard to have expectations as a rookie,” he said. “It’s your first year going against the best players in the world. You don’t really know how good they’re going to be or how hard they’re going to hit. The first time I played against Nathan MacKinnon, you realize how good [the best players are] and how fast they are. You just learn so fast how good you’re going to have to be to play in this league.”
It’s a nightly battle for players adjusting to an 82-game schedule with excellence as a baseline. Failing to show up? Not an option.
“I’ve seen it’s a grind, and you’ve got to be ready to play every night and ready to go even when you’re not feeling it,” Calgary Flames forward Connor Zary said. “You’ve got to come in and try and play your best every night. It’s a mental test. So even if you normally do [certain things] to get ready, maybe you do them even longer and even more on those days you don’t feel good, to help the body move a little quicker and a little better on those back-to-backs and those tough games. When you can get your body feeling good, it helps mentally too.”
Another hurdle the rookies must clear is becoming monthly cross-country travelers. Yes, they’re ferried now via private planes instead of coach buses (much to Benson’s delight), but the constant time zone changes coupled with late night check-ins and early-morning wakeups can take their toll.
“Coming from college, I didn’t play that many games last year,” Fantilli said. “I had like Sunday to Thursday to kind of get my body right for the weekend, and we would only have one opponent for two games. So getting used to playing a bunch of different opponents in one week or two weeks and having a quick turnaround on flights and with playing time have been the biggest adjustments.”
“It’s been the biggest surprise,” Wild forward Marco Rossi noted. “Just the amount of games and all the travel is a lot. When you’re playing almost every day, the consistency is the most important thing and that’s what you learn in this league. When you play night in, night out, it’s got to always be at your best and sometimes it gets tiring.”
Teammates become invaluable resources there. Rookies have unencumbered access to veterans who’ve discovered their own hacks to maintain an edge regardless of the circumstance. All the rookies have to do is pay attention.
That is Knies’ strategy anyway. The forward — who’s spent time on Auston Matthews‘ wing while producing 11 goals and 26 points through 62 games — scoured the Leafs’ dressing room for intel on a stable routine that would also remove some of that draining day-to-day monotony.
“It gets repetitive,” he admits of the long NHL season. “I had to switch up [what I was doing]. You’re playing triple the number of games now. I had to find what works with me and I’ve been seeing what other guys do. I’m just picking up on them and seeing things I like and putting it in my game. It’s a lot of stealing things away from other players and just adding it to myself.”
Spoken like a true student of the game. But it’s not all work and no play, either. Balance is the key.
FANTILLI WON’T DENY he’s a rink rat.
When the time finally comes to head home though, there’s no shortage of activities to occupy his non-hockey focused hours.
“I’ll hang out with whatever teammates can hang out. I like to get dinner or lunch or do whatever,” he said. “I don’t get on the sticks too much. I don’t even own a console, to be honest with you. But I like to watch TV shows. A lot.”
Fantilli wholly embraced the habit while sidelined for eight weeks with a calf laceration. The 19-year-old was having a stellar rookie campaign before the injury as a top-line skater for the Blue Jackets, now with 12 goals and 27 points through 49 games.
When Fantilli couldn’t play he channeled his energy elsewhere.
“I’ve actually had a few [TV show binges], believe it or not,” he said. “I have been watching ‘Masters of the Air’ on Apple TV. I watched that ‘Griselda’ show that was on Netflix. It was really good. I watched the ‘Ted’ series. All these are like five episodes long and I’ve been injured, so don’t judge me. But, I’ve been making my way through ‘The Sopranos’ as well.”
Zary’s downtime is similarly filled with couch-sitting, something for which he’s likely had more time lately. The 22-year-old suffered an upper-body injury earlier this month that has held him out of game action; before that, Zary had been on a solid scoring pace with 12 goals and 29 points through 50 games.
“I’m a pretty big binge watcher. That’s my thing,” he said. “Whenever I have a night just to hang out and relax, especially when the schedule can get pretty busy, just spending a couple hours vegging out is something that’s always nice, especially when you’re really tired after a long week or after a lot of games.”
