STILLWATER – Former Oklahoma State pitcher Justin Wrobleski joined a select group of Cowboys as a Major League Baseball World Series champion.
Wrobleski and the Los Angeles Dodgers captured the 2025 Major League Baseball World Series title, defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in seven games.
A southpaw, Wrobleski played a key role out of the Dodgers’ bullpen in the series against Toronto, making four appearances and working five shutout innings. He allowed just four hits and tallied six strikeouts.
Wrobleski pitched at OSU in 2021, where he made eight starts and went 3-2 with 50 strikeouts in 40 2/3 innings before suffering a season-ending injury.
The ninth player in Cowboy Baseball history to play in the World Series, Wrobleski is one of five to play for a World Series champion; he joins a list of OSU Baseball World Series winners that includes Allie P. Reynolds, Frank Kellert, Joel Horlen and Andrew Heaney. Another former Cowboy, John Farrell, won a World Series as the manager of the Boston Red Sox in 2013.
Reynolds won six World Series titles with the Yankees, the first in 1947 before five straight from 1949-53. In 15 World Series appearances, Reynolds went 7-2 with four saves and a 2.79 ERA while also tossing five complete games and a pair of shutouts.
Kellert was a member of the 1955 World Series champion Brooklyn Dodgers and recorded a single in three at-bats in the Fall Classic.
Horlen also celebrated a World Series title, that coming with the Oakland Athletics in 1972, as he made one relief appearance in the series.
Heaney joined Reynolds as the second Cowboy pitcher to win a World Series game as he earned the victory in Game 4 of the 2024 World Series against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Wrobleski made his MLB debut with Los Angeles last season and has made 32 career appearances for the Dodgers, including 24 this season.
OSU Cowboy Baseball alumni who played in the Major League Baseball World Series
Dib Williams, Philadelphia A’s – 1931
Allie P. Reynolds, New York Yankees – 1947, 1949-53
Frank Kellert, Brooklyn Dodgers – 1955
Jerry Adair, Boston Red Sox – 1967
Joel Horlen, Oakland A’s – 1972
Pete Incaviglia, Philadelphia Phillies – 1993
Robin Ventura, New York Mets – 2000
Andrew Heaney, Texas Rangers – 2023
Justin Wrobleski, Los Angeles Dodgers – 2025
*In 2004, Scott Williamson pitched for Boston during the regular season but was injured and not on the roster for the Red Sox during the postseason.