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Los Angeles Clinches World Series Title

Hershiser Claims MVP Award With 2nd Complete Game of Series

If baseball is a predicter of presidential elections, then George Bush will beat Michael Dukakis on November 8.

You see, Bush is an original Yale Bulldog and 1988 was the "Year of the Bulldog" in baseball.

Bartlett Giamatti, another 'dog from Yale, was named this summer to succeed Peter Ueberroth as baseball commissioner, and now Orel "The Bulldog" Hershiser has led the Los Angeles Dodgers to the World Series Championship and, in the process, was named MVP of the series following his complete game, 5-2 win in Game 5 over the Oakland A's.

Hershiser also pitched a complete-game victory in Game 2 of the series.

Monster-Bashing Dodger Blue

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The Dodgers once again continued their power-surge which has plagued Oakland's pitching throughout the series.

Los Angeles touched Oakland starter Storm Davis for a pair of two-run homers from two players, Mickey Hatcher and Mike Davis, who had combined for only three home runs all year.

The first homer came in the first inning following a one-out single by firstbaseman Franklin Stubbs. Hatcher buried Davis' 1-1 pitch over the left-field fence and proceeded to round the bases like a starving man who has stumbled across a slab of meat.

The A's ended Hershiser's World Series scoreless string at 11 innings when they pushed a run across in the bottom of the third.

Thirdbaseman Carney Lansford led off the inning with a single up the middle and on a hit-and-run, second-baseman Tony Phillips grounded a ball towards the hole vacated by Dodger shortstop Alfredo Griffin, who was covering second base. Griffin was forced to backtrack to the ball and Phillips beat out the play for an infield hit.

Shortstop Walt Weiss sacrificed Lansford and Phillips over to third and second, respectively, before leftfielder Stan Javier scored the first Oakland run off "The Bulldog" with a sacrifice fly to left field.

Hershiser ended the rally by striking out Oakland rightfielder Jose Canseco, who had only one hit in his previous 16 at-bats in the series.

Blue Storm Rising

It didn't take long for Los Angeles to respond with runs of its own to stake Hershiser to an insurmountable lead.

Davis lived up to his reputation of giving up runs quickly in the fourth inning.

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