"Nine days ago, Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers gave the greatest performance in baseball history. It may have been the greatest all-round performance in any sport. Hitting three home runs in game four of the National League championship match against the Milwaukee Brewers was noteworthy enough. This was just the 12th such hat-trick in over a century of post-season play. It set the Dodgers up for a best of seven World Series joust with the Toronto Blue Jays which began on Friday night."
"Nine days ago, Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers gave the greatest performance in baseball history. It may have been the greatest all-round performance in any sport. Hitting three home runs in game four of the National League championship match against the Milwaukee Brewers was noteworthy enough. This was just the 12th such hat-trick in over a century of post-season play. It set the Dodgers up for a best of seven World Series joust with the Toronto Blue Jays which began on Friday night."
Shohei Ohtani produced an extraordinary all-round performance for the Los Angeles Dodgers nine days earlier, framed as one of the greatest in baseball history and possibly any sport. He hit three home runs in game four of the National League championship against the Milwaukee Brewers, a feat that represented only the 12th such postseason hat-trick in over a century. That three-homer game secured a Dodgers berth in the best-of-seven World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays. The World Series began on Friday night, with Ohtani's performance serving as the decisive momentum into the championship series.
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