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New York, who was 11 games under .500 at one point in the season, is the third straight sixth seed to make it out of the Wild Card series round in the National League. They did this by defeating the Milwaukee Brewers in three games, thanks in part to a Pete Alonso three-run home run in the top of the ninth inning that gave the Mets the lead and ...
The 2024 National League Championship Series was a best-of-seven playoff in Major League Baseball's 2024 postseason. It matched the overall #1 seed Los Angeles Dodgers against the sixth-seeded New York Mets. The Dodgers won the series, four games to two, to become National League (NL) champions and advance to the 2024 World Series.
His 54 homers lead the NL, 15 ahead of second-place Marcell Ozuna. His 130 RBI are 19 ahead of Willy Adames. That left batting average, where Ohtani is hitting .309, five points short of Padres ...
Sale is on track to lead the NL in ERA at 2.38, with Philadelphia's Zack Wheeler at 2.57. Skubal’s 2.39 mark led the AL. Sale tops the NL with 235 strikeouts and Skubal led the AL with 228. Sale became the first pitcher to win an NL pitching Triple Crown since the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw in 2011.
Luis Arraez held off Shohei Ohtani's bid to win the National League Triple Crown and was set to become the first player since the 1800s to earn batting titles with three teams. Kansas City Royals ...
The 2024 Major League Baseball postseason was the playoff tournament of Major League Baseball (MLB) for the 2024 season. In each of the two leagues – National and American – the three division winners and three wild card teams (the remaining teams with the best records) participated in the postseason, for a total of twelve teams.
Shohei Ohtani didn’t win the National League batting title, or claim the NL’s first triple crown since 1937, during the Dodgers season-finale 2-1 win over the Colorado Rockies on Sunday.
[1] [2] The term "Pitching Triple Crown" refers to the pitching achievement of leading a league in wins, strikeouts, and earned run average (ERA). The term "Triple Crown" is typically used when a player leads one league, such as the American League (AL) or the National League (NL), in the specified categories. A tie for a lead in any category ...