Keys to ALCS Game 6 (and maybe 7): Superstar dilemmas, secret heroes and numbers to watch
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Keys to ALCS Game 6 (and maybe 7): Superstar dilemmas, secret heroes and numbers to watch
"Are we having fun yet? Friday was one of the most unforgettable days ever seen in the playoffs, with Eugenio Suarez's go-ahead grand slam rocking T-Mobile Park and putting the Seattle Mariners one win away from the World Series, and then Shohei Ohtani's historic three-homer, 10-strikeout performance that goes down as perhaps the single greatest individual performance in postseason history. Let's call it a top-five day of all time and add this to our list of future projects to research."
"Guerrero is having a monster postseason, hitting .457/.524/.971 with five home runs. After a hitless first two games of the ALCS, he did his best Roy Hobbs impersonation in Seattle, going 7-for-11 with five extra-base hits. He has just two strikeouts in 42 postseason plate appearances, and he has had 15 balls in play register over 100 mph, including six of his seven hits at T-Mobile."
Friday's playoff action featured Eugenio Suarez's go-ahead grand slam that left the Seattle Mariners one win away from the World Series and Shohei Ohtani's three-homer, 10-strikeout performance that ranks among the greatest individual postseason efforts. The Los Angeles Dodgers reached the World Series behind Ohtani's night. The Seattle Mariners and Toronto Blue Jays will meet in Game 6 of the ALCS for the remaining American League pennant. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is having a dominant postseason, batting .457/.524/.971 with five homers, two strikeouts in 42 plate appearances, and multiple 100+ mph balls in play.
Read at ESPN.com
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