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Shohei Ohtani

Ohtani Pivots From His Signature Sweeper, Fans Nine In Improved Start

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | May 23, 2023 at 2:27pm CDT

Shohei Ohtani made his 10th start of the season Sunday afternoon against the Twins. It was a bounce-back performance for the Halos ace, who ended his streak of home runs allowed and held the Twins to just two hits and one run in six innings while fanning nine. The Japanese hurler’s season ERA is down to 3.03 and is striking out hitters at a 34.6% rate. He is also leading the majors with a .142 opponent batting average. 

Although he held the Twins to two hits, Ohtani regretted walking three batters and hitting one. He was able to pitch around it, however, and gave the Angels the length that they needed from him. The sole run came from a Carlos Correa double in the 3rd inning. 

Ohtani has consistently provided the Angels staff with length. Sunday was the fifth time out of the last six starts that Ohtani lasted at least six innings. It was an encouraging performance for the 2021 AL MVP, who has been going through a rut on the mound. 

Ohtani closed out his strong performance by striking out the side in the sixth inning. He did not get the decision, but the Angels got the win off of a Mickey Moniak go-ahead two-run double in the seventh.

The trend of decreased sweeper usage for Ohtani continued on Sunday, with usage down to  27% from his season average of over 40%. He did not throw the sweeper until the 10th pitch of the game. The adjustment comes from hitters going deep five times on the sweeper. He pivoted and instead relied heavily on his cutter and splitter. 

“I kept the pitch percentages in mind,” Ohtani said. “I threw a few hittable pitches, but since they weren’t sitting on it [like the sweeper] I was able to get away with it.”

The improved approach paid dividends, as Ohtani matched his season-high of 22 whiffs that he recorded on April 21 against the Royals. 

“I was trying to control the home runs and not make them feel comfortable at the plate. I was trying to make sure they were not taking good swings,” Ohtani said.

Former Red Sox pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka said that even if Ohtani wasn’t throwing the sweeper, the thought of his sweeper was enough to keep hitters on their toes. He noted the pitch sequencing in Ohtani’s sixth-inning matchup with Carlos Correa. 

“After getting to two strikes against Correa, his fourth pitch was a splitter on the outside to try to get him out, but this was a ball. Correa was probably expecting a sweeper next, but Ohtani elected to throw the fastball so he was late and struck out,” Matsuzaka said. “Every pitch can be an outpitch for him. I think that he reestablished himself as a pitcher who’s hard to break down.” 

Ohtani’s next projected start is at home on May 28 against the Miami Marlins and their #1 pitching prospect Eury Perez at 4:07 PM EST/1:07 PM PT.

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Ohtani Nearly Hits For The Cycle While Tossing Seven Innings

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | May 16, 2023 at 2:20pm CDT

Shohei Ohtani made his ninth start of the season Monday night against the Orioles. It was another shaky start for the Japanese right-hander, who tossed seven innings in 98 pitches, struck out five, and gave up five earned runs off of three home runs. Ohtani’s ERA for the season is now at 3.23.

Ohtani has now allowed at least three runs in four straight starts, something that has never happened in his career. It was just the third time in his career that he gave up three home runs in a start and the second time against the Orioles.

Hanging sweepers continue to haunt Ohtani, with Adam Frazier and Anthony Santander capitalizing on mistakes with two-run homers in the 2nd and 3rd innings. Although hitters are only hitting .138 against Ohtani’s sweeper,  they have homered five times off of it. Last season, hitters homered off of the only sweeper six times

Heavily relying on the sweeper was not an issue against the Orioles. Ohtani’s sweeper usage was at a season-low 27% on Monday night, and he mixed in his cutter and split-fingered fastball at a higher rate, showing different looks to hitters. The problem was the poor location of sweepers at the heart of the plate.

“I’ve noticed a couple of things [about the sweeper], so if I keep making corrections it will still be effective,” Ohtani said after the game.

Ohtani also gave up a rare home run off of a fastball to Cedric Mullins in the fifth inning. He only allowed three home runs off a fastball last season, and Mullins’ homer was the first this season. He retired 13 of the last 15 hitters faced and completed seven innings.

Despite giving up multiple long balls, Ohtani allowed just four hits against the Orioles. Even with the recent four-game pitching slump, hitters are only hitting .171 against Ohtani this season.

Although it was a night to forget on the mound Ohtani more than made up for it at the plate, going 4 for 5 with 3 RBI and a walk and finishing a double-shy of the cycle. The 2021 AL MVP’s towering three-run homer traveled 456 feet and recorded an exit velocity of 114.6 mph. It was the longest homer of the season for Ohtani.

“I think there was a little anger behind that swing,” said Halos skipper Phil Nevin.”An impressive night. I know he gave up the five runs, but like I said, the damage was minimal because the hits were down and not a lot of guys on base.”

Ohtani got the chance to complete the cycle in the ninth after a Mike Trout walk but settled for a single to left field after getting behind on the count at 0-2.

“I was trying [to get a double], but I got down in the count so I wanted to make contact,” Ohtani said. “At least I was able to get a hit so that was good.”

Ohtani’s next projected start is at home against the Twins on Sunday at 4:07 PM EST/1:07 PM PST

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Shohei Ohtani Outdueled By Framber Valdez

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | May 10, 2023 at 6:38pm CDT

Shohei Ohtani took the mound against AL West rivals Astros Tuesday night and recorded his first loss of the season, despite seven strong innings of work. 

Ohtani finished the outing with 103 pitches, his second-highest total of the season, with seven strikeouts and three runs allowed. He was outdueled by Astros ace Framber Valdez, who only allowed a single run and fanned 12 in eight innings. Ohtani is now at a 2.74 ERA and has given up 12 runs over his last 18 innings.

