
The Ultimate Showdown: Can the Yankees or Dodgers Rewrite History in These 7 Game-Changing World Series Battles?
So here we go—the stage is set, the lights are brightest in Los Angeles, and the biggest dance in baseball is ready to unfold. It’s Dodgers vs. Yankees, a classic clash that’s more than just a game; it’s where titans collide, huge contracts meet legendary legacies, and two MVPs stand tall on the precipice of postseason glory. But let me ask you—can raw power alone crown a champion, or will a handful of razor-thin edges carve the path to victory? As these giants gear up for Game 1, I’ve pinpointed seven electrifying matchups that could swing the balance of this World Series. Brace yourself—this isn’t just baseball; it’s a chess match played at 100 mph, with every pitch, swing, and call hanging in the balance. Ready to dive deep into the fireworks ahead? LEARN MORE.
Oh right, the other MVP-caliber superstars.
They employ the likely National League MVP and American League MVP, who also happen to be the recipients of the two largest free-agent deals in MLB. And they will now renew the most common World Series matchup in the sportâs history.
These likely Game 2 starters both carry enough talent to dominate a game and enough latent inconsistency to obliterate their managersâ plans between commercial breaks.
The Yankeesâ Chisholm: .481 postseason OPS, 95 full-season RV+
The post World Series Predictions: The Seven Yankees-Dodgers Matchups That Will Decide the Fall Classic appeared first on Opta Analyst.
After upstarts soared in the early years of the 12-team MLB playoff format, the Goliaths have asserted themselves as the best teams in 2024.
Donât be surprised to see one of these No. 2 hitters at the crux of some discussion-provoking managerial decisions that treat them like Public Enemy No. 1.
1. Shohei Ohtani vs. Aaron Judge
Yet that was interrupted by injury, and his return in mid-September means he hasnât been pushed for length the way an arm of his abilities might be in other circumstances. If he were able to muster a deep outing, it could change the course of the series for the pitching-strapped Dodgers.
Norms have shifted pretty dramatically in this arena. The Tampa Bay Rays shocked the world by pulling Blake Snell in 2020 (which went badly). And the Arizona Diamondbacks raised eyebrows by not pulling Zac Gallen in the clinching game of last yearâs World Series (which also went badly).
There are reinforcements in both bullpens, but the most trusted members of the pitching staffs are going to have their durability put to the test. Whose stuff stays crisp as the pressure rises? Among a lot of matchups foretold and surrounded by hype, this unexpected duo might have just as much to say about the outcome.
Out of his five homers this month, Stanton sent three sliders and two four-seam fastballs into the seats. But Kopech would present a new challenge: None of those homers have come on pitches over 94 mph.
Be sure to check out our MLB, NBA, NFL and college football coverage. And follow us on X and Instagram for more!

With this showdown beginning with Game 1 on Friday at Dodger Stadium (on FOX), weâve identified seven clashes that might just decide this world-class Yankees vs. Dodgers World Series.
2. Protection (aka Mookie Betts) vs. Pressure (aka Juan Soto)
His 98.6 mph four-seamer is the hardest pitch youâll be seeing in this World Series.
What pitchers and their managers choose to do to mitigate or avoid the thunderous risks of Ohtani and Judge? Well, that might shape the series.
The Dodgers are avoiding this conundrum by having next to no one who is simultaneously healthy enough and trustworthy enough to press the issue, but Aaron Boone and the Yankees are candidates for this yearâs pitching discourse.
You want wild cards? Weâve got wild cards. Itâs not the teams playing in the World Series, but their No. 2 starters.
Kopech, the former top prospect rescued from the sinking Chicago White Sox by a deadline deal that also brought NLCS MVP Tommy Edman to LA, has been untouchable since joining Dave Robertsâ club. Sizzling fastballs and tight sliders earned him a 1.13 ERA across 24 regular-season innings in blue, and he has struck out seven in 5.1 innings in October so far, including as the starter in one of the bullpen games they will likely employ once again.
Hernandez, a frequent postseason hero who mashes left-handed pitching, is probably not a star activated only by the leaves turning in October. Chisholm, a trade deadline acquisition whose bat could play a crucial role in lengthening the Yankeesâ lineup, is not a .147 hitter.
3. Gerrit Cole vs. the Times Through the Order Penalty
This is well-known at this point, but Betts (eighth in MLB with a 109 contact+) is the toughest player in the series to strike out, while Soto (first in MLB with a 133 discipline+) is the toughest to keep off the bases. If youâre a pitcher trying to negotiate these lineups, these are the guys who are driving the hardest bargains.
Which brings us to Stanton, whose sneaky good Hall of Fame case is getting some shine thanks to his mammoth postseason performances. Now sporting a 1.019 career postseason OPS, Stanton is locked in after earning ALCS MVP honors against the Cleveland Guardians.
Betts and Soto, who would be (and have been) the dominant offensive threats on other championship teams, draw contrasts to their taller talented teammates in some important ways.
Where Ohtani and Judge have each been striking out about 32% of the time in the postseason, Betts and Soto are running 15% and 17% rates, respectively.
The Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees werenât juggernauts by recent standards, but they had the top records in their respective league standings and ranked fourth and first, respectively, in overall raw value.
Two lessons here: Thereâs still not an exact science between when to turn the page on a starter pitching well in a high-intensity moment, and no one remembers any pitching decision unless the result is bad. (The Texas Rangersâ Nathan Eovaldi struggled throughout that same game, but wound up facing the order three times and allowing no runs.)

