Goliath v Goliath: Yankees, Dodgers clash in World Series classic
The two biggest teams from America's two biggest cities, led by baseball's two biggest superstars. East Coast v West Coast. Broadway v Hollywood. Goliath v Goliath.
The most eagerly anticipated World Series showdown in decades gets under way on Friday when the Los Angeles Dodgers take on the New York Yankees in what promises to be a baseball blockbuster for the ages.
Forty-three years after their 11th and most recent meeting in a World Series, the historic rivals will face off once more at Dodger Stadium for game one of the best-of-seven championship series.
"This is what the baseball world wanted," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "It's going to be a great World Series."
Any World Series meeting between the two teams who were New York City rivals before the Dodgers left Brooklyn for California in 1957 would be a must-see event in its own right.
But hype surrounding this year's collision between the two baseball juggernauts -- the first time they have met in a World Series since 1981 -- has soared into a different stratosphere, thanks largely to the star-studded nature of the two teams' rosters.
The Dodgers boast the talismanic Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani, the record-breaking generational talent widely seen as the greatest all-round player since Babe Ruth.
The Yankees are led by the big-hitting Aaron Judge, the former American League Most Valuable Player who blasted an astonishing 62 home runs in the 2022 season.
Yet while Ohtani and Judge are the headline acts, the supporting cast is equally gaudy.
The Dodgers have former MVPs in Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman; the Yankees have Giancarlo Stanton, the 2017 National League MVP and five-time All-Star, along with the likes of the gifted outfielder Juan Soto and Cy Young award-winning pitcher Gerrit Cole.
- 'World Series of superstars' -
"As a fan of baseball, how can you not be excited about this?" Dodgers infielder Max Muncy asked this week. "You're talking about two of the biggest franchises. The biggest stars in the sport. We got Shohei, Freddie and Mookie. On the other side, they've got Aaron Judge, Giancarlo, Juan Soto, Gerrit Cole."
It's the kind of dazzling star power capable of eclipsing the bright lights of Broadway or Hollywood Boulevard.
And it's the kind of box office appeal that has Major League Baseball's bean-counters rubbing their hands in delight after years of steadily declining audience numbers.
So far this postseason, average television viewing figures have leapt 18% from last year's average of 2.82 million per game to 3.33 million.
While this year's World Series is unlikely to match the record average of viewers for a Fall Classic -- 44.3 million tuned in for each game of the 1978 series -- it is likely to obliterate the record-low 9.08 million who watched last year's series between the Texas Rangers and Arizona Diamondbacks.
The presence of Dodgers ace Ohtani has also opened up a new international frontier, with Major League Baseball revealing that a record 12.9 million Japanese viewers tuned in for the Dodgers' recent National League Division Series decider against the San Diego Padres -- roughly 10% of Japan's entire population.
"That's an unbelievable number, a huge audience," MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said. "Ohtani has really, really driven interest in the game internationally."
Manfred believes this year's World Series evokes baseball's golden age, when the sport was truly America's pastime and had yet to be usurped by the NFL and NBA.
"The history of Yankee-Dodgers is great for our fanbase," Manfred said.
"You look back and think of Sandy Koufax playing against Mickey Mantle, of Joe DiMaggio playing against Jackie Robinson. And now you've got Aaron Judge against Shohei Ohtani."
Unsurprisingly, World Series tickets have become the hottest commodity in sport since the Dodgers confirmed their place in the championship finale with victory over the New York Mets on Sunday.
According to ticket aggregator TicketIQ, games in Los Angeles are averaging around $3,100 on secondary markets; games in New York come in at an eye-watering average of $4,875.
"Everybody wants to see these two teams play on the biggest stages" Dodgers shortstop Tommy Edman said this week. "It's a World Series full of superstars."
The top-seeded Dodgers will have home advantage through the series, and will look to starting pitcher Jack Flaherty to get them off the mark in Friday's opener.
The Yankees will start Cole on the mound as they aim to spoil the Dodgers' party before the series heads back to New York for game three next Monday.
"I'm looking forward to it," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. "This is Dodgers-Yankees. Lakers-Celtics, however you want to say it. It certainly has that feel to it.
"The stars will be out, the eyeballs will be watching, and hopefully we can deliver a great series."
馬-J.Mǎ--THT-士蔑報