In Knies’ case there’s a best of both worlds, where one solo passion holds space with another more virtually immersive hobby enjoyed with others.
“I wasn’t big into video games but like so many teammates play that I don’t want to miss out on it,” he said. “It’s like peer pressure; it’s like I want to play just to honestly chat with the guys. But I actually got a guitar so I’m learning guitar. I picked it up this summer so I’ve got a good six, seven months in me now. Self-taught to now. I’ve been looking into a teacher but I think it feels more like an accomplishment to be self-taught.”
Given all the time players spend inside it’s a treat for some to recharge outdoors.
Carlsson, who has embraced the shift from frigid Swedish winters to semi-permanent sunshine in California, is an avid golfer (and has a 5 handicap).
Nature is healing for others too. Rossi — who’s third behind teammate Faber in rookie scoring, with 17 goals and 33 points through 65 games — doesn’t look to escape the real world outside the office; he wants to get lost in it. Preferably with company.
“I love to go for a walk,” he said. “Me and my girlfriend, we just bought a dog [a Pomeranian] earlier in the year and it brings you away a little bit from hockey when you think about different things [on the walks] and just turn your brain off a little bit about hockey.”
Benson’s a fan of walking, too. His walks just happen in a different venue. And inadvertently attract attention.
“I’ll search up the local malls,” he said. “You just drive around to find spots that you like. That’s what I’ve done. I actually went to the mall yesterday and a few people recognized me. I don’t mind that, it’s cool to see fans that enjoy watching you play hockey.”
He’s not the only rookie who’s been stopped in his tracks by well-wishers. Rossi said it happens to him in restaurants. Ditto for Fantilli. And they get it. The players are fans, too. And on most nights, guys they admire are directly across from them on the ice.
DMITRI VORONKOV USES words sparingly. But they’re highly effective.
Like when the Blue Jackets forward — who has 31 points through 58 games — dropped his initial takeaways after facing Edmonton captain Connor McDavid.
“It looked like he has arrived from a different planet,” Voronkov said, via a translator. “I don’t think I’ve seen somebody like that, ever.”
Faber recalls the “wild” (no pun intended) feeling of witnessing those iconic players of his youth still crushing the competition — right in front of him.
“You can’t believe you’ve playing against [Sidney] Crosby and [Alex] Ovechkin,” he said. “I watched them a ton growing up. When I was a young kid, they were the superstars of the league and they still are. That’s crazy.”
The trick is not to get distracted in the moment. Carlsson figured that out in a hurry against Pittsburgh.
“I had Sidney Crosby as an idol growing up, so the first time I played against him was really cool,” he said. “When I saw him on the opposite side of the faceoff dot, that was like, wow. It was so cool. But I think when I was out there against him after that first faceoff, I was just focused on playing hockey.”
There’s precious little time for chitchat once the puck gets dropped anyway. So some league veterans make sure to get their hellos in early.
“My first NHL game, Artemi Panarin off the draw kind of tapped me on the shin pads and was like, ‘Welcome to the NHL, kid,'” Benson said. “So that was pretty cool for me.”
Not every rookie gets an ideal NHL greeting, though. Knies points to another, more humbling experience that truly summarized where he was at. And of course, it’s something he’ll never forget.
“Last year at playoffs, I missed the first two power-play meetings,” he laughed. “I had no idea what time [they were] or what was going on. Guys kind of give it to me for that. That was probably my ‘welcome to the NHL moment;’ like, you need to show up, and you need to be ready.”
THERE ARE SOME THINGS for which a rookie can prepare himself. Some can’t be controlled.
Take Faber, for instance. He’s heard the outside chatter for months. It’s saying there’s a chance he’ll be more than just a Calder Trophy finalist. He’ll be a favorite to win.
Chicago’s Bedard looked like the runaway Rookie of the Year leader early in the season. Then Bedard missed six weeks with a fractured jaw and Faber’s increasingly excellent play separated him from the remaining freshman pack.
It’s a nice compliment to Faber that he’s been seen as award-worthy. It’s just not what drives him, especially now when Minnesota is on track to miss the playoffs.
