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World Series offers Blue Jays fans 鈥 and Canada 鈥 a chance to change the plot

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Elise Amendola/AP/File
Toronto's Joe Carter gets a victory ride on his teammates' shoulders after his World Series-clinching home run in the ninth inning of Game 6 against the Philadelphia Phillies, Oct. 23, 1993.

Supendra Chandrakumar was in his mother鈥檚 womb when the call of the Toronto Blue Jays鈥 victory in the 1992 World Series, the first championship by a non-American team, crackled through his family鈥檚 one-bedroom apartment.

And he was born in 1993, the year the Canadian team won it again with one of the most iconic moments in baseball history: Joe Carter鈥檚 walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 6. Mr. Chandrakumar鈥檚 parents, who had fled civil war in Sri Lanka for Toronto a few years earlier, dressed their son in a Blue Jays onesie for the occasion.

The team hasn鈥檛 won a championship since.

Why We Wrote This

This World Series holds extra meaning for Toronto and Canada, after a 32-year baseball championship drought for the city and nearly a year of diplomatic loggerheads with the U.S. for the country. But it鈥檚 also just a game.

And, so, as the Blue Jays return to their home city this weekend to try and best the Los Angeles Dodgers for the World Series title, Mr. Chandrakumar, like other fans born in 1993 or after, says he has waited his entire life for another chance.

Courtesy of Supendra Chandrakumar
Supendra Chandrakumar was born in Toronto in 1993, the last year the Blue Jays made it to the World Series. He鈥檚 been waiting for a return his entire life.

鈥淚 was part of that atmosphere then, and it must have rubbed off on me,鈥 he says.

This year's World Series offers a compelling underdog narrative. The Blue Jays finished last in their division in 2024, and few 鈥 except perhaps Mr. Chandrakumar 鈥 expected them to make it this far this season. They are facing the reigning world champion Dodgers, who, with their deep pockets, have essentially overtaken the New York Yankees to be what Major League Baseball fans refer to as the 鈥淓vil Empire.鈥

It鈥檚 not the only reason fans are rooting for the Blue Jays, even south of the border. This series comes as U.S. President Donald Trump continues to taunt Canada: slapping impromptu tariffs on the country (most recently for airing an ad during Game 1 of the World Series game played in Toronto, with Ronald Reagan lauding free trade), and claiming it should become America鈥檚 鈥51st state.鈥

The World Series, in many ways, shows the folly of this North American feud. The only member of the Blue Jays who was actually born in Canada is star Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who was born in Montreal and grew up in the Dominican Republic. His father played for the Expos, which later moved from Montreal to D.C. to become the Washington Nationals after the 2004 season.

Currently the only MLB team in Canada, and at a time when Canadians are rallying around their flag in the face of U.S. hostility, the Blue Jays are being touted as a team for the whole of Canada to cheer on.

Norah Spades, a lifelong Jays fan and a washboard player with her blues-ragtime duo The Vaudevillian, travels all over Canada for gigs. She says she sees Canadians cheering wildly for the Toronto team. And, for her, as far as baseball is concerned, the U.S.-Canada rivalry is in good fun.

Courtesy of Supendra Chandrakumar
Supendra Chandrakumar holds a Blue Jays flag with the help of an elephant in Thailand in 2022.

鈥淚 feel like even though we鈥檙e in this competition, it feels like the camaraderie is actually quite strong right now because the game is the priority,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t almost feels like we鈥檝e gone back to that neighborly fun.鈥

Ms. Spades was also born in 1993. She was wrapped in her mother鈥檚 arms when Joe Carter hit that iconic home run 鈥 but that changed when both Mr. Carter and her mom started cheering ecstatically.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 be surprised if I fell over on the couch cushion, because when my mom cheers, there鈥檚 arms and legs in the air at the same time,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad I made it, really.鈥

She spent her childhood tossing a ball with her mom, a softball player. She grew up playing T-ball and hardball, and watched every Blue Jays game she possibly could, often with her face painted Jays blue.

鈥淚鈥檝e been hearing forever, 鈥極h, it鈥檚 just the Jays, they鈥檙e never gonna make the Series again because it鈥檚 been 32 years.鈥 But I鈥檝e always been holding out. I always knew they鈥檇 be back, and they鈥檙e finally back and they鈥檙e killing it.鈥

But those reveling in the idea that Canada could win at 鈥淎merica鈥檚 game鈥 don鈥檛 know the real history, says William Humber, a Canadian baseball historian.

鈥淪o many people purport that baseball is an American invention,鈥 he says. 鈥淥bviously, we have a surfeit of American media and culture up here. ... So, there鈥檚 nothing that would better somehow symbolize cultural imperialism than the national game of the United States, foisted on a novice and naive public.鈥

Courtesy of Supendra Chandrakumar
A group of women in Japan pose with Supendra Chandrakumar in 2018. He has traveled to more than 30 countries carrying Toronto sports merchandise for his #LoveMyCityProject, calling himself the 鈥渦nofficial Toronto ambassador.鈥

Except it鈥檚 not true. Mr. Humber tried to set the record straight in his book 鈥淥ld Ontario at Bat: Baseball鈥檚 Unheralded Ancestry.鈥

He says baseball was being played as a folk game in Ontario in the 19th century and evolved into a modern game concurrently in Canada and the U.S. The first professional game between the two countries was played in Niagara Falls, Ontario, in 1860.

American cultural imperialism has indeed grown since the Blue Jays won their last World Series in 1993. A few months later, the North American Free Trade Agreement went into effect. While Canadians overwhelmingly support the free trade that Mr. Trump is contesting today, at that time, they worried about their much larger neighbor subsuming their identity. And in some ways, the U.S. has, as the two countries have become more intertwined since the 1990s.

When Mr. Chandrakumar was growing up in the 1990s, Toronto very much felt like a hockey town. That has changed. The Raptors winning the NBA title in 2019 is one reason. A World Series title this weekend could offer another.

When Mr. Chandrakumar鈥檚 parents arrived in Toronto, like so many newcomers, they wanted to immerse themselves in the culture of their new homeland. Baseball was all the buzz then, so they joined in the collective joy. But his father left him at home, still an infant, to go downtown and celebrate that World Series-clinching home run in 1993.

Mr. Chandrakumar has been determined to make it to a Blue Jays parade downtown ever since, riding with them 鈥渢hrough thick and thin,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 what I鈥檒l do for as long as I live.鈥

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