3 Countries, 2 Continents, 1 More Ring: 2025 Dodgers Deliver
The 2025 Dodgers were a lot of things — but subtle wasn’t one of them. This was Year Two of Shohei in blue, and he looked every bit the superstar — more relaxed, more himself, and finally back on the mound. Yoshinobu Yamamoto went from “big international signing” to “give him the ball, he’s our guy.” Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell brought veteran firepower, while Rōki Sasaki’s stuff looked unfair at times. It wasn’t just a rotation; it was five totally different personalities figuring out how to make dominance look routine.
The payroll had its own zip code, and so did the pressure. Every city they walked into treated them like the villain. But inside that clubhouse, it didn’t feel like arrogance — it felt like expectation. They just saw a standard: win again. And in their world, anything less would’ve felt like failure.
A Season That Started in Tokyo and Ended in Toronto
Los Angeles didn’t just rack up wins — they racked up miles. The Dodgers opened the season in Tokyo, crossing the Pacific before most teams had even unpacked from Spring Training. Those early‑morning Tokyo games felt like preseason exhibitions until the jet lag followed them home and reminded everyone this counted. Then to finish it all out, they play their final game in Toronto, against a team representing an entire country. That’s two continents, three countries, and 179 games of baseball in one year.
By the time they lifted the trophy, they’d logged more than 50,000 travel miles and felt every one of them. This was a team built for endurance, not convenience — one that proved a long flight or twenty can’t slow down a dynasty.
The Rotation Held Together by Duct Tape and Dominance
On paper, this was supposed to be an Avengers rotation. In reality, April took a crowbar to it. Snell went down after two starts, Glasnow after five, and Sasaki before his ninth. Some nights, the question “who’s starting tomorrow?” was answered with a shrug. But through all of it, Yamamoto quietly became the steady heartbeat of the staff, finding another gear when everything else was falling apart. And Ohtani — who had a slow rollout when he was able to start pitching — still gave them enough innings to keep things moving while terrorizing pitchers on the other side of the ball.
By August, the rotation finally started to look like the one the front office imagined back in February. Glasnow came back throwing angry fastballs again, and Snell’s rhythm clicked just in time for October. Sasaki, too electric to sit, found a spot in the bullpen where his stuff helped close out games.
The Bullpen’s Redemption Story
If there was one through-line for the regular season, it was the ninth inning turning Dodger fans into part‑time cardiologists. The bullpen was a roller coaster — leads slipped away, walks piled up, and every press conference turned into a guessing game about who’d get the next save chance. By late summer, that shaky group had the second‑highest bullpen ERA among playoff teams and had blown more saves than any other division winner. It was the one thing about this club that never seemed to stabilize.
Then October hit, and everything flipped. Suddenly the same group that couldn’t string together clean innings all summer was untouchable when it mattered most. Their bullpen ERA across the postseason dropped to barely above 2.00, they stranded more than 85% of inherited runners, and they didn’t allow a single homer after the Division Series. And when the game demanded length or nerve, Yamamoto or Glasnow picked up the baton and finished the job. The same bullpen that was their biggest problem in June became the reason they survived October.
Everyday Heroes: The Grind Behind the Glory
Unless you're a Red Sox fan who was watching a lot of games in 2014-2105, you probably didn't know that Mookie Betts came up through their farm system as a second baseman. He only shifted to the outfield because Dustin Pedroia still had gas in the tank. Mookie made it look effortless, carved out an MVP career out there, and stayed. But even for a guy who’s done just about everything, the move to full-time infielder this year was something he hadn't done in the majors. What began with fans asking, “Can he really do this?” ended with Betts turning double plays that decided championships.
Freddie Freeman was the heartbeat that never changed — steady, brutal efficiency at the plate, a quiet tone‑setter in the clubhouse. Will Smith continued morphing into that rare kind of catcher who’s as dangerous at the plate as he is behind it, managing a pitching staff like a chess player while slugging like a cleanup hitter. And Teoscar Hernández? When the Dodgers needed muscle, he brought it.
The crazy part is this wasn’t one of those 110‑win cruises people expected from L.A. They “only” won 93 games, pushed through cold streaks, nagging injuries, and that weird midsummer stretch where everything felt slightly off. They looked human more often than superhuman, and that’s what made the repeat hit harder.
The Roberts Factor
Managers don’t win pennants by themselves, but they do create space for players to. Roberts did that, and what it meant this time went beyond the clubhouse — it changed how people talk about his place in baseball history. Three titles in five years, five pennants in a decade, and a career winning percentage that stacks up with the all-timers: that’s a resume that starts to sound a lot like Cooperstown, and Alex Rodriguez agreed on the postgame show:
You got to give it to Doc Roberts. I think, now he's a three-time world champion, and it cements him as a future Hall of Fame manager.