4. Yoshinobu Yamamoto vs. Carlos Rodon
You want strength on strength? Thereâs no better proxy for arm wrestling between the worldâs strongest men than Kopech vs. Stanton, which is a matchup likely to be meaningful at some point in this series.
So much for the little guys ruling MLBâs postseason.
In a meta sense, this is strength on strength, titan vs. titan. Yet even matchups this galactic are ultimately decided not by an unstoppable force or an immovable object, but by an edge or two. A matchup here, a decision there.
The Dodgersâ Hernandez: .863 postseason OPS, 95 full-season raw value+
Dedicating himself to hitting while rehabbing an elbow injury, Ohtaniâs first season with the Dodgers has turned into a landmark in virtually every way. He hit 54 homers. He stole 59 bases. He reached the postseason for the first time having shed the Los Angeles Angels uniform, and now heâll make his mark on the Fall Classic.
5. Enrique Hernandez vs. Jazz Chisholm Jr.
Rodon, whose 2023 Yankees debut was an utter disaster, rebounded into something tantalizing but a touch stressful. This version of Rodon has the nastiest stuff of any starter in this series (eight in MLB with a 121 whiff+), but runs into rough patches that leave him prone to home runs.
They arenât the closers who were promised, but they are the closers who have been delivering. Treinen (68 raw value- this season) and Weaver (67 RV-) are going to be asked for a lot.
Weaver, a starter until this season, has already gone beyond an inning in five different outings this postseason. Treinen, 36 years old and coming off two seasons lost almost entirely to injury, has done it four times.
Pressing the issue? The fact that Ohtani, who will be the tip of that third-time spear from his leadoff perch, has been the best hitter in baseball seeing pitchers for a third time over the past three seasons, notching a 1.187 OPS across 351 plate appearances.
Ohtani or Judge could take over the series with brute force, of course, but perhaps the only thing that is guaranteed in the last four to seven baseball games of 2024 is the gravitational pull their bats will exert on decision-making. No one in the game is more powerful when they connect â with Judgeâs 292 BIP+ ranking first among qualified hitters and Ohtaniâs 249 BIP+ ranking second.
6. Michael Kopech vs. Giancarlo Stanton
Now consider that Betts steps up after Ohtani, while Soto precedes Judge. Thereâs not a wrong answer on how to arrange players this good, but there are serious reverberations to the arrangements. The NL pennant winners lean toward a parade of threats, while the Yankees dare you to make it through a critical mass of power bats without giving up the big swing.
Might as well start with the headliners right?
Superstars are neither a ticket to glory when successful nor a guaranteed exit when struggling. Still, all eyes will be on the gameâs most ridiculous performers, each appearing in their first World Series. Thus far in the postseason, Ohtani wasnât much of a factor until going 6 for 15 with two homers over the last four games against the New York Mets, while Judge has struggled to a .161/.317/.387 line.
Judgeâs numbers, meanwhile, can only be described as Barry Bonds-adjacent. The Yankeesâ gargantuan avatar tallied the first full-season slugging percentage over .700 since Bonds in 2004.

The only pitcher who might be used like an ace in this series is Cole, the 2023 AL Cy Young winner, and even the phrase âused like an aceâ doesnât mean what it meant a few years ago.
7. Blake Treinen vs. Luke Weaver
Yamamoto, historically good in Japan before joining the Dodgers on a massive deal this offseason, fired up a 3.00 ERA during the regular season.
History and extensive research have repeatedly proven that pitchers get worse the more times they face a lineup in a game. So even though thereâs also potentially a reliever-related penalty to worry about, managers tend to pull starters before they stare down the lineup for a third time.
These two spark plugs, who bring personality and fire to their clubhouses, are essentially matching up against gravity.
The Projected Winner: Dodgers (57.0% Probability)
With this epic showdown beginning with Game 1 on Friday in Los Angeles, weâve identified the clashes that might just decide this world-class matchup in our World Series preview.
Something will give in this and other tugs of war against regression.
Post Comment