Donald Trump's presidential campaign will run a trio of TV commercials during the Fox network's Wednesday night broadcast of the final World Series games.

The 11th-hour attention grab aimed at baseball fans will come just hours after Red Sox and Yankees great Johnny Damon spoke at a Trump rally in Orlando, Florida.

The Cleveland Indians are hosting the Chicago Cubs in Game 7 of the Fall Classic.

The Trump campaign calls the commercials its 'closing argument ads' and titles them 'Change,' 'Choice' and 'Corruption.'

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HOME RUN Retired Major Leaguer Johnny Damon gave Donald Trump a ringing endorsement Wednesday during a rally in Orlando, FL

The Trump campaign is running three ads during the final game of the World Series, including one that blasts Hillary Clinton as a corrupt politician

Damon first endorsed Trump back in March following a 2015 run as a contestant on Trump's 'Celebrity Apprentice' program.

'People wonder why I like Donald Trump,' Damon told a few thousand people in central Florida on Wednesday afternoon.

'I actually love the guy. Why? Because he likes winners. He likes to win.'

'He likes everything to be great, not just for him but for everybody, and he wants America to be great again,' Damon said.

The Republican presidential nominee called the former Major League outfielder 'a champ.'

'He was a winner and he loves this area.'

The Orlando, Florida rally where Damon spoke attracted thousands in the middle of a midweek work day

Game 7 of the 2016 World Series pits the Chicago Cubs against the Cleveland Indians

The Trump ads paint Clinton as a greedy bureaucrat beholden to donors who have sustained her 30-year political career

Damon sat behind the real estate tycoon-turned-candidate as he spoke, and joined in a crowd chant of 'Build that wall!'

When he first threw in with Trump in the spring, the Florida native told the New York Daily News that he had been 'a Trump fan ever since I met him seven or eight years ago. Everything he does, he does first-class – his hotels, his businesses, his golf courses.'

'Everyone is calling him a racist,' he lamented then. 'He just wants people to come into this country legally and fill out the proper paperwork. That's how I’m viewing it.'

'If he needs me anywhere, I'll be there. He's a good friend.'

One of the Trump ads airing during Game 7 on Wednesday night is a hard-hitting indictment of Clinton 'corruption.'

Trump is trying to push the former first lady, U.S. senator and secretary of state off her perch and surprise her on Nov. 8 with a come-from-behind election win

'How did Hillary end up filthy rich?' a female narrator asks. 'Pay-to-play politics. Staggering amounts of cash poured into the Clinton Foundation from criminals, dictators, countries that hate America.'

'Hillary cut deals for donors. Now the FBI has launched a new investigation. After decades of lies and scandals, her corruption is closing in,' the ad concludes.

The other two employ softer messages about forcing a change in the federal government's culture and choosing the country's future.

'Hillary Clinton won't change Washington. She's been there 30 years,' one ad says.

'A vote for Hillary is a vote for more of the same. A vote for Donald Trump is a vote for change that makes America great again.'

Trump posed with some of the more than 100 police officers who greewted him on the airport tarmac after his Orlando rally

Similar to President Barack Obama's pitch eight years ago, Trump's 'change' ad makes a case that he can do away with the worst of Washington and start with a clean slate

The 'choice' ad says the Nov. 8 election offers 'two choices, two Americas, decided by you.'

Clinton would put America 'on the road to stagnation: fewer jobs, rising crime, America diminished at home and abroad,' the ad warns, while Trump represents a future that's 'better, stronger, more prosperous for everyone.'

Trump spokesman Jason Miller said in a statement that '[w]e are excited to take our message directly to the millions of sports fans watching the World Series to let them know that they have a clear choice in this election, and Mr. Trump is the one who will fight for them. He is the leader who will Make America Great Again.'

In Orlando, Trump had yet another sport on his mind as he spied a Florida lake in the distance on a sweltering, sticky afternoon.

'It's so beautiful here. I just noticed the water. Let's go for a swim!' he told the crowd.