Ohtani allowed yet another home run against the Astros, making it the third consecutive start with a home run allowed. This time it came against an unlikely opponent, defensive catcher and former teammate Martin Maldonado. The home run once again came off of Ohtani’s signature sweeper. 

“The pitch location was bad, so it’s on me,” Ohtani said after the game. “I’m not hitting the spots I need to.”

Ohtani finished his start strong and came back in the sixth and seventh innings to keep the Halos in the game. 

Ohtani mentioned after his previous start that he didn’t like that hitters were able to lift the ball against him. Against the Astros, he induced 13 groundballs. The increase in groundballs may be a result of his increased sinker usage. He dramatically increased his sinker usage, throwing it 32 times. In just one start, he threw his sinker as many times as all of his other starts combined.

In his last start, Kazuhiro Sasaki pointed out that Ohtani needed to adjust his game plan. Ohtani did just that. Ohtani threw his sweeper only 39% of the time, compared to his season average of nearly 50%.

The decrease in sweeper usage and change in gameplan may also have been a result of a new catching partner in Chris Okey, who was filling in for the injured Chad Wallach. 

“It’s difficult for catchers to catch pitches that they haven’t seen before,” Ohtani said. “I didn’t know his blocking data, so it was weighing the risks of throwing [certain] pitches,” Ohtani said.

Ohtani threw his splitter just once, and his average horizontal movement on his sweeper was once again down to 15 inches compared to the season average of 17 inches.

Ohtani also was dealing with a cracked middle finger, but said it was not an issue. 

“I didn’t really feel it and I was good in the sixth and seventh, and the pitches I threw weren’t bad so I don’t think it had a big impact,” Ohtani said. 

Ohtani’s next start will be against the Baltimore Orioles at Camden Yards on May 16, 6:35 PM EST/ 3:35 PM PT.

 

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How Much Revenue Does Shohei Ohtani Actually Generate?

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | May 9, 2023 at 9:47am CDT

Shohei Ohtani’s impact on the field as a two-way superstar is undisputed. Ohtani is a Cy Young-level talent on the mound, hurling 100 mph fastballs and making hitters look silly with his frisbee-like sweepers and devastating splitters. At the plate, he is one of the premier sluggers in the game, winning the Edgar Martinez Award for most valuable designated hitter in the last two seasons. 

The 2021 AL MVP’s impact beyond the field is equally noteworthy. 

Last October, Katsuhiro Miyamoto, renowned economist and Professor Emeritus at Kansai University, released a report on Ohtani’s economic effects in the 2022 season. 

The study found that Ohtani’s economic effects totaled an estimated 45 billion Japanese Yen, approximately 337 million US dollars. 

Miyamoto is a sports economics expert who has previously studied topics such as the economic impact of championship seasons of NPB teams and the economic damage sustained by the Japanese sports industry as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The bulk of Ohtani’s economic effects came from ticket sales, merchandise sales, Ohtani’s salary and sponsorships, and MLB broadcasting rights related to Ohtani. 

Ohtani’s effect on ticket sales was calculated by hypothesizing the number of fans (both home and away) who attended Angels games because of Ohtani. The total estimate resulted in 631,174 fans, which accounts for roughly ¥6 billion ($45MM) in ticket sales. Ohtani merchandise sales in the US equaled ¥984MM ($7.26MM). 

The ticket and merchandise sales coupled with his salary and sponsorships brought Ohtani’s direct impact on the US economy to ¥19.4 billion ($143.6MM).  

Ohtani’s direct impact on the Japanese economy was calculated through merchandise sales, travel packages for Ohtani games, and appearance fees for TV commercials, which totaled an estimated ¥1.7 billion ($12.55MM). 

In addition to these direct effects on the economy, Miyamoto accounted for primary and secondary economic ripple effects on related industries to calculate the final amount. 

The estimated value of Ohtani’s economic effects in the 2022 season was nearly double that of Ohtani’s groundbreaking 2021 AL MVP season, which was an estimated 24 billion Japanese Yen ($178MM). Miyamoto explained that the increased effect was a result of higher attendance at games in 2022 because of the MVP campaign and inflation.

Miyamoto, who has been conducting similar studies for years, was stunned by the findings. “These numbers are unprecedented for a single athlete,” Miyamoto said. “For example, this [economic effect] is the equivalent of a championship campaign of a popular NPB team like the Yomiuri Giants, Hanshin Tigers, or Softbank Hawks and that is considering a team having about 70 players.”

Ohtani’s economic impact could also be found during Team Japan’s championship run at the World Baseball Classic. In February, before the tournament, Miyamoto stated that Team Japan can generate nearly 59.6 billion yen ($444MM) if they won the tournament. The final number was boosted to 65 billion yen ($484MM) after the tournament by what Miyamoto calls the “Ohtani Effect.” “It took every player’s contribution for Samurai Japan to win the world championship, but this was Ohtani’s tournament,” Miyamoto said.  

It’s possible that the Ohtani’s economic effects in 2023 will dwarf the 2022 estimate. A free agent to-be in the fall, Ohtani is projected to sign the largest contract in MLB history. Earlier this year, he signed a long-term deal with Boston-based apparel company New Balance. In March, Forbes reported that Ohtani will collect $65 million in total earnings, the highest-ever in MLB, for the 2023 season before taxes and agents’ fees.

“We are thankful to live in the same era where we can witness Ohtani’s greatness,” Miyamoto said.

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Shohei Ohtani Matches A Babe Ruth Record Despite Rough Start

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | May 8, 2023 at 10:15am CDT

Shohei Ohtani took the mound for the first time in the month of May against the Cardinals last Wednesday night. 

The 2021 AL MVP had another rough start by his standards, allowing four runs in five innings. His season ERA has now gone up to 2