Yankees versus Dodgers in the 2024 World Series is a renewal of an old school October rivalry that began back in a baseball Golden Age, but is remixed for the modern era. That means we’ll see at least one bullpen game and newfangled pitching plans galore.
Starters will be carefully watched and only a select few -- maybe Gerrit Cole? -- will see the same hitter a third time through the lineup. There won’t be any Don Larsen redux, most likely.
But there will be incredible star power, so much so that fans ought to show up in tuxedos and gowns like it’s some kind of diamond Oscar ceremony. Heck, it’s a TV execs fever dream, the two biggest markets meeting for the 12th time -- the most ever -- in the Fall Classic.
The expected MVPs of each league -- Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani -- form a boldface-name centerpiece. Neither has played in the World Series before. It’s the first time ever that two sluggers who mashed 50-plus homers during the regular season are facing off with these stakes. Oh yeah, Ohtani was also the first 50-homer, 50-steals player in history this year.
In total, there will be five former position-player MVPs in the Series – Judge, Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman and Giancarlo Stanton. Cole is a reigning Cy Young winner. Juan Soto is this generation's Ted Williams. Both teams also boast supporting casts that can tilt the series – just ask the Dodgers and NLCS MVP Tommy Edman.
It’s two iconic teams, and, this year, the best teams in each league, head-to-head, for everything. Yankees-Dodgers started in 1941, but this is the first time they’ve met in the World Series since 1981. East Coast vs. West Coast transplants from Brooklyn?
Sumptuous baseball feast incoming.
What the Yankees have going for them
Power and patience, to start. And -- lecture alert -- stop talking about how power doesn’t win games in October. Teams to out-homer opponents this postseason are 21-7 (.750), according to Sarah Langs of MLB.com. Last year, that mark was 25-4 (.862).
And the Yankees can hit ‘em far. Stanton (four), Soto (three) and Judge (two) combined to hit nine of the Yanks’ 10 home runs in the ALCS (they out-homered Cleveland, 10-5). It was rocket dagger after rocket dagger, too.
Stanton, the ALCS MVP who has five homers and 11 RBI in the postseason, has his October swing tuned. Soto (1.106 postseason OPS) is showing that whatever the number he commands on his upcoming free agent contract, it’s probably not enough.
The Yanks have clogged the bases with traffic all postseason -- looks like an LA freeway out there, am I right? -- thanks to patient at-bats, and other slots in the batting order perked up to help the big guys. Anthony Volpe (.459 on-base percentage in the postseason) and Gleyber Torres (.400 OBP) have been huge.
Cole (3.31 ERA in three starts) is the one starting pitcher in the whole Fall Classic who profiles like the kind of ace this matchup used to boast. He’s no Sandy Koufax or Whitey Ford, of course, but Cole could actually give the Yankee bullpen a break one night by throwing seven innings. He did it in the ALDS against the Royals, though his other two starts haven’t been nearly as sharp.
So there will be a burden on the Yanks’ pen, which mostly has delivered so far, though workload concerns will loom -- Clay Holmes and Luke Weaver have appeared in eight of nine postseason games, for instance. But Yankee relievers have been a strength, going 5-1 with a 2.56 ERA and five saves in eight chances. Pen wobbles ruined Game 3 in the ALCS, when Holmes and Weaver gave up late homers, relegating dramatic blasts by Judge and Stanton to sidebar status.