
The Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate after a series-clinching walkoff victory over the Philadelphia Phillies
Los Angeles (United States) (AFP) - The Los Angeles Dodgers scored a thrilling 2-1 walkoff victory in extra innings to eliminate the Philadelphia Phillies from the Major League Baseball playoffs on Thursday and stay on course for back-to-back World Series crowns.
Cuban outfielder Andy Pages helped set up the bases-loaded winning run, which scored when Phillies reliever Orion Kerkering bungled what should have been an innings-ending play to seal a 3-1 series victory for the reigning MLB champions.
The win sends the Dodgers into a best-of-seven National League Championship Series against either the Milwaukee Brewers or Chicago Cubs with a World Series berth on the line.
The Cubs beat the top-seeded Brewers 6-0 in Chicago to force a decisive game five in their series on Saturday in Milwaukee.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts called his team’s victory “an instant classic,” although he was full of sympathy for Phillies pitcher Kerkering.
“It’s brutal,” Roberts said. “You definitely feel for a player.”
Phillies manager Rob Thomson, who consoled Kerkering moments after the blunder, added: “I feel for him because he’s putting it all on his shoulders. But we win as a team and we lose as a team.”

Philadelphia reliever Orion Kerkering misfields a ground ball, allowing the Los Angeles Dodgers to score the winning run in the MLB playoffs
Kerkering’s agonizing error was the final twist in a gripping battle between two of the most expensively-assembled lineups in baseball.
Yet despite the array of firepower on show, Thursday’s clash unfolded as a pitching duel of the highest caliber, with Dodgers starter Tyler Glasnow, who threw six scoreless innings, going toe-to-toe with Phillies ace Cristopher Sanchez.
“Crazy game,” Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts said. “It was like a street fight, but on a baseball field.”
Glasnow finished with eight strikeouts and gave up only two hits through six innings, while Sanchez was similarly dominant, striking out five through 6 1⁄3 innings for one run.
The Phillies were first to make a breakthrough after a mistake by Dodgers reliever Emmet Sheehan allowed the Phillies’ Max Kepler to move into scoring position in the seventh inning.
The Phillies’ Nick Castellanos doubled to bring Kepler home for a precious 1-0 lead.
The Dodgers hit back immediately in the bottom of the inning when the Phillies opted to walk Shohei Ohtani to load the bases after bringing in closer Jhoan Duran.
That risky gambit backfired when Betts drew a walk, allowing Justin Dean to jog over home plate to make it 1-1.
- ‘I feel awful’ -
As the tension ratcheted up, the Dodgers turned to Roki Sasaki to shut down the Phillies in the late innings, and the Japanese prodigy duly delivered, mowing down a succession of Phillies batters in the eighth, ninth, and 10th innings for no runs.
Dodgers reliever Alex Vesia then came through a nervy top of the 11th to leave the Dodgers with another chance of walking it off.
Tommy Edman and Max Muncy both singled to get on base, prompting Phillies skipper Thomson to swap reliever Jesus Luzardo for Kerkering with two outs and runners on first and third.
The Dodgers loaded the bases when Kerkering walked Enrique Hernandez to bring up Pages.
The out-of-form Pages then broke his bat connecting with a 96.2 mile-per-hour sinker from Kerkering.

Nico Hoerner and Ian Happ of the Chicago Cubs celebrate Happ's first-inning home run in an MLB playoff win over the Milwaukee Brewers
His grounder trickled to Kerkering, but the Phillies reliever fumbled as he tried to gather, and his wild throw missed catcher JT Realmuto as pinch runner Kim Hye-seong crossed for the winning run.
“They pitched great. We pitched great,” Thomson said. “It was a well-fought series. They came out on top, unfortunately, and that’s the way it is. I feel awful.”
In Chicago, Ian Happ’s three-run homer staked the Cubs to a 3-0 lead in the first inning and they held on to stay alive in their first postseason since 2020.
Kyle Tucker and Michael Busch also homered for the Cubs.
Matthew Boyd pitched four-plus scoreless innings and four Cubs relievers combined to complete the shut-out.