“It’d be really cool and a tremendous honor [to be a finalist] considering how many great rookies there are this year,” he said. “It’s crazy to think that it’s maybe a possibility. But I think every guy in the league would say they’re more focused on the team’s success, and doing what they can for their teammates. Individually, it’s just a pretty cool thing on the side to be mentioned in.”
And there’s another bit of balance that rookies have to find. They might be teenagers and 20-somethings living a dream, but the NHL is a business, too. Winning matters in ways it sometimes hasn’t in the past, with real-world implications — and painful fallout — when players and teams fall short.
Confidence becomes more than just a buzzword: It’s a mantra. The rookies, after all, have to believe they belong — even among the future Hall of Famers.
“It’s not like the guys you’re playing against are not human, you know what I mean?” Carlsson said. “You realize you can be a good player here too, and you don’t have to be worried that you’re not going to make it. If you have confidence out there, you’re going to be fine.”
The trick for Zary has been remembering every skater — regardless of their status — is going through a season-long adventure that inevitably produces highs and lows. The rookies won’t be exempt from, or destroyed by, their struggles.
This is, after all, just the beginning.
“Bad games or a bad day, whatever it is, just let it go, and know the next day is a new day and you can go enjoy that,” he said. “Put a smile on your face and take a step back and realize, you know what, you might have had a bad day, maybe made a couple bad plays, but at the end of the day, you know where you are and you know how good you can be.
“Step back and tell yourself, ‘I’m in the NHL and that’s one of my lifelong goals,’ so you’ve got to kind of pinch yourself sometimes.”
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Sports
The unhittable pitch rocking this MLB postseason — and the aces who will be throwing it in World Series Game 6
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2 hours agoon
October 31, 2025By
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TORONTO — In Game 6 of the World Series on Friday, two of the foremost practitioners of the pitch that has defined October will duel at Rogers Centre. Los Angeles Dodgers right-hander Yoshinobu Yamamoto is trying to save his team’s season, and Toronto Blue Jays right-hander Kevin Gausman is trying to win his franchise’s first championship in more than 30 years, and both will rely heavily on the split-fingered fastball, an offering that for almost 20 years teetered on the brink of extinction in Major League Baseball.
The rise of the splitter over the past half a decade — fueled by the emergence of elite pitching from Japan, where the the offering is a standard part of nearly every pitcher’s arsenal, and the softening on its use by MLB teams that at one point had forbid the pitch, fearful that it directly led to elbow injuries — has transformed baseball even more than the cutter and sweeper once did. Because it’s a superior pitch to all of them.
“If you can throw it near the strike zone,” Clayton Kershaw said, “it’s the best pitch in the game.”
In recent years, Kershaw began throwing a split-change, finally finding a comfortable variation of a changeup after spending his 18-year future Hall of Fame career in search of one. He is far from alone. This postseason, 32 pitchers, representing nearly a quarter of playoff hurlers, have thrown splitters. Since the advent of pitch tracking in 2008, the highest percentage of splitters thrown among overall pitches in October was 3.2% last year. Most seasons, it ranged between 0.2% and 2%.
This October, 6.8% of all pitches have been splitters, a staggering number that reflects the game’s wholesale embrace. It’s not just Gausman (who has thrown the pitch 41.4% of the time in the playoffs) and Yamamoto (24.7%). Toronto rookie Trey Yesavage dominated the Dodgers with his splitter in Game 5. Shohei Ohtani, who will pitch in Game 7 if the Dodgers win Friday’s battle of the splits, throws a vicious one. Blue Jays closer Jeff Hoffman could set off a celebration with one. The same goes for Dodgers closer Roki Sasaki, whose splitter dances in all directions with perilously low spin, like a souped-up knuckleball.
“It’s kind of one of the few pitches I thoroughly believe a hitter can know it’s coming and still get out,” Gausman said. “I’ve always felt like the changeup is the best pitch in the game because it looks like a fastball, and anything that looks like a fastball and isn’t is really good. So, I think that’s why you’re seeing a lot more guys do it. I’m happy to see a lot more starters do it because it was always kind of more of a reliever pitch. So, to me, it’s exciting to see guys like Yamamoto throw it a lot.”
