World Series Roundtable: Expert Predictions, MVP Picks, X-Factors

The New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers are set to clash in the most highly anticipated Fall Classic in years. Here’s how our staff sees it playing out.
Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernandez (left) and Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge are set to kick off the World Series on Friday. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers are set to meet in the World Series for the first time since 1981 to renew MLB’s most common Fall Classic matchup, and there is no shortage of story lines.

New York vs. Los Angeles. Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman vs. Aaron Judge, Juan Soto and Giancarlo Stanton. 2004 Boston Red Sox postseason hero Dave Roberts facing off against 2003 Yankees postseason hero Aaron Boone in the managerial battle of wits. And plenty more talking points that will surely surface throughout the series.

The Dodgers took two of three from the Yankees when the teams met at Yankee Stadium in June, but both rosters have undergone significant changes since then. And of course, games are managed much differently in the World Series than they are in the summer.

Here’s your guide to the most anticipated Fall Classic in years, as the Sports Illustrated staff picks x-factors for both teams and predicts how it’ll all play out in the country’s two most populated cities.

1. What's the biggest x-factor for the Dodgers to win?

Tom Verducci: Blake Treinen. His sweeper is video-game crazy good. He is Dave Roberts’s best arm, which means he is someone Roberts will not be able to save for the ninth inning. Time to damn the Law of Exposure. Roberts has to put Treinen on Soto, Judge, Stanton in every meaningful spot from the seventh inning on. His stuff is so good you don’t worry about hitters seeing him multiple times in a series.

Stephanie Apstein: Whether Alex Vesia can pitch—effectively—after missing the NLCS with an intercostal injury. As the Dodgers' top lefthanded reliever, he is their best shot at navigating the pocket of lineup that includes Juan Soto. If he can't go, or if he struggles, that will ask a lot of Anthony Banda, their only other lefty. 

Emma Baccellieri: Starting pitching. L.A. has an entire rotation's worth of starters on the IL. Having a great bullpen helps, of course, but only so much. The Dodgers will still need some quality work from the trio of Jack Flaherty, Walker Buehler and Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Can Flaherty bounce back after his last disastrous outing against the Mets in the NLCS? Can they get any meaningful length from Buehler? The Dodgers don't need their starters to be outstanding. But they do need them to be at least adequate. 

Will Laws: How will Freddie Freeman look in the wake of a sprained ankle that caused him to miss Games 4 and 6 of the NLCS? He’s 1-for-15 in his last three games while trying to gut through the injury. Los Angeles scored just fine without him against the Mets, but the Yankees’ pitching staff is a different beast, and the former NL MVP makes the Dodgers’ lineup much more fearsome when at full strength.

Nick Selbe: Can any starting pitcher step up? The Dodgers' bullpen was outstanding in the NLCS, but they'll need at least two serviceable starts from Jack Flaherty, Yoshinobu Yamamoto or Walker Buehler. The Cleveland Guardians' vaunted bullpen was not enough to overcome lackluster starting pitching against the Yankees (Cleveland starters accounted for just 38% of innings during the ALCS). Los Angeles doesn't need Sandy Koufax 2.0 to show up, but it will need something from its starters.

2. What's the biggest x-factor for the Yankees to win?

TV: Gleyber Torres. He’s been terrific at getting on base in front of the thick of the lineup. You know he’s feeling good when he’s slashing fastballs for line-drive singles to right field. His defense and base running can be problematic, but the offense can make a difference.

SA: How deep the starting pitchers can go. The Yankees have a typically impressive bullpen assembled from other teams' castoffs, but it is less deep than it has been in previous years, and the Dodgers become vastly more dangerous each time they see a pitcher. New York needs to limit how many chances Los Angeles gets to see its leverage arms. 

EB: Whether they can meaningfully attack the L.A. bullpen. The relief corps has generally been a huge strength in this playoff run for the Dodgers, but they've had to carry a pretty heavy workload, and it's not going to get any lighter in the World Series. They're virtually guaranteed to have at least one (more) bullpen game here. Will the Yankees be able to make adjustments and benefit from repeated exposure to this group? That's especially key if this series goes long.

