Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas is still soaking things in after hitting the game-tying home run in the ninth inning of Game 7 of the World Series in Toronto, and will be back in 2026 running his second stint with the team to four seasons.

“I want to be a manager, but I don’t know if I’m going to have the abilities and the skills to do it,” Rojas said. “I want to go out there next year and learn about everything that I can learn with the front office. I think the Dodgers have great people in the front office and the organization that can help me kind of understand what I’m going to be good at.”

Football — the NFL and college — dominated the top 100 most-watched television broadcasts in the United States, as Austin Karp of Sports Business Journal reported this week. But also notable were Games 6 and 7 of the World Series between the Dodgers and Blue Jays (the Dodgers won both games, in case you forgot) also in the top 100. Per Karp, “That’s the first time since 2019 that MLB has two spots in the top 100.”

Michael Schneider at Variety has more details on the broadcasts, with Game 7 of the World Series was the fifth-most-watched telecast of 2025, with 27,053,000 viewers. Game 6 was No. 24 on the list with 17,768,000 viewers.

Back in November, Fox Sports said Game 7 was the most-watched baseball game since Game 7 of the 2017 World Series between the Dodgers and Blue Jays, and that the average 15,709,000 viewers for the entire 2025 World Series was also the most-watched since 2017.

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred is again floating the idea of a potential free agent signing deadline to drum up offseason interest in the sport. The players union, as you might expect, is against the idea, as Evan Drellich reports at The Athletic.

The Feed is your place to make yourself heard at True Blue LA. This week, for instance, both Tony VSB and puddle shared their thoughts on Dodgers trade targets and went into detail explaining their choices. Got something to share? You can use The Feed.