The splitter is the evolutionary descendant of the forkball, which dates back to the 1910s. Whereas a forkball was jammed as deep as possible between the index and middle fingers, the splitter offers more leeway for pitchers to find comfort. It is not a discriminating pitch like the changeup, which necessitates pronation — the internal rotation of the forearm that leaves the thumb facing down and the pinky up after release — something with which Kershaw and others struggle. It’s quite simple, actually: put the ball between two fingers, support it with the thumb, throw it with the arm speed of a fastball and let the grip do the work.
Closer Bruce Sutter learned the splitter in 1973 and rode it to the Hall of Fame, inspiring the next generation to throw the pitch that looks like a fastball, only to die as it approaches the plate. Mike Scott won a Cy Young with it. Roger Clemens, Curt Schilling and John Smoltz pitched into their 40s thanks to it. By the time their careers ended in the 2000s, though, the splitter was made into a scapegoat for failing elbow ligaments across the game. Some had the gumption to keep throwing it. Most were discouraged, turning splitter into a four-letter word.
The lack of splitters thrown led to a knowledge gap, Dodgers pitching coach Mark Prior said, “and I don’t think a lot of people knew how to teach it. If you were around a guy who threw it, maybe you can mess with it. If you weren’t, I don’t even remember anybody I was with who threw splits. So, it was something you didn’t even mess around with.”
The arrival of Masahiro Tanaka to the New York Yankees in 2014 ushered in a new generation of the splitter. And technology aided its rebirth. Super-high-speed Edgertronic cameras allowed pitchers to see how a ball left their hands. TrackMan, the radar-based system that measures pitches’ spin and movement, gave immediate feedback and a granular look at a pitch’s effectiveness.
“Five, 10, 15 years ago, a guy would work on a pitch all year then find out,” Blue Jays pitching coach Pete Walker said. “Looking back, that was fruitless. It was not going to happen. So, we wasted a year of someone’s career working on a curveball, working on a slider or working on a split-fingered fastball. I think now it’s just expedited. We can make that decision with more background on it and more validity to it.”
Compound that ability and desire to learn new offerings with the sport-wide understanding that velocity is the greatest predictor of arm injuries, and teams’ stances on splitters softened. Pitchers jumped at the opportunity to try the splitter, and with good reason.
This postseason, batters are hitting .154/.206/.250 against splitters — the lowest numbers in each triple-slash category for any pitch. In the World Series, the Dodgers are 1-for-22 with 14 strikeouts on splitters. Toronto has thrown splitters 13.7% of the time during the playoffs, a number that figures to jump with Gausman on the mound in Game 6.
The splitter has saved careers — “I’d have been done a long time ago without it,” Dodgers reliever Kirby Yates said — and is more frequently making them. Over this winter, it will be the talk of pitching labs around the sport, with hundreds of professional pitchers at all levels seeing if it works. Already, multiple front office officials said, teams are digging into their pitchers’ movement patterns to see if a splitter would complement their current arsenal. And because of what they’ve learned designing other new pitches, they’ll have a decent idea whether it works sooner rather than later.
“It could be one session,” Walker said. “It could be even before the session, to be honest with you.”
The versatility of the splitter only adds to the allure. Pitchers can throw it extremely hard, like Paul Skenes‘ and Jhoan Duran‘s splinker, a splitter-sinker hybrid. They can aim for a forked, low-spin variety like Sasaki’s, a devastating late-breaker like Yamamoto’s or one like Gausman’s that he can command in and out of the strike zone. They can even use it as a show-me off-speed pitch like Kershaw.
Whatever the form, the splitter is here to stay. As it proliferates, perhaps its utility will diminish. Part of its effectiveness, after all, is its relative rarity. For now, though, it’s still a pitch teeming with mystery — there one second, gone the next.
“You can’t hit it,” Kershaw said. “You cannot hit a good split.”