WL: Carlos Rodón’s starts have an especially wide range of outcomes, as we’ve already seen this postseason. If New York’s likely Game 2 (and Game 6, if necessary) starter can pitch like he did in his first ALCS outing, New York will be in terrific shape. If he looks more like he did in the ALDS, that’ll put a lot of pressure on a bullpen that was already exposed a bit last round.

NS: Base running might seem like a boring answer, but it could prove to be the difference. The Yankees ranked last in FanGraphs' base running metric, 24th in stolen bases and 29th in speed score. They had so many gaffes against Cleveland that radio broadcaster John Sterling exclaimed they ran the bases “like drunks.” In a series that looks like it will be tight, the little things could determine who comes out on top.

Boone is set to enter his first World Series in his seventh season at the helm for the Yankees. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

3. Which manager is under more pressure to win?

TV: Dave Roberts. It’s got nothing to do with “narratives” and the worthless psychobabble that dominates “analysis” this time of year. Roberts gets less innings out of his starting pitchers than does Boone. He must run one or two more bullpen games, having already run three of them. The more buttons need to be pushed, the more likely you’ll be wrong. That’s pressure.

SA: I actually don't think either is under terrible pressure personally at this point—by getting here, they've almost certainly both secured their jobs moving forward—but organizationally, the Yankees' window seems shorter, since Soto hits free agency as soon as the World Series ends. 

EB: Dave Roberts. The fact that he's yet to win a World Series in a full season is still a mark on his record with the Dodgers. Yes, much of that has been out of his control, but it's nonetheless a piece of his legacy. This group was always expected to play for a championship this year. (That standard was complicated by injuries but certainly not compromised by them.) Making it to the World Series was always the goal. To satisfy the pressure, then, Roberts will have to actually win. 

WL: Dave Roberts has the readymade excuse of having a terribly depleted pitching staff, which he’s managed magnificently just to get here. This may be Aaron Boone’s best shot at getting a championship in the Bronx, especially considering Juan Soto might head south to Queens in the offseason.

NS: Aaron Boone. It came in a pandemic-shortened season at a neutral site with limited fan attendance, but Roberts still gets (and deserves) credit for guiding Los Angeles to the 2020 title. While Dodgers fans have grown antsy at having so many great seasons fall short during this decade-plus long run, the Yankees have more urgency to end their 15-year championship drought.

4. What's your World Series prediction?

TV: Yankees in 7. Flip a coin. There is no obvious edge here. (The Dodgers are the better base running team, but I don’t see that as a deciding factor.) Both offenses can be relentless—the two most disciplined lineups in baseball. Both bullpens are excellent—where most of these series are decided. The difference? Read below.

SA: Dodgers in 6. I think their lineup and bullpen are a bit deeper, which will make up for a more tattered rotation. 

EB: Dodgers in 6. These clubs are so closely matched that it can easily go either way, but while the Yankees do have some clear advantages over the Dodgers, L.A.'s bullpen, slugging and base running push it over the edge for me.

WL: Yankees in 6. In a postseason that’s been dominated by bullpen talk, Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón have the talent to get through Los Angeles’s lineup a couple of times mostly unscathed. And if New York’s big three sluggers can get support from the rest of the lineup, the Dodgers’ bullpen will be hard-pressed to continue its dominance.

NS: Dodgers in 7. Yamamoto has been sharp his last two times out, and threw 73 pitches in his most recent start. He'll provide the boost this starting rotation needs to save the bullpen some extra wear-and-tear, making Roberts's life much easier in the late innings.

Ohtani carries a slash line of .286/.434/.500 with three home runs and 10 RBIs through his first 11 playoff games. / Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

5. Who do you think will win World Series MVP?

TV: Giancarlo Stanton. It’s his time. He had the fourth longest wait among active players to get to the World Series, and now it begins in the ballpark where he went to games as a kid, where he won the All-Star MVP and where he has the second-highest slugging percentage of anyone in Dodger Stadium history. He’s not chasing. He looks like he’s on a Corey Seager-type run.

