Guerrero clobbered a hanging sweeper from Shohei Ohtani 395 feet over the left-field fence at Dodger Stadium for his seventh post-season home run, the most in Blue Jays history.

Even more spectacular, the 26-year-old had zero October home runs to his name prior to 2025, hitting all seven in Toronto’s run to the World Series.

Behind 2-1 in the count, Ohtani threw a breaking ball over the plate and Guerrero didn’t miss, lining it at 102.5 m.p.h. into the seats.

The American League Championship Series MVP leads the post-season with 25 hits, a 1.310 OPS, and his 14 RBIs are tied for first with Ohtani. The Dodgers’ two-way superstar leads all players with eight home runs in October.

Guerrero passed Jose Bautista and Joe Carter, who each had six, for sole possession of top spot on the Blue Jays’ post-season home run leaderboard.

The Montreal-born slugger also crushed the first grand slam in Blue Jays post-season history during a 13-7 win in Game 2 of the ALDS against the New York Yankees.