Sports
This World Series is headed back to Toronto! Here’s what each team needs to do to win it
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October 31, 2025By
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The 2025 World Series is back in Canada for Game 6 on Friday night with the Toronto Blue Jays one win away from dethroning the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Will the Blue Jays finish the deal at Rogers Centre or will the Dodgers find a way to rebound? And who is the World Series MVP through five games?
Our MLB experts break down what Toronto and L.A. must do in the final game(s) of this Fall Classic.
How surprised are you that this series is heading back to Toronto with the Blue Jays up 3-2?
David Schoenfield: Hey, I picked the Blue Jays in seven, and one of the main reasons I went with them has come into play: concern about the Dodgers’ bats. They’re hitting just .201 in the World Series and .236 overall in the postseason (and .214 since the start of the NLDS, while averaging just 3.5 runs per game).
It feels like unless Shohei Ohtani is hitting the ball over the fence, they’re going to have problems scoring runs. Mookie Betts’ struggles are especially problematic: He’s 3-for-23 in the World Series without an extra-base hit or RBI. He has six hard-hit balls (95-plus mph), but only one ball in play at 100 mph, and he’s 1-for-6 in those six plate appearances.
Jorge Castillo: I wouldn’t have been surprised if presented with this scenario before the series started since I picked the Blue Jays to win in seven games. But I thought Toronto was in trouble after not only losing Game 3 in that fashion but losing George Springer to injury. The Blue Jays bouncing back from those two setbacks — beating Shohei Ohtani in Game 4 before Trey Yesavage made more history in Game 5 — was beyond impressive.
Who is the MVP of this series through the first five games?
Jesse Rogers: With all due respect to what young Yesavage did in Game 5, the Blue Jays would have no chance in this series without the contributions of Vladimir Guerrero Jr. He’s been the most constant — as well as dominant — hitter on any team this postseason, this series included. That’s saying something considering some of Ohtani’s heroics, but that’s how good Guerrero has been. He’s hitting .364 with two important home runs in Games 4 and 5. He might be your MVP no matter what happens in Games 6 and 7.
Alden Gonzalez: I agree with Jesse on Vlad. But Addison Barger actually has a higher OPS than Vlad in this series, at 1.147. And Alejandro Kirk is right behind Barger at 1.125. And so, even though it’s obviously not possible, I’d like to give the MVP to this entire Blue Jays offense — for doing what the Milwaukee Brewers couldn’t against a dominant rotation, and for showing the Dodgers what is possible against the high-end pitching teams face this time of year.
The Blue Jays have been without Springer over these last couple of games and are playing a very limited Bo Bichette, and yet they’ve outscored the Dodgers by 11 runs in this series and by a whopping 36 runs in the entire postseason. In all three of their wins, they’ve perfectly followed the blueprint to beat this Dodgers pitching staff — make the starting pitcher work, then tee off on the middle relievers.
What do you expect for Yamamoto vs. Gausman 2.0 in Game 6 after their Game 2 pitching duel?
Bradford Doolittle: Yoshinobu Yamamoto is on a roll. The Dodgers’ offense is very much not. That suggests a low-scoring duel and a game decided by one or two runs. The chances of Yamamoto throwing another nine are slim from a pure probability standpoint, and frankly the Dodgers shouldn’t need him to do it with just two more games to cover and the availability of starters like Ohtani and Blake Snell in the bullpen for an all-hands-on-deck Game 7.
After the 15 whiffs in Game 5, the Dodgers will be antsy for contact and it’ll be telling how aggressive they are against Gausman early on. It’s a tough balance. Kevin Gausman will walk guys, but you can’t be too passive with him because he’ll bury you once he gets the edge in a count. It’ll be a great cat-and-mouse game on both sides.
Castillo: Another duel. Yamamoto has been the best pitcher in this postseason and nothing suggests he’s about to get roughed up. A third straight complete game is asking for a lot, but he should give the Dodgers at least a quality start. On the other side, Gausman has been very good in the playoffs and matched Yamamoto in Game 2 until the seventh inning. The struggling Dodgers offense might not need much to support Yamamoto, but Gausman won’t make it easy.