SA: Shohei Ohtani. In his worst NLCS game, he reached base twice. 

EB: Sometimes the most obvious choice is the best one. Come on: Shohei Ohtani. And I'm still holding out hope that we'll get to see him make a miracle bullpen appearance.

WL: I’m going to go down the board and pick Jazz Chisholm Jr. Is this because I’m foolishly sticking with a bold prediction I made at the start of the playoffs? Perhaps. But his poor postseason showing to this point would only greater accentuate a strong World Series where he’s the most likely Yankee to make a difference with his bat and his speed.

NS: Mookie Betts. There's no shortage of stars to choose from, and while it's tempting to go off-menu and pick a more supporting player (like Tommy Edman after his NLCS showing), Betts will continue his strong showing in the last round to take home the MVP.

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Ranking All 11 Yankees-Dodgers World Series Matchups in MLB History

Baseball’s most common World Series opponents haven’t clashed in the Fall Classic since 1981, but they’ve produced plenty of familiar iconic moments.

By Nick Selbe

Led by manager Billy Martin (left), the Yankees defeated Tommy Lasorda's Dodgers in the 1977 World Series. / Neil Leifer/Sports Illustrated

When it comes to America’s best sports rivalries, the ones that stand out most prominently are typically regional. The premier bi-coastal rivalry is probably between the Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers—the organizations have met in the NBA Finals 12 times, most recently in 2008 and ‘10 but most prominently in the ’60s and ‘80s, a period that saw nine Finals matchups.

While Celtics-Lakers is worthy of distinction, it’s not alone. And on Friday, one of sports’ greatest dormant rivalries will be renewed when the Los Angeles Dodgers host the New York Yankees in Game 1 of the World Series.

The two franchises rank first and second in Fall Classic appearances: The Yankees will astoundingly be making their 41st trip, while the Dodgers are on No. 22. This will be their 12th time meeting in the World Series—the most frequent pairing of all time, and five more than the runner-up (Yankees-Giants). Both clubs shared residency in the Big Apple for over half a century before the Dodgers moved from Brooklyn to Los Angeles in 1958. They met in the World Series eight times between ‘41 and ‘63, but haven’t battled for the Commissioner’s Trophy since ‘81.

That’ll change Friday. Not only will this be a matchup between two of the most successful and recognizable franchises in all of sports, but it will pit the game’s two biggest stars—Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge—against one another as they chase their first World Series title.

To prepare for such a moment, let’s take a look back at the previous Yankees-Dodgers World Series meetings and rank them from least to most memorable. Which series was the most competitive? Which had the biggest stakes (beyond deciding that year’s champion)? And which featured the most dramatic or iconic moments? Those are the kinds of questions considered when deciding on the final order.

In all, the Yankees hold a decisive 8–3 advantage (though the Dodgers triumphed in the most recent one, winning the 1981 World Series in six games). How will this latest tilt shape up? We’ll find out soon enough. For now, we can get ourselves ready with a little history lesson and hope this latest iteration can live up to its predecessors.

11. 1941: Yankees in 5

MVP: N/A

Future Hall of Famers: Bill Dickey, Joe DiMaggio, Leo Durocher (manager), Joe Gordon, Billy Herman, Joe McCarthy (manager), Joe Medwick, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzuto, Red Ruffing

The first Subway Series featuring the Yankees and Dodgers was a low-scoring affair, with New York’s 7–4 win in Game 4 the only game of the series that saw more than five runs. The first three contests were all decided by one run. The Yankees’ win was their fifth championship in six years and ninth overall.

Most significant moment: In Game 4, the home side Dodgers held a 4–3 lead in the top of the ninth inning, three outs away from evening the series at two games apiece. With two outs, two strikes to batter Tommy Henrich and nobody on base, pitcher Hugh Casey got Henrich to swing and miss on a curveball to seemingly end the game. But catcher Mickey Owen dropped the pitch, allowing Henrich to reach first base. That opened the door for the Yankees to mount a two-out rally that produced four runs to let New York take the lead and eventually win, 7–4.

