When COVID-19 forced an early end to spring training in the second week of March, no one knew how Major League Baseball would get to this point.
Owners and players could not agree on how an abbreviated season would look like, raising the possibility that the 2020 season would be wiped out entirely.
But the sides settled on a 60-game season and an expanded playoff format. Players reported for summer camp and pushed through a season like no other.
There were twists and turns, as the Cardinals and Marlins dealt with coronavirus outbreaks. Cleveland pitchers Mike Clevinger and Zach Plesac broke protocols and paid the price, with Clevinger being traded away.
But MLB got through the season.
After all of it — the truncated season, battling outbreaks, rescheduling games, shortening doubleheaders, expanding rosters, setting up playoff bubbles in southern California and Texas then watching two teams reach the postseason despite losing records — the best two teams in baseball will square off in the World Series.
The Dodgers and Rays open the World Series on Tuesday at new Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas. Payroll-wise, it's a David-vs.-Goliath matchup, as the Dodgers were second in payroll this season, the Rays were 28th. That did not stop Tampa Bay from assembling a quality pitching staff with a high-end bullpen.
It should be a fascinating series, as the Rays make their second World Series appearance ever while the Dodgers return for the third time in four seasons — but still looking for their first title since 1988.