Monday, November 3, 2025

Was Game 7 of the 2025 World Series the greatest game ever? What does Championship Win Probability Added say?

In some ways, Championship Win Probability Added (cWPA) suggests it was the greatest. But let's look at the numbers.

I started thinking about this after a great tweet from Rany Jazayerli:

"Alejandro Kirk's GIDP is the most impactful defensive play in major league history.

It had a Championship WPA (cWPA) of -44.7%. No play in MLB history has had as large a cWPA in favor of the team on defense."

I checked this myself and started to notice Game 7 this year had several events that had a big impact. That got me wondering if cWPA could tell us if this was the greatest game ever.  

What is cWPA? See Single-Season Leaders & Records for Championship WPA (cWPA) from Baseball Reference:

"Given average teams, this is the change in probability, displayed in percentage points. A change of +/- 100% would indicate one world series win added or lost."
So that play (the Kirk DP) was worth almost half of World Series title. What is Win Probability Added (WPA)? 
"WPA quantifies the percent change in a team's chances of winning from one event to the next. It does so by measuring the importance of a given plate appearance in the context of the game. For instance: a homer in a one-run game is worth more than a homer in a blowout." 
 
Here are the top 12 cWPA events all-time (or at least from what is in the Stathead database from BB Ref). The players in red are all from Game 7, 2025.
 

Year

Series

Gm#

Event

cWPA

Batter

1960

WS

Gm 7

HR

63.62%

Hal Smith

2012

WS

Gm 8

1B

50.52%

Tris Speaker

2001

WS

Gm 7

2B

49.75%

Tony Womack

2025

WS

Gm 7

Out

46.24%

Alejandro Kirk

2025

WS

Gm 7

HR

41.03%

Will Smith

2016

WS

Gm 7

HR

39.04%

Rajai Davis

1992

NLCS

Gm 7

1B

36.84%

Francisco Cabrera

1960

WS

Gm 7

HR

36.74%

Bill Mazeroski

1968

WS

Gm 7

3B

35.92%

Jim Northrup

1951

 

 

HR

35.56%

Bobby Thomson

1924

WS

Gm 7

1B

35.20%

Bucky Harris

2025

WS

Gm 7

HR

34.91%

Miguel Rojas

 
Click here to see all the search results for cWPA events from Stathead. This link also has inning, outs, score and where men, if any, are on base. The 1951 game with Bobby Thomson was from the unscheduled best of three playoff to break the tie for the pennant between the Dodgers and Giants.
 
Right away, we can see that Game 7 this year has 3 of the top 12. The only other game with more than one is game 7 in 1960 with 2 (which did have 3 of the top 12 before this year). 
 
Other big events from Game 7 this year:  
 
Guerrero's 2B in the 11th is the 43rd highest cWPA event.
  
Bichette's HR in the 3rd is 78th. 
 
The force out at home in the top of the 10th is 112th. 
 
The force out at home in the bottom of the 10th is 120th (when Dodger catcher Will Smith was just able to get his toe back on the plate in time). 
 
The ground out to end the top of 10th is 122nd.  
 
Clement's fly out in the bottom of the 9th is 150th (when Pages made the leaping catch).
 
Game 7 this year has 9 of the top 150. No other game has more than 6. The ones with 6 are World Series Game 7 in 1991, World Series Game 7 in 1924 and World Series Game 8 in 1912.  
 
Game 7 of 1924 had 13 of the top 300 events. This year's game 7 is second with 11.
 
So this year leads if we stick to the top 150. But 1924 leads if we go to the top 300. Either game could claim to be the greatest ever based on how many big impact plays it had. 
 
As an alternative way to rank games, I added up the cWPA values of all the events any game had in the top 300. Here are the results:
  

Game

Total cWPA from top 300 events 

WS 7 2025

261.28%

WS 7 1924

253.56%

WS 7 1960

228.23%

WS 7 1997

168.42%

WS 8 1912

161.72%

 
So this year's game 7 has the most value among the top 300 events (if we add up all the events it had in the top 300 it comes out to 261.28%). What about the top 600? The next table has that. 
 

Game

Total cWPA from top 600 events 

WS 7 1924

317.53%

WS 7 1960

294.71%

WS 7 2025

271.32%

WS 8 1912

226.49%

WS 7 1997

199.67%

 
The 1924 game had 19 events in the top 600. The 2025 game had only 12.  What about the top 900? The next table has that.
 

Game

Total cWPA from top 900 events 

WS 7 1924

393.52%

WS 7 1960

311.30%

WS 7 2025

303.78%

WS 8 1912

244.53%

WS 7 1997

233.12%

 
The 1924 game had 28 events in the top 900. The 2025 game had only 16.  The order did not change in moving from the second table to the third. And 1924 dramatically increased its lead. What about the top 1200? The next table has that. 
 

Game

Total cWPA from top 1200 events 

WS 7 1924

415.29%

WS 7 2025

340.29%

WS 7 1960

332.75%

WS 7 1997

262.69%

WS 8 1912

251.90%

 
So 2025 jumps back into second. But 1924 has a very large lead. I later go to each of these games and get the total from all events no matter where they rank. But should low cWPA events matter here? We are looking for the greatest game ever and maybe events below a certain threshold should not count. 
 
There are only 488 cWPA events of 10% or higher. Number 489 at 9.99% is a 2-run HR in the fifth inning of game 6 in 1987 by Don Baylor to tie the score. That does not seem especially memorable. Maybe only events that people might notice should count. 
 
What if 10% was the cutoff? Here are the leaders then:
 

Game

Total cWPA from 10%+ events 

WS 7 1924

289.05%

WS 7 1960

284.72%

WS 7 2025

271.32%

WS 8 1912

207.18%

WS 7 1997

190.11%

 
Same games as before. The next table has the total cWPA from all events from each of the top 10 games in the 1200 events table  (in the table above where 1924 has 415.29% we see the top 5-I included a few more games here to be sure I was not missing what might have been the highest game).
 

Game

Total cWPA from all events

WS 7 1924

610.26%

WS 7 2025

603.38%

WS 8 1912

498.98%

WS 7 1997

475.26%

WS 7 1960

453.22%

WS 7 2016

432.64%

WS 7 1991

413.74%

WS 7 1925

403.40%

WS 7 1946

368.30%

WS 7 2001

364.64%

 
So the top two are 1924 and 2025 (and it is the same top 5 games as the other tables). Both are pretty far above the others. This could be too close to call. But 2025 Game 7 is probably no lower than the second greatest game ever.

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