For 32 years, the Toronto Blue Jays waited for a night like this — a Game 7 under the lights, the city electric, the air trembling with belief. And when it finally came on a brisk November Saturday, it unfolded like a fever dream. History dangled by a thread. Every pitch, every heartbeat, every sound of leather meeting wood felt like it could tilt the universe.

And when it was over — when Yoshinobu Yamamoto snapped off one final curveball, when Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s knees buckled and the Dodgers spilled out of the dugout in a tidal wave of blue — it was the Los Angeles Dodgers who stood atop the baseball world once again.

The defending champions had done it.

Trailing by three runs early in the game, the Los Angeles Dodgers mounted a comeback for the ages, defeating the Toronto Blue

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