@newyorkdepression
Watched
3.2

13 : 4
MLB • ALCS10/16/2025
This is one of those nights where everything flipped fast. The crowd in Seattle was rocking early when Julio Rodríguez smashed a two-run homer in the first inning, and it felt like the Mariners were about to put Toronto on the ropes. For a brief moment, the building had that “this might be our year” energy. Then the third inning happened. Toronto exploded for five runs — and it felt like the air got sucked right out of T-Mobile Park. Andrés Giménez, of all people, tied the game with a two-run shot, and before anyone could catch their breath, the Jays just kept piling on. Daulton Varsho’s double, a wild pitch, and suddenly it was 5–2. George Kirby looked completely lost after that, and the Mariners never really recovered. (Secoñdo part in Commeñtos)
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3.2
Watched
From there, it was a Blue Jays show. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. couldn’t be stopped — four hits, a homer, two doubles, and that usual swagger that makes him look like he’s playing a different game. Shane Bieber, who gave up the early bomb to Julio, settled in and just carved Seattle up for six solid innings. By the time Alejandro Kirk crushed a three-run homer in the sixth, it was 10–3 and most of the drama was gone. honestly, it wasn’t even that close. They hit five homers, had 18 hits total, and looked like a completely different team than the one that dropped the first two games. The Mariners just didn’t have an answer. Kirby’s command disappeared, the bullpen couldn’t stop the bleeding, and the defense even gave away a run on a wild pitch. What’s crazy is how quickly momentum swung. A couple innings in, it looked like Seattle was going to take a 3–0 series stranglehold. Two hours later, it was Toronto who looked like the more confident, looser team. Now the Jays have life again, and if the road-team-wins trend keeps up, this series might get a whole lot more interesting.
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