LOS ANGELES — Giancarlo Stanton has been coming to Dodger Stadium since he was a kid. Seems like every time he returns, he sends a special souvenir into the outfield seats.
The opener of this Yankees-Dodgers World Series was no exception.
Stanton hit a go-ahead, two-run homer in the sixth inning to put New York ahead, his latest big drive for a Yankees team chasing the franchise's 28th title. It wasn't enough in a 6-3, 10-inning thriller of a loss to Los Angeles on Friday night that Freddie Freeman finished with a two-out, walk-off grand slam.
''You never want that ending,'' Stanton said long after the game in a nearly empty Yankees clubhouse. ''You've got to win four anyways. No one said it's going to be easy."
Maligned by Yankees fans for much of his time in the Bronx, Stanton homered for his fourth straight postseason game, a 116.6 mph shot off a Jack Flaherty knuckle-curve at the knees that was the hardest-hit ball in the World Series since MLB started tracking in 2015.
His six homers and 13 RBIs both top the Yankees this postseason, and his 17 career postseason homers in 135 at-bats are among the top ratios in baseball history. He is the only player to twice homer in four straight postseason games.
''He's a killer,'' Yankees manager Aaron Boone said earlier this month. ''I just admire how well he's able to focus in these big moments and just go to a different place mentally.''
Throughout October, Stanton's determination has been evident.