Max Scherzer, Toronto Blue Jays and World Series
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The 2025 World Series is officially in the books, and the Los Angeles Dodgers are once again champions after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in seven thrilling
Toronto Blue Jays fans on Saturday gave Max Scherzer the applause worthy of his legend in Game 7 of the World Series. Scherzer showed off his championship
Scherzer limped to the finish in the regular season, pitching to a 9.00 ERA with eight home runs allowed in 25 innings in his final six starts. He pitched well in the postseason though, authoring a 3.77 ERA in three starts. Scherzer doesn't pitch deep into games these days, but he can still be effective in the innings he does pitch.
Scherzer had a respectable outing against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 7. He lasted longer than Shohei Ohtani did on the other side, but he was still pulled before he could fin
Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer got so hyped during teammate Trey Yesavage's masterpiece in Game 5 of the World Series.
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A love letter to my favorite player of all time Max Scherzer
His first season in DC might be the most memorable one. Scherzer had the best two start run in MLB history against the Brewers and the Pirates. Against Milwaukee, Scherzer flirted with a no-hitter, but came up short, allowing a bloop hit to Carlos Gomez. However, he did fire a 16 strikeout complete game in an absurdly dominant performance.
Retirement might not be in the cards for Max Scherzer after all.Scherzer, the Toronto Blue Jays' starting pitcher in Saturday's Game 7 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers, hinted afterward he's keeping the door open for a return next season.
Max Scherzer delivered a vintage performance in a winner-takes-all Game 7 against the Dodgers, striking out three and allowing just one earned run. Hi