
Dodger Stadium has hosted playoff games, parades, and pressure that can crush a season before it even begins. On Saturday, it hosted something for the very first time: a fan festival for back-to-back World Series Champions.
An estimated 30,000 fans poured into Chavez Ravine for the 2026 Dodgers FanFest, and an opportunity to see their beloved Boys in Blue since the confetti settled on the celebration in November.
The early hours felt like a block party dressed in blue.
Fans drifted through centerfield plaza lined with interactive games, sponsor activations, live music, and the familiar chaos of Dodger Dogs and cold beers disappearing faster than winter should allow. VIP experiences pulled fans into places usually reserved for October tension, while exclusive merchandise flew off the racks like souvenirs from a dynasty still in progress.
But what stood out wasn’t the scale, it was the ease in which the players interacted with the fans.
Blake Snell ran along the barriers passing out first bumps. Anthony Banda blushed as women screamed out his name, telling him they “loved him.” In fact, for all the players in attendance, the screams never stopped. But neither did the smiles on the defending champions faces.
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“This is always a really fun event,” said Dodgers’ third baseman Max Muncy, after waving to the fans from the Dodgers’ bullpen. “When you come to this event, and you see how excited the fans are, it just really gets you in the right mindset.”
Autograph lines wrapped around pillars. Selfies with players were a currency shared amongst everyone. And when Shohei Ohtani finally appeared, the reaction felt less like baseball and more like a pop culture phenomenon.
“It was like the Beatles in the 60s when Shohei pulled up,” said Brian, a Dodgers fan from Westlake who drove over an hour to be at FanFest.
Ohtani might have gotten the loudest ovation, but Miguel Rojas drew a different kind of roar— louder, deeper, more personal. Re-signed for one final season after his Game 7 heroics, Rojas is now walking into what fans already view as a farewell tour.
“I’m so glad Miguel Rojas is coming back for another year,” said Joey Molloy, a lifelong Dodgers fan attending his sixth FanFest. “He got the biggest ovation by far, outside of Shohei.”
And yet, even with rings flashing and banners looming, the loudest anticipation centered on something still to come: the first night Edwin Díaz jogs in from the bullpen to “Timmy Trumpets.” Chavez Ravine already knows how it will sound.
“That’s going to hit so hard in this stadium,” said Molloy.
The chatter across the stadium was equal parts celebration and ambition. Back-to-back World Series titles were celebrated, then immediately filed away. The real conversation was about a three-peat. About becoming the first team since the 1998–2000 Yankees to pull it off. About embracing the villain label that comes with spending, winning, and refusing to apologize for either. “The Dodgers aren’t ruining baseball,” said Stephanie, decked out in a Dodgers Mexican heritage night jersey. “The owners who don’t spend are.”
The day closed with a 90-minute stage show. Dave Roberts didn’t duck the word “three-peat.” Neither did the players. “We’re comfortable with winning,” said Victor Ramirez, an electrician from Eagle Rock. “We’re a little spoiled.”
He’s right. But this is what winning looks like.


