After all the oddities of the MLB regular season and postseason, the 2020 World Series pits baseball's top two teams against each other. While we've grown accustomed to seeing the Dodgers playing for the championship, this is the first Fall Classic for the Rays since 2008 and only the second in franchise history.
Here's what you need to know for Game 5 on Sunday, including a look at the pitching matchup, predictions, odds, other key numbers and more.
Key links: Viewers guide | Schedule | Playoff Baseball Classic
What's on tap
World Series Game 5: Tampa Bay Rays (Tyler Glasnow) vs. Los Angeles Dodgers (Clayton Kershaw), 8:08 p.m. ET in Arlington, Texas
ARLINGTON, Texas -- Now that the series is tied 2-2, Clayton Kershaw won't get the chance to pitch the Los Angeles Dodgers to a World Series championship after his team's Game 4 collapse, but his importance in Game 5 on Sunday can't be overstated. He'll need to be the stopper the Dodgers always expect him to be -- because all of a sudden, the Rays have grabbed some momentum.
Kershaw has a career 4.68 ERA in the World Series, though he pitched well in Game 1. He'll take on Tyler Glasnow for a second time in this Series, and the wild and wacky finish to Game 4 will undoubtedly still be fresh on everyone's mind.
Meanwhile, Glasnow could use some redemption after a Game 1 collapse. He walked six batters in less than five innings pitched and hasn't completed a full six innings all season. After using their top relievers in Game 4, the Rays will take as many innings as they can get out of Glasnow in Game 5.
In a season that has been unexpectedly defined by a pandemic, followed by labor strife and a shortened, 60-game regular season, the World Series is down to a best-of-three. After the drama of Game 4, what kind of encore do the best two teams in baseball have in store? Stay tuned. -- Jesse Rogers
Running World Series odds
Dodgers 66.1%; Rays 33.9%
Game 5 predictions
David Schoenfield: You want a prediction after THAT game? LOL. The Dodgers have been tested many times in the playoffs over the past eight years, but I don't know if they've ever faced a tougher mental test than coming back from maybe the most shocking, heartbreaking playoff defeat since the infamous Pedro game for the Red Sox in the 2003 ALCS. What will happen? I have no idea, but I really, really want Clayton Kershaw to pitch a good game. Rays 5, Dodgers 4.
Dan Mullen: Did you see what happened last night? How is anyone supposed to pick against the Rays after that display of just-won't-go-away magic? Throw in the fact that, as Dave writes today, the second time around in a postseason series has been the real issue for Clayton Kershaw in October, and I'm going to pick Tampa Bay to take a 3-2 series lead and send Dodgers fans into even more despair heading into another "travel" day. Rays 5, Dodgers 4.
Rogers: Kerhsaw will exorcise his World Series demons once and for all after throwing a solid effort in Game 1. We've seen him out-pitch Glasnow once, and he'll do it again in Game 5, knowing the Dodgers need to get their swagger back after their Game 4 ninth-inning collapse. The Rays got their dramatic win in the series, so it's the Dodgers' turn to pull off a close one. Glasnow will be better than he was in Game 1, but Los Angeles wins. Dodgers 5, Rays 4.
Stat of the day
Game 4 was the third walk-off win by a team that trailed entering the bottom of the ninth in the past 15 World Series. The other two? Game 6 in 2011, the "David Freese" game for the Cardinals, and Game 1 in 2015, which ended on an Eric Hosmer sac fly in the bottom of the 14th after Alex Gordon hit a game-tying home run in the ninth. The Rays are the first team to win a nine-inning World Series game in which they trailed entering the bottom of the ninth since the Diamondbacks won Game 7 of the 2001 World Series.
Social media post of the day
A walk-off like you've literally never experienced before.#WorldSeries pic.twitter.com/1AfRQvJPnw
— MLB (@MLB) October 25, 2020
Best moment of the MLB playoffs to date
Rays walk off on Dodgers' costly errors
Brett Phillips' bloop single is bobbled by Chris Taylor in center, and then Will Smith drops the ball at home, allowing two Rays runs to score and win the game.
If you were watching Game 4, you just saw it, when Rays journeyman Brett Phillips' two-out hit off Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen -- Phillips' first hit since the regular season after Jansen walked Randy Arozarena -- in the ninth scored Kevin Kiermaier from second for a 7-7 tie and then, improbably, plated Arozarena as well when catcher Will Smith lost the ball at home plate for a Rays walk-off win. Just like that, the World Series was evened up, making it a best-of-three showdown between L.A. and Tampa Bay.
Arozarena tripped and fell before scoring ??? #WorldSeries pic.twitter.com/mt71CJLF2D
— ESPN (@espn) October 25, 2020
Rays walk off on Dodgers' costly errors
Brett Phillips' bloop single is bobbled by Chris Taylor in center, and then Will Smith drops the ball at home, allowing two Rays runs to score and win the game.
The running MLB playoffs MVP
Randy Arozarena has gone from an unknown outfielder to this October's breakout star. Going into the playoffs, you might have been asking, "Who is this guy?" But the Rays' trade for him has been a huge factor in their postseason run. Arozarena is now a living, breathing postseason record book in cleats, having set MLB records for home runs (nine) and total bases (58), and he's tied for the all-time record for postseason hits (26). What's more, he has been flashing some leather in the outfield and some sweet celebration dance moves on the field.