But numbers only tell part of it. Roberts’ case got its final push because of how this one happened. He didn’t just ride a loaded roster — he guided a team through chaos, injuries, travel, and expectations that could’ve crushed lesser managers. The decisions in October were spot-on. He knew when to lean on his aces and when to let a role player have the moment. The bullpen that haunted him for months became his greatest weapon because he never stopped trusting them. David Ortiz talked a bit about what makes Roberts so special:
If I’m the Dodgers’ owner, I’d give Dave Roberts a very long-term deal. It’s because he knows that ballclub better than anybody I’ve ever seen. He moves his players in a way that makes it seem like he knows the future. What he did with Rojas, what he did with Pages — I never thought he’d let Rojas hit in that situation. I would’ve bet everything that he wouldn’t. But he knows his players better than anybody I’ve ever seen, and that’s why they’re World Champions today.
It’s funny — his critics always said he managed like a front-office extension, too loyal to analytics, too safe with the book. But this postseason flipped that narrative. In Game 7, he managed by feel. He trusted Yamamoto on fumes, stuck with Rojas for defense, and let his veterans work. When the ballots eventually come, this October will be the moment everyone points back to and says, “That’s when Dave Roberts crossed the line from great manager to Hall of Famer.”
Cold-Blooded in October: The Dodgers Who Delivered
Yoshinobu Yamamoto: The MVP, the Metronome, the Fire Extinguisher
You can throw a lot of labels at Yamamoto, but none of them quite capture what he was for this team. He was the calm when everything around him felt chaotic. In Game 2, he delivered a complete-game masterpiece in a postseason where most pitchers can’t survive the sixth. In Game 6, he gave the Dodgers six innings that felt like twelve, keeping their season alive when the margin for error was nonexistent. And then came Game 7, where he came out of the bullpen on zero days of rest and slammed the door shut for the final eight outs — like it was still April, not the eleventh inning of a World Series winner-take-all.
The numbers tell you how dominant he was — three wins, a 1.10 ERA, 15 strikeouts, and just two walks in the World Series alone — but they don’t tell you how much control he had over the moment. His teammates talked about him like a human metronome, the same heartbeat whether it was a quiet Tuesday in May or an elimination game in November. For a team that’s used to stars showing up, Yamamoto wasn’t just great — he was unshakable. He's the first pitcher since Randy Johnson in 2001 to get 3 wins in a World Series. That’s the stuff that makes legends, and that’s why his name will sit near the top of any list of the best pitching performances of this era.
Will Smith: The Marathon Man with the Hammer
We throw around “caught every inning” like it’s normal. It isn’t. Smith logged 73 of them in this World Series — eighteen in the epic marathon at Dodger Stadium, eleven in the decider in Toronto, and all the others in between. That number doesn’t just sound impressive — it’s an all-time record. The previous record for innings caught in a World Series was set in 1903, the very first one ever played, which went eight games back when it was a best-of-nine series. Smith broke that 122-year-old record, and somehow, he did it with one fewer game. Absolute insanity.
He still had the legs and the bat speed to get on time to a slider in the 11th inning of Game 7 and send it into the night. Catching is pain management with strategy layered on top, and Smith did both like a savant — stealing strikes on the edges, guiding four different pitchers through one of the most chaotic games imaginable, and then capping it with the swing that gave L.A. its first lead of the night. That’s not just endurance. That’s legacy.
Miguel Rojas: From Glue Guy to Savior
There’s always one. The veteran who's been more of a calming presence and sure-handed defender suddenly becomes the hero at the plate. Rojas had barely seen the field in the month leading into the World Series, and heading into Game 7, he hadn’t recorded a hit since October 1st — a full month. Then, in the biggest moment of the year, he delivered one of the biggest swings in franchise history. That’s baseball for you — one minute you’re a role player, the next you’re a postseason legend.
The ninth‑inning homer is the part we’ll replay forever, but the game‑saving force at home in the bottom half belongs right next to it. This sport is funny that way — it asks you to be two different players in one night: one who guesses right and lets it fly, and another who stays calm enough to let the moment come to you. Rojas did both within three batters.
Shohei Ohtani: The Sho-Stopper
Shohei Ohtani’s 2025 postseason was the kind of show you tell your kids about years from now. He elevated the entire idea of what one player can do in October. His Game 4 against Atlanta in the NLCS will live forever — three home runs at the plate and ten strikeouts in six innings on the mound. That’s not a good night, that’s an all-time baseball performance. Then, in the 18-inning epic that was World Series Game 3, he reached base nine times and hit two more homers, forcing Toronto to start intentionally walking him just to survive. In a month when stars tend to fade under the pressure, Ohtani somehow shined brighter.
The Meaning Behind the Moment
When the final out dropped and the Dodgers poured onto the field, it felt like a full-circle moment. From opening the season halfway across the world to grinding through injuries and late-night flights, this team earned every bruise and mile. There’s a different kind of respect for a champion that does it twice. It’s not just about dominance; it’s about endurance. You could see it in the way Freeman hugged Betts, in the way Yamamoto stood on the mound soaking it all in, in the way Roberts finally let himself smile. In Kershaw's pure joy.
The Dodgers have been baseball’s standard for a while now, but this run made them something more: a true dynasty. And one that doesn’t take itself too seriously, that still loves the grind, and that somehow keeps finding new ways to make baseball feel magical. They’ve reached the mountaintop twice — and there's a very real chance that they’re not done climbing.