The Dodgers have made Joe Davis’ impossible job a manageable one.

Davis had the unenviable task of stepping into the booth Vin Scully occupied for 67 years as the legendary voice of the Dodgers — first in Brooklyn, then in Los Angeles. Since Davis took over behind the mic in 2017, the Dodgers continued doing exactly what they were at the end of Scully’s reign: winning.

They won 104 games in Davis’ first season, 92 the next and 84 thus far this season as they are rolling to their seventh straight NL West title.

“It has exceeded my expectations. A big part of it has been how good the team is,” said Davis, who calls games for the team-owned SportsNet LA broadcasts.

“If the team was losing 100 games a year, they’d probably be running me out of town at this point. But the team has been so good, [analyst] Orel Hershiser has been an incredible partner and as responsible as anything and anybody for it going well.”

The one thing this impressive Dodgers run has yet to include is a World Series title after dropping the past two Fall Classics to the Astros and Red Sox. The potential for a Yankees-Dodgers matchup looms as the teams meet this weekend in Los Angeles with both seemingly destined for home-field advantage in their respective leagues.

“Any time you go through a drought for an organization that is this proud with a fan base that has always had high expectations, there is always going to be some pressure,” Davis, 31, said.

“Also, when you factor in the fact that they’ve gotten to the World Series, gotten that close each of the past two years and whetted the fans’ appetite again, it turns it up another notch. You hate to say World Series or bust, but at this point, they’ve done everything but win a World Series the past couple of years and the fans are still wanting more for good reason. They look at this team at this point as the best of the three.”

Davis said this three-game series with the Yankees represents the most ticket requests he has received in his three years calling Dodgers games. It comes as both teams aim to stay motivated through the dog days of August with the postseason inching closer.

“I think there is some added buzz around it,” Davis said. “A lot of people look at it as a potential October preview, and that’s not even getting into the wonderful history the two franchises have against each other.”

The final month of the season will only get busier for Davis, though, as he begins calling college football games for Fox Sports again on top of the national baseball games he already does for the network. He will call Division Series games for Fox when his regular-season role with the Dodgers ends.

Still, taking over for Scully has led to the most attention for Davis, who was a quarterback at Beloit College in Wisconsin and quickly rose from Rays minor league broadcaster to ESPN to the positions he holds now.

“It is part of what made the job intriguing, special,” Davis said. “Had I gone into it trying to replace Vin or be Vin, I’d have had a really hard time. Anybody would have had a really hard time. So, I went into it and the primary advice he gave me was just be yourself. It sounds simple, but it is not an easy thing when you’re stepping into a role like that when it’s the greatest ever to do it.

“It’s the only voice the city ever had. The tendency would be to mimic what made him so great, but his advice was not to get caught up in that and be myself, and I’ve done that the best I possibly can. And the team is winning, I am delivering good news so I think that has helped it go well. The big thing was not replacing Vin, knowing that it was impossible.”