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  • First guest tonight, homered and homered and homered again and again to power his, to power the Los Angeles Dodgers to an eighth World Series title.

  • A million fans showed up to cheer him on Saturday.

  • Please give a big LA welcome to the most valuable player, Freddie Freeman.

  • Wow.

  • Wow.

  • Wow.

  • Wow.

  • Wow.

  • Wow.

  • Wow.

  • Wow.

  • What an unbelievable performance that was.

  • Is this something you imagined as a boy?

  • Yeah, I mean, you always dream about wanting to be in the World Series and ultimately winning one.

  • But to do it from a place where you're from in Southern California, I think that made it a little bit special.

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • And to do it in such, I mean, it's like that description that you'd have.

  • You'd be playing wiffle ball.

  • And you'd go like, OK, it's the 10th inning.

  • It's extra innings.

  • We're down by a run.

  • And I have to say, I was at game one.

  • And I watched what you did, which was incredible.

  • And I want to ask you a couple things, because I was kind of imagining what was going through your brain at that time.

  • So they intentionally walk Mookie Betts to get to you.

  • They put him on first.

  • The bases are now loaded.

  • And I turned to my buddy.

  • I said, Cleto, I said, oh, Freddie's mad.

  • They intentionally walked Mookie.

  • He's mad.

  • This is going to be good.

  • Were you annoyed?

  • I'm not annoyed.

  • Because, I mean, if you follow baseball, once you saw them get second or third on the show, he's foul out.

  • I kind of knew, just left on left, that's kind of the matchup.

  • But I was replaying everything I was, my process that I was going to go with in that moment.

  • So I wasn't really thinking about Mookie getting walked.

  • I was just going over my plan in that moment.

  • You had a plan going into the at-bat.

  • Yes.

  • We'll tell you another thing.

  • Our other pal, Jimmy, is sitting next to me.

  • He goes, he's going, please don't swing at the first pitch.

  • Please don't swing at the first pitch.

  • I'm glad he's wrong.

  • I'm glad you didn't watch him.

  • Oh.

  • OK.

  • So you want to know my thought process on that?

  • Yeah.

  • OK.

  • So I had watched, actually, at-bats against Shohei, Shohei against Nestor.

  • Because usually when Shohei walks into the box, your back's against the wall.

  • It's most likely going to be a home run when he comes into the box.

  • So I wanted to see how he pitched to Shohei.

  • And a lot of cutters and sliders away.

  • So I was like, you know what, I'm just going to move my sights closer to me and try and be on the fastball.

  • On the inside part of the plate, I won't swing at the cutters or sliders away.

  • And he threw it right where I was looking.

  • He sure did.

  • Is this?

  • But the thing is, you've got to hit them, too.

  • That's the hard part.

  • Like, you can be looking in certain spots, but sometimes you miss the mistakes you get.

  • Yeah, I would miss every single time.

  • I'm glad I didn't miss that moment.

  • Have you spoken to Nestor?

  • Did you ever?

  • No, we haven't.

  • You haven't had anything?

  • You say thanks?

  • I mean, you should send him a little something.

  • I don't know how to go about that one.

  • A fruit basket would be nice.

  • I think that is the appropriate gift.

  • And then you guys have the big.

  • What did you guys do to celebrate after the game?

  • It's going to be a little bit of a letdown.

  • OK, so obviously we went on the road.

  • We celebrate like crazy in the clubhouse, doing a lot of fun stuff.

  • But then we actually had to fly home that night.

  • So we left Yankee Stadium around 3 AM.

  • And we flew all the way home.

  • We landed at like 930 in the morning.

  • So I'm not going to lie.

  • There was pretty much just sleeping.

  • Pretty much sleeping.

  • And at what point do you, with you're on this high, you just won the World Series, you're the MVP, all your childhood dreams have come true.

  • You get home.

  • Do you go, oh, now I have to take out the garbage?

  • I went trick-or-treating the night we flew home.

  • OK, you did.

  • Yeah, so I had to get Iron Man set up, the Hulk, and Spider-Man.

  • Thankfully, my beautiful wife helped a lot.

  • So yeah, we went straight.

  • Well, yeah.

  • It was straight into trick-or-treating.

  • That was pretty much it.

  • I actually met your family after the game.

  • That's what I heard.

  • And they were very, very excited.

  • I couldn't wait to meet them.

  • I mean, I was excited for their excitement, really.

  • So, OK, so you went trick-or-treating.

  • Do you see any little Freddys?

  • Yeah, we saw a couple.

  • Yeah.

  • A lot of show haze.

  • Did they notice you?

  • Did the Freddys notice you?

  • Yeah, I took one picture with a Freddy.

  • OK, all right.

  • That must have been crazy.

  • It is cool.

  • You don't ever think about that as a kid and growing up that you're going to have people dressing up as you.

  • No, yeah, yeah.

  • It's kind of surreal, you know?