The Blue Jays will be World Series champions if …
Rogers: They simply keep the pressure on at the plate. Despite some stellar moments on the mound for the Dodgers, Toronto’s pesky lineup has caused just enough havoc to earn a series lead. If they don’t get much off Dodgers starters the next game or perhaps two, their ability to add on late against L.A.’s pen is always a threat. Toronto has proven it has the lengthier and better lineup so far. It’s their key to winning this weekend.
Schoenfield: Vlad Jr. keeps hitting bombs. The Jays can win without him — they won Game 7 of the ALCS even though he went 1-for-4 without a run or RBI — but he is, as Reggie Jackson might say, the straw that stirs the drink.
As alluded to above, even if they lose Game 6, at least knocking out Yamamoto and forcing Dave Roberts to use Roki Sasaki will be another key. It feels like if it goes to a Game 7, Roberts’ circle of trust might be limited to starter Tyler Glasnow, Sasaki, Ohtani and maybe Snell. Glasnow has topped out at six innings in his three playoff starts, so if the Blue Jays can at least force Sasaki into Game 6, maybe that limits Roberts’ relief options in Game 7 — or forces him to use someone else from an unreliable bullpen.
The Dodgers can force a Game 7 (and win it) if …
Doolittle: For me, Game 6 is the Blue Jays’ best chance to close out the series. I just like the Dodgers’ pitching outlook for a Game 7 much more, from the starter to the options in expanded bullpens. They have to get to Gausman early on the scoreboard, ideally by stringing some disciplined at-bats together that revs up his pitch count.
I feel like Yamamoto, complete game or not, will pull his weight. But one or two or more of the Dodgers’ struggling stars have to remind us of why L.A.’s offense was such a beast during the regular season, because you can’t count on the Blue Jays’ offense being completely shut down. They are just too consistent.
Gonzalez: Their offense gets back to manufacturing runs. The Dodgers are slashing just .214/.306/.360 since the wild-card round. In that stretch, they’ve scored three or more runs in just three of their 123 half-innings. Two players in particular need to step up: Mookie Betts, who hits between Ohtani and Freddie Freeman but is just 3-for-23 in the World Series; and Alex Call, who will probably replace the struggling Andy Pages in the No. 9 spot once again and who needs to reach base so that the top of the lineup can see more RBI opportunities.
Sports
Ohtani roles for potential G7 include opener, OF
Published
2 hours agoon
October 31, 2025By
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Associated Press 
Oct 30, 2025, 08:20 PM ET
TORONTO — Dodgers manager Dave Roberts will consider using Shohei Ohtani as an opener or even as an outfielder in Game 7 if Los Angeles forces the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays to the limit.
The two-way star threw 93 pitches in Wednesday’s 6-2 loss in Game 4 and could be available as a reliever this weekend in Toronto.
However, if Ohtani enters as a reliever after starting the game as a designated hitter, the Dodgers will lose their DH. If he enters as a reliever after starting as a DH, he will need to play a position to remain in the game once his mound appearance is over.
Ohtani can stay in the game as a DH if he also is the starting pitcher.
“I think we would consider everything,” Roberts said Thursday, a day ahead of Game 6. “It’s more of just kind of doing whatever we can to get through tomorrow and then pick up the pieces and then see what’s the best way to attack a potential Game 7. So everything should be on the table and will be, for sure.”
Roberts said he planned to discuss options with Ohtani later Thursday.
Ohtani has never pitched in relief during his Major League Baseball career. He made a handful of relief appearances in Japan for the Pacific League’s Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, mostly as a rookie in 2013. He closed out Japan’s victory in the 2023 World Baseball Classic final against the United States, striking out then-Los Angeles Angels teammate Mike Trout for the final out.
Ohtani took on-field batting practice Thursday, which he rarely does, appearing to hit balls off the hotel behind center field.
He is batting .250 with 8 homers, 14 RBIs and 14 walks in the postseason for a 1.109 OPS. He is 2-1 on the mound with a 3.50 ERA and 25 strikeouts in 18 innings.
Ohtani made seven outfield appearances with the Angels in 2021, the year before a rule was changed allowing starting pitchers to stay in games at DH after being removed from mound appearances.
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