10. 1949: Yankees in 5

MVP: N/A

Future Hall of Famers: Yogi Berra, Roy Campanella, Joe DiMaggio, Gil Hodges, Johnny Mize, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzuto, Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Casey Stengel (manager)

The two teams traded 1–0 wins in the first two games. After that, the Yankees never trailed, outscoing the Dodgers, 20–13, over the final three. Robinson, who was the National League MVP after hitting .342 with 37 stolen bases and 124 RBI, was kept in check for the series as he was just 3-for-16 (.188) at the plate.

Most significant moment: Locked in a scoreless pitchers’ duel in Game 1, Yankees first baseman Tommy Henrich led off the bottom of the ninth inning with a walk-off homer against Dodgers pitcher Don Newcombe. Newcombe had 11 strikeouts on the day, tying the World Series record for most by a losing pitcher. Henrich’s blast was the first walk-off homer in World Series history.

Koufax etched himself into Dodgers lore with his legendary 1963 season that included an MVP award and a World Series victory. / Neil Leifer/Sports Illustrated

9. 1963: Dodgers in 4

MVP: Sandy Koufax

Future Hall of Famers: Walt Alston (manager), Yogi Berra, Leo Durocher (coach), Don Drysdale, Whitey Ford, Sandy Koufax, Mickey Mantle

The lone sweep of these 11 matchups gets bumped up due to a dominant showing by Koufax, who broke out as the game’s best pitcher during the regular season, going 25–5 with a 1.88 ERA and 11 shutouts to win his first Cy Young Award and only MVP. He finished his dream season with two complete games in the World Series, as Dodgers pitchers allowed just four total runs to a Yankees team that won 104 games. New York never held a lead in any of the four games.

This series remains the only time the Dodgers have clinched a title in their home ballpark, and was the first meeting between teams from New York and Los Angeles for a major professional sports championship.

Most significant moment: In a series dominated by pitching, it’s difficult to single out any specific moment. But we’ll show some love for Drysdale’s Game 3 performance, which was overshadowed given Koufax’s two wins but was nonetheless brilliant, as he tossed a three-hit shutout (all singles) with one walk and nine strikeouts in a 1–0 victory.

8. 1978: Yankees in 6

MVP: Bucky Dent

Future Hall of Famers: Yogi Berra (coach), Goose Gossage, Catfish Hunter, Reggie Jackson, Tommy Lasorda (manager), Bob Lemon (manager), Don Sutton

This is the most recent time that we’ve had a World Series rematch from the previous season. It also started a run of 10 consecutive seasons that featured 10 different World Series winners. The Dodgers jumped out to a 2–0 lead before New York won four straight to claim back-to-back titles. This season was famous for the Yankees overcoming a 14-game deficit over the Boston Red Sox to tie for the American League East division title, resulting in a one-game playoff between the two sides that turned on a three-run homer by Dent. The light-hitting Dent, who owned a .247/.297/.321 career slash line, took home World Series MVP honors just 15 days later, batting .417 with seven RBI for the series.

Most significant moment: The Dodgers held a 3–0 lead through five innings in Game 4 and seemed poised to take a 3–1 series advantage. But the Yankees scored twice in the sixth under controversial circumstances.

The Yankees got on the board through an RBI single by Reggie Jackson and were threatening for more with one out and runners on first and second. Lou Piniella hit a soft line drive to Dodgers shortstop Bill Russell. The ball kicked off Russell’s glove—perhaps intentionally so—and the runners froze momentarily. Russell recovered the ball, stepped on second base for the force out and then threw to first to try to complete the double play. But the ball struck Jackson, who began the play at first base and was only a few steps off the bag when the throw hit his hip and bounced toward right field, allowing Thurman Munson to score from second.

Instead of an inning-ending double play, the Yankees had cut the deficit to 3–2. They tied it in the eighth and eventually won on a walk-off single by Piniella in the 10th, evening the series. New York outscored Los Angeles 19–4 over the final two games.