  • And thankfully, that I was able to do something to make people happy, that's all I'm told about.

  • Yeah, you did make people really, not in New York.

  • You made them very unhappy.

  • In New York, the people were displeased.

  • Yeah, I heard it.

  • Believe me, I heard it when I was there.

  • I'm sure you did.

  • Although, I have to say, I do want to mention this.

  • One of the Yankees fans, this is pretty great, had a sign.

  • I don't know if you saw this during the game.

  • Freddy, please stop.

  • Which is, I think, and I think I hit a homerun in this game, so I didn't stop.

  • Yeah, no, you didn't stop at all.

  • But it was nice of him to be polite.

  • We have a.

  • That might have been the only polite person that I heard.

  • We have a moment with Kike in the locker room after the game.

  • Oh, my god.

  • Woo!

  • Woo!

  • Why are you still wearing that coat?

  • I don't know.

  • OK, I don't know.

  • Now, why did he know you were still wearing your coat?

  • I think that we all know Kike now.

  • He's not a hugger up top.

  • He's a hugger from here and pull you in kind of guy.

  • I see.

  • I see.

  • He's a butt hugger, what you call.

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • He's going to feel everything that you have.

  • That's just, that's Kike.

  • Besides the story being great on its own, it's so great because of what you guys went through this season.

  • And the love from the Dodgers fans was really incredible.

  • Not just during the World Series, but throughout the whole season.

  • Yeah, it's special.

  • I mean, I think everybody that kind of knows, my family and I went through a lot with our son, Maximus, getting Guillain-Barre in late July.

  • And when I came back, that first game was one of the most special things I've ever been a part of, standing ovation by 53,000 people when I first came back.

  • And I tried to reciprocate that love that moment, but sometimes it takes a couple of months.

  • And three months later, I was thankfully able to put on a World Series to remember.

  • And hopefully, you know, there's different ways you can show love.

  • And I tried to show it then, and I'm glad I was able to show it with performance as well.

  • You not only do you have the bad ankle, which we could all see you limping, but you also had a rib injury of some kind.

  • Yeah, so I had a costal cartilage defect of my sixth rib, which is essentially a broken rib.

  • That actually happened the night before NLDS game one against the Padres.

  • So I was hitting in the cage, and I dropped to the ground.

  • I needed help out of the cage.

  • So I went to the MRI.

  • Luckily, the results came back.

  • I thought I had blown my oblique out and whatnot.

  • But it came back, and I was like, well, I think I can play through that, right?

  • With some help.

  • Yeah, well, yeah.

  • So I wasn't really able to walk in that morning, and we did a lot of treatment.

  • And that's, you know how it's kind of like game time decision every single day?

  • It was mostly because of my rib, not my ankle.

  • Interesting.

  • Yeah, the ankle obviously wasn't very good either.

  • Have you heard from Kirk Gibson?

  • Because I think a lot of people, he reached out.

  • He actually sent a message through one of the executives of the Dodgers saying congratulations.

  • Yeah.

  • Oh, man.

  • I actually got to meet him earlier this year.

  • So very nice guy.

  • He does the Tigers stuff, so I get to see him a lot.

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • I mean, yeah, you know he's got to share that spotlight with you.

  • No, I think we're OK sharing it.

  • That's World Series wins. 12 RBIs is the, you tied the record, held by a member of the Yankees, Bobby Richardson, in 1960.

  • And he lost.

  • And he lost.

  • And he did it, that was a seven game series.

  • You did it in a five game.

  • So really, you are the record holder for a 1990.

  • I appreciate that.

  • Mookie was here, and he told us that the dance that you guys do when you get a hit is something that you came up with, courtesy of a bottle of wine, actually, he said.

  • I'm sure it was, yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • Would you show us just a little of that?

  • Be right back.

  • Yeah.

  • Woo!

  • Woo!

  • It's a lot better with a bottle of wine, I promise.

  • You know you're going to have to do that at every wedding you go to for the whole rest of your life.

  • Maybe do it on stage in front of 53,000 people.

  • It's a lot easier when you hit a double or something like that.

  • When you're prompted to do it, it's a little bit awkward.

  • It's a little awkward.

  • Well, think of it as, this was really like a double, I think.

  • So, well, it's great to have you here.

  • Thank you so much for coming.

  • I know you're probably exhausted in every way.

  • Can you tell a little bit?

  • I'm sure you are.

  • You have to be.

  • I mean, you'd be inhuman not to be.

  • But congrats.

  • It was so much fun, and especially when we needed it.

  • I appreciate that.

  • Thank you.

  • Freddie Freeman, everybody.

  • Look at the trophy.

  • Oh, my god.

  • Oh, I forgot this.

  • Oh, yeah.

  • I got you.

  • I got you a present.

  • Oh, my god.

First guest tonight, homered and homered and homered again and again to power his, to power the Los Angeles Dodgers to an eighth World Series title.

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