The Yankees dropped the first three games of the series but now may be bringing some restored confidence into Game 5 following their overwhelming 11-4 victory in Game 4.
Game 5 features a rematch of the starters from the series opener, Jack Flaherty for Los Angeles and Gerrit Cole for the Yankees. Both are Southern California natives.
Game 5 updates
The Yankees feasted early on Flaherty, who gave up four runs - including back-to-back home runs - before Dave Roberts yanked him in the second inning and sent in Anthony Banda.
Aaron Judge, who had been fairly quiet this series, blasted one to right center with Juan Soto on first. The next batter was Jazz Chisholm Jr. who also took Flaherty deep for a solo shot to right center.
It wasn't looking good for the Dodgers heading into the fifth inning down 5-0.
But then they finally figured out Cole. A long series of singles and doubles, helped by a pair of Yankee fielding errors, helped them bat around the order and even it up at 5-5 heading into the sixth.
By the top of the eighth, the scored was tied at 6 apiece.
With bases loaded, Mookie Betts hit a deep pop fly to center and Tommy Edman tagged up to make it 7-6. That brought out Freddie Freeman with two men on, and the chance to once again be the hero of the game. But Freeman struck out swinging, sending the Yankees back to the plate.
Game 5 preview and storylines
Besides the possibility of a Dodger championship, other storylines to watch out for in Game 5:
Fans hoping Dodgers can win it all as they face Yankees in Game 5 of World Series
Yankees fans who interfered with Mookie Betts are banned from World Series Game 5
Will the Yankees walk Freddie Freeman or give the likely series MVP the chance to extend his record-breaking home run streak?
The Dodgers first baseman has now hit home runs in each of the four games of the series so far, and in six consecutive World Series games dating back to his time with the Atlanta Braves in the 2021 series, both records for MLB. The first and most celebrated of those was in Game 1, when he slugged the first walkoff grand slam in World Series history.
Another storyline: Will Shohei Ohtani break out of a series slump to help seal the title?
The $700 million superstar has averaged just .133 in the 2024 series with two hits, two runs, and no homers in 15 at bats. That's far below the performance in his historic first regular season with the Dodgers, when he became the first player to hit more than 50 home runs (54) and steal more than 50 bases (59) in one season as he averaged .310. Ohtani injured his shoulder on a steal attempt in Game 2 but was healthy enough to return in Game 3.
Game 5 at Yankee Stadium starts at 5:08 p.m.