The Kelce brothers made headlines this week with their opinions on the World Series. On the "New Heights" podcast, Jason and Travis shared polar-opposite takes on the 2025 World Series, in which the Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the Toronto Blue Jays in seven games.While Travis referred to it as "an awesome seven games of baseball," Jason made it clear he wasn’t impress"So you’re telling me I’m supposed to get excited about a Canadian baseball team and a team that just spends more money than everybody else? Who the f**k cares about either?..." Jason said. "That’s why baseball su*ks. It’s the dumbest thing in the world... The team that spends the most money wins. It was all meaningless shit before it happened."Within hours, fans flooded social media, calling the comments disrespectful to the sport."They got CTE, their opinions don’t really matter. They don’t even know how to read," one fan wrote.Jack Torrance @LivesTorranceLINK@thehazelmae @newheightshow @JasonKelce @tkelce They got CTE their opinions don't really matter. They don't even know how to read."Where was this attitude when you had Freddie Freeman on the pod?' another fan said."Wow. What a disappointing comment," one fan tweeted."It’s almost like when the Eagles or Chiefs win the Super Bowl, lol," another fan commented."The first time Jason Kelce has ever disappointed me," one fan wrote."Dude drinks too much," another fan tweeted.Dodgers outlast Blue Jays in seven-game World Series classicThe Los Angeles Dodgers are World Series champions once again, beating the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in 11 innings of an unforgettable Game 7 at Rogers Centre.Will Smith delivered the biggest swing of the night with a solo home run in the top of the 11th and Yoshinobu Yamamoto finished the job, retiring the final three hitters to seal Los Angeles’ second straight championship.Game 7 had all the chaos and tension you’d expect from a series that went the distance. Bo Bichette gave Toronto early life with a three-run homer in the third inning, chasing Shohei Ohtani from the game and sending the home crowd into a frenzy.But the Dodgers’ depth and patience wore the Jays down. Miguel Rojas tied things up with a clutch homer in the ninth to force extras, and from there, L.A.’s bullpen and Will Smith held the line.Yamamoto, who threw five scoreless innings in relief and finished with a 1.57 ERA for the postseason, was named World Series MVP.