The Yankees' World Series triumph in 1978 bookended an 18-year title drought lasting until 1996. / Tony Triolo/Sports Illustrated

7. 1981: Dodgers in 6

MVPs: Ron Cey, Pedro Guerrero, Steve Yeager

Future Hall of Famers: Goose Gossage, Reggie Jackson, Tommy Lasorda (manager), Bob Lemon (manager), Dave Winfield

The third World Series matchup between these two franchises in a five-year span went the Dodgers’ way. This marked the end of an era for the Yankees, who had reached four World Series in six years before a 13-year playoff drought that spanned 1982 to ‘94. For the Dodgers, this was the year of “Fernandomania” behind rookie phenom pitcher Fernando Valenzuela, who won Rookie of the Year and Cy Young Award honors after going 13–7 with a 2.48 ERA, 11 complete games and eight shutouts. (Editor’s note: Valenzuela died Tuesday night at the age of 63.)

VERDUCCI: Fernando Valenzuela’s Immediate MLB Success Gave Way to a Lasting Legacy

In an inverse of the ‘78 World Series, the Yankees won the first two games before the Dodgers won four straight, including three one-run victories, spurred by Valenzuela’s Game 3 victory that saw him hurl 147 pitches in a complete game. This marked the only time the series MVP award was shared by three players as Cey, Guerrero and Yeager combined to go 18-for-55 (.327) with five homers and 17 RBI.

Most significant moment: With the series tied 2–2, the Yankees held a 1–0 lead in Game 5 at Dodger Stadium. With one out in the bottom of the seventh, pitcher Ron Guidry gave up back-to-back solo homers to Guerrero and Yeager to give Los Angeles a 2–1 lead. Dodgers pitcher Jerry Reuss recorded the final six outs to finish his complete game and give Los Angeles a 3–2 series lead. The Dodgers cruised to a 9–2 win in Game 6 to clinch the championship.

Yeager (left) would go on to share the World Series MVP with two teammates in 1981. / Manny Millan/Sports Illustrated

6. 1947: Yankees in 7

MVP: N/A

Future Hall of Famers: Yogi Berra, Joe DiMaggio, Bucky Harris (manager), Gil Hodges, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzuto, Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Arky Vaughan

The same year that Robinson broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier, he helped propel the Dodgers to the Fall Classic, leading the team in hits, doubles, home runs, stolen bases and runs scored. This was the first World Series to be televised, though only in New York, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C. and the Schenectady/Albany market. Yankees righthander Spec Shea started three of the seven games, winning Games 1 and 5, the latter a complete game. This marks the only time that Yankees have ever won a World Series Game 7 in their home stadium. 

Most significant moment: Game 6 featured one of the most iconic catches—and radio calls—in World Series history to that point. With the Yankees trailing 8–5 in the sixth, DiMaggio came to bat with two on and two out. He drove a ball to left-center field, where defensive replacement Al Gionfriddo leapt up to snag it and rob DiMaggio of a game-tying home run. Legendary radio announcer Red Barber, then the voice of the Dodgers, gave a memorable call of the play, describing how Gionfriddo went “back, back, back, back” for the ball before making the grab (perhaps Chris Berman owes Barber royalties).

5. 1953: Yankees in 6

MVP: N/A

Future Hall of Famers: Yogi Berra, Roy Campanella, Whitey Ford, Gil Hodges, Mickey Mantle, Johnny Mize, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzuto, Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Casey Stengel (manager), Dick Williams

The Yankees and Dodgers faced off in the World Series for the third time in five years, and the result was the same. New York won its fifth consecutive title, a record that still stands today. Billy Martin was the standout of the series, batting 12-for-24 with two homers, two triples and eight RBI.

Most significant moment: The Yankees held a 3–1 lead heading into the top of the ninth inning of Game 6, three outs away from clinching the title. The Dodgers refused to go quietly, though, as Snider worked a walk and then scored on a two-run homer by right fielder Carl Furillo to tie the game. New York finished the job in the bottom half of the inning when Martin delivered a walk-off RBI single that scored right fielder Hank Bauer to seal the championship.

