Dodgers show their resolve, star power in series-opening win vs. Yankees

Dodgers show their resolve, star power in series-opening win vs. Yankees

LOS ANGELES – The weekend isn’t over yet, but the Dodgers can still claim their superiority over the Yankees.

And didn’t this series-opening World Series rematch echo back - in some way - to that clinching Game 5?

Instead of handing back a five-run deficit in the fifth, the Yankees lost a four-run lead in the sixth – with the sensational Max Fried failing to retire any of the four Dodgers he faced that inning.

“They won the World Series last year, they know how to win games,’’ said Fried, after the Dodgers’ 8-5 victory on Friday night. “For the most part, I just didn’t do my job.’’

There was a fascinating in-game battle between the reigning league MVPs as Shohei Ohtani clubbed two homers off Fried while Aaron Judge belted one of four Yankees homers against Tony Gonsolin.

After Judge, Austin Wells, Trent Grisham and Paul Goldschmidt went deep by the third inning, maybe he was going, going Gon-solin – but he lasted six innings for the win.

Yankees experience another "playoff atmosphere''

May 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; New York Yankees rightfielder Aaron Judge (99) rounds the bases after a home run during the first inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jason Parkhurst-Imagn Images

Meanwhile, Fried entered with a 1.29 ERA and took his first loss of the year, on a night when Mookie Betts (bruised toe) was not in the Dodgers' lineup.

Another former MVP, Freddie Freeman, chased Fried with an RBI double and the Dodgers’ rickety bullpen, weakened by injuries, survived to get the last nine outs.

Now, it’s up to Saturday’s starter, rookie Will Warren, and either Ryan Yarbrough or Carlos Rodon on Sunday (that decision remained undecided Friday) to help carve out a series win.

That would give the AL East-leading Yankees (35-21) some measure over the NL West-leading Dodgers (35-22), but it wouldn’t take down L.A.’s monstrous 2024 world championship flag in center field.

“People are asking (whether this series) is personal, this and that. Every game we play is personal,’’ said Judge. “Every game matters.’’

Judge added that the Yankees are constantly operating in playoff-atmosphere games, but not like this – with a postseason-sized media contingent milling about, and the constant October rematch buzz.

Bad timing for Max Fried's roughest outing

May 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) hits a home run during the first inning against the New York Yankees at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jason Parkhurst-Imagn Images

Yes, for Yankees Universe, this was a rotten time to see Fried have his toughest outing in 12 starts.

“Just a rough inning where some good hitters got to him,’’ Boone said of the sixth-inning trouble that began with Ohtani’s second homer of the night, extending his MLB lead to 22.

The wondrous Ohtani is now 5-for-8 with three homers in his regular season career against Fried, who hadn’t yielded more than two earned runs in a game this year until Friday’s six.

Ohtani launched Fried’s first delivery of the game over the center field wall, answering for Judge’s first-inning solo shot – his 19th of the year.

“Right out of the gate, a couple haymakers there,’’ said Boone. “Some of the stars really shining tonight.’’

This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: Dodgers show their resolve, star power in series-opening win vs. Yankees