Nobody plans for a Game 7, but the Dodgers and Blue Jays have played themselves into the kind of finale that feels earned, a week of traded punches, late-inning chaos, superstars answering each other swing for swing, and a series that has slowly stripped away every illusion except who can handle the moment.
Toronto’s crowd hasn’t sat down in two days, LA’s stars have refused to blink, and just about every bullpen arm looks one pitch away from breaking.
With both teams leaning heavily on matchups, adrenaline, and whichever pitcher has anything left in the tank, tonight’s best value sits with the hitters whose timing, confidence, and recent form make them the most likely to deliver the kind of swing that gets remembered forever.
Note: Odds are set by DraftKings Sportsbook and are subject to change. No outcome can be guaranteed when betting on sports.
Today’s Best MLB Home Run Prop Bets for Dodgers vs. Blue Jays World Series Game 7
#3. Shohei Ohtani (+171)
Shohei Ohtani is the archetype of “one swing ends a season,” even when you’ve watched him all year, he still finds ways to do things you haven’t seen before, and his recent Game 3 fireworks of two homers, multiple extra-base hits and a historic nine times on base night underline how often he turns even borderline pitches into tape-measure shots.
In a Game 7 at Rogers Centre, where the roof, wind, and crowd noise can exaggerate every mistake, Ohtani’s swing profile matters even more because he doesn’t need many good pitches to make them count.
The Dodgers will also manage him carefully, given his two-way role, so his plate appearances could be fewer or arrive in different matchup windows, but every one of those swings carries enormous damage potential.
#2. George Springer (+497)
George Springer’s October DNA reads like playoff insurance, veteran poise, elite situational hitting, and a knack for turning pressure into big contact and his 2025 numbers back that up.
Lately, Springer has been seeing the ball with the kind of timing that forces pitchers to either challenge him or hand him counts; in Game 7, that discipline is gold because starter Shohei Ohtani and relievers will be trying to avoid the big blow and will sometimes miss their preferred plan.
At Rogers Centre he benefits from park factors that reward hard, barreled contact to the alleys, and at +497, he’s the kind of mid-odds play you use as a core single because his approach reliably produces the kind of contact that clears fences when a reliever falters.
#1. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (+342)
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has been the steamroller of this postseason, his 2025 playoff slash is the kind of surreal form that turns him into the Blue Jays’ single most dangerous hammer in a Game 7 setting.
Vlad’s game is brutally simple: he punishes elevated and middle-away mistakes with authority, his launch-angle/exit-velo combo is elite in October, and he’s delivered repeatedly in this very ballpark and series, including multiple recent homers that swung games.
Guerrero is the batter everyone wants on the ticket because his conversion rate on good contact is unusually high; he doesn’t need many pitches to turn a game.