Are the Dodgers unbeatable? Here's how they're unlocking their best selves when it matters most
Briefly

Are the Dodgers unbeatable? Here's how they're unlocking their best selves when it matters most
"The Dodgers didn't just fall short of lofty expectations during the regular season. For a large chunk of it, they were basically mediocre. They began with a 23-10 record and ended, after a well-timed meeting by their manager, with 15 wins in a stretch of 20 games. But in between, from May 4 to Sept. 7, the Dodgers were 56-54, a mere two games above .500 in a 110-game sample."
"Now they're a juggernaut. The Dodgers have steamrolled through this postseason, winning seven of eight and going 4-0 away from home. They breezed past the Cincinnati Reds in the wild-card round, outscoring them 18-9, then faced a Philadelphia Phillies team widely considered the most talented in this playoff field and dispatched it in four games. They have since taken control of the National League Championship Series with back-to-back road wins over the No. 1-seeded Milwaukee Brewers."
"Barring the unforeseen -- teams that have won the first two road games in a best-of-seven format have prevailed in that series 25 of 28 times -- the Dodgers will become the first club since the 2009 Phillies to return to the World Series a year after winning it. Six more wins and the Dodgers will become baseball's first repeat champions in a quarter century. Nothing is guaranteed, but that they're even in this position -- with Shohei Ohtani slumping offensively, no less --"
The Dodgers produced a long stretch of mediocrity during the regular season, going 56-54 from May 4 to Sept. 7 amid rotation injuries, bullpen struggles and an inconsistent lineup. The team opened strongly and finished the regular season with a timely winning run after a manager-led meeting. The Dodgers have dominated the postseason, winning seven of eight games and sweeping road contests, including series victories over the Reds and Phillies and consecutive road wins against the top-seeded Brewers in the NLCS. The club could become the first repeat champion in 25 years despite Shohei Ohtani's offensive slump.
Read at ESPN.com
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