Jackson earned the nickname “Mr. October” with his performance for the Yankees during the 1977 World Series. / Walter Iooss Jr./Sports Illustrated

4. 1977: Yankees in 6

MVP: Reggie Jackson

Future Hall of Famers: Yogi Berra (coach), Bobby Cox (coach), Catfish Hunter, Reggie Jackson, Tommy Lasorda (manager), Don Sutton

This marked the Yankees’ first trip to the World Series under the ownership of George Steinbrenner, who took over in 1973. New York was coming off an 11-year playoff drought before making the Fall Classic in ‘76, where the team was swept by the Cincinnati Reds. Lasorda was in his first full season as the Dodgers’ manager after taking over for Walter Alston, who led the franchise to four titles.

This was the series that minted Jackson as “Mr. October.” Jackson, in his first year with New York after signing as a free agent, hit five home runs in the series, capped by three in the decisive Game 6.

Most significant moment: Jackson saved his best for last. With the Yankees on top, 7–3, in the bottom of the eighth in Game 6, Jackson obliterated the first pitch he saw from Charlie Hough deep into the batter’s eye in center field, joining Babe Ruth as the only players at the time to homer three times in a World Series game—a group that now includes Albert Pujols (2011) and Pablo Sandoval (2012).

3. 1956: Yankees in 7

MVP: Don Larsen

Future Hall of Famers: Walt Alston (manager), Yogi Berra, Roy Campanella, Don Drysdale, Whitey Ford, Gil Hodges, Sandy Koufax, Mickey Mantle, Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, Enos Slaughter, Duke Snider, Casey Stengel (manager)

The Yankees got their revenge for the 1955 defeat in this series, which was the final Fall Classic meeting between the two teams before the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles. The Dodgers jumped out to a 2–0 series lead before the Yankees pitching staff strung together five straight complete games. Brooklyn managed just three runs over the final four games. Berra and Mantle each hit three home runs, with Berra logging 10 RBI. The Dodgers avoided elimination when Robinson delivered a walk-off single in the 10th inning to seal a 1–0 win in Game 6, but the Yankees responded with a dominant 9–0 victory the following day.

Most significant moment: This series is best remembered for Larsen’s perfect game in Game 5, which remains the only perfect game in postseason history. Larsen, a journeyman pitcher who played for seven different organizations and never made an All-Star team, went 3–21 for the Baltimore Orioles two years prior and made just 13 starts for the Yankees in 1955 before having the best year of his career in ‘56. Larsen’s gem was the only no-hitter in World Series history until the Houston Astros threw a combined no-hitter in Game 4 of the 2022 Fall Classic against the Philadelphia Phillies.

2. 1955: Dodgers in 7

MVP: Johnny Podres

Future Hall of Famers: Walt Alston (manager), Yogi Berra, Roy Campanella, Whitey Ford, Gil Hodges, Sandy Koufax, Mickey Mantle, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzuto, Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Casey Stengel (manager)

Finally, the Dodgers broke through for their first championship after seven World Series defeats (five of which came to the Yankees). Both teams were led by MVP catchers—Berra for the Yankees and Campanella for the Dodgers, who each earned their third MVP nod in five seasons. Both players rose to the occasion: Berra had a series-high 10 hits in 24 at-bats, while Campanella was 7-for-27 (.259) with two homers, three doubles and three walks. Snider hit four homers while starting pitcher Podres tossed two complete games—including a shutout in Game 7—to win the inaugural World Series MVP award.

Most significant moment: It was only Game 1 (a game the Dodgers ended up losing), but Robinson’s steal of home in the eighth inning of a 6–5 defeat remains among the most iconic moments in World Series history. At 36 years old and in his second-to-last season, Robinson’s production and speed had declined to that point. But in this moment, it didn’t matter. Maybe this wasn’t the series’s most “significant” moment, but it’s surely had the longest-lasting impact.

1. 1952: Yankees in 7

MVP: N/A

Future Hall of Famers: Yogi Berra, Roy Campanella, Gil Hodges, Mickey Mantle, Johnny Mize, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzuto, Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Casey Stengel (manger)

A seven-game thriller in which six of the seven contests were decided by two runs or fewer, this one was an instant classic. In the first year after center fielder Joe DiMaggio's retirement, the Yankees replaced him with … Mickey Mantle (such is life for the Evil Empire). The Dodgers held a 3–2 series lead coming back to Ebbets Field, then Mantle took over. He homered in the eighth inning of Game 6 to give the Yankees a 3–1 lead (in a game they eventually won 3–2). Game 7 was tied 2–2 through five innings when Mantle hit a solo homer in the sixth and added an RBI single in the seventh to secure a 4–2 victory. For the series, Mantle went 10-for-29 with four extra-base hits, hitting the first two of his record 18 World Series home runs.

Most significant moment: In the bottom of the seventh inning of Game 7, the Dodgers loaded the bases trailing 4–2. With two outs and a full count, Robinson popped the ball up in the infield. Most of the fielders froze momentarily, and it seemed like the ball would fall in between everybody when second baseman Billy Martin darted in to make a shoestring catch. A web gem-worthy play? Maybe not, but it spared the Yankees some embarrassment and preserved the win.


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Yankees vs. Dodgers Opening World Series Odds (Los Angeles Enters as Slight Favorite)

The Los Angeles Dodgers are favored to win the World Series over the New York Yankees in 2024.

By Peter Dewey

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen (49) celebrates with catcher Will Smith. / Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

The stage is set for the 2024 World Series!

The Los Angeles Dodgers earned their bid to the Fall Classic on Sunday night, taking down the New York Mets in Game 6 of the NLCS. Now, Los Angeles will host the New York Yankees -- who beat the Cleveland Guardians in just five games in the ALCS -- in Game 1 starting on Friday.

The layoff between the Championship Series and the World Series should allow both teams to set their rotation however they'd like for the Fall Classic, truly making this a series to watch.

Both the Yankees and Dodgers had high preseason expectations, and to their credit, both teams finished with the top spot in their respective league and rolled through the playoffs to make the World Series.

New York has dropped just two games on its road to the Fall Classic, and it's looking to win its first title since 2009. Meanwhile, the Dodgers last won the World Series in the 2020 season, which was shortended due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Oddsmakers have released odds for this series, and the Dodgers are set as the favorite at DraftKings Sportsbook. Los Angeles (-125) has an implied probability of 55.56 percent to take this series while the Yankees (+105) have an implied probability of 48.78 percent.

Based on these odds, we should be in line for a great series. In fact, the exact outcome odds in the World Series show that this matchup is expected to go at least six games.

World Series Exact Outcome Odds

  • Dodgers in 6: +400
  • Yankees in 7: +475
  • Dodgers in 7: +475
  • Yankees in 6: +550
  • Dodgers in 5: +600
  • Yankees in 5: +650
  • Dodgers in 4: +1200
  • Yankees in 4: +1400

This series features plenty of star power on both sides, including the likely AL MVP (Aaron Judge) and NL MVP (Shohei Ohtani). New York also has stars like Gerrit Cole, Juan Soto, Giancarlo Stanton and others while the Dodgers feature Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Will Smith and more.

Cole will likely get the ball in Game 1 for New York against Los Angeles' Jack Flaherty, but both sides still have some time to set their roster for the World Series.

In the opening odds for Game 1, Los Angeles is a -130 favorite and the total is set at eight runs.

Yankees vs. Dodgers Postseason Comparison

So far this postseason, the Yankees rank third amongst playoff teams in OPS -- the Dodgers are first -- and fourth in team ERA -- the Dodgers are ninth.

One key for New York has been the dominance of its bullpen (2.56 postseason ERA) as it's been lights out for nearly every game but Game 3 of the ALCS. The Dodgers (3.16 bullpen ERA) may end up using their pen more than New York, as they had two full bullpen games during the NLCS.

After going the distance with the San Diego Padres in the NLDS, Los Angeles avoided a winner-take-all Game 7 on Sunday. It has scored at least five runs in seven of its 11 appearances in the playoffs. In addition to that, the Dodgers have shut out their opponent on four different occassions this postseason.

These teams are pretty evenly matched, so we should be in for quite the series once things kick off on Friday night.


Odds refresh periodically and are subject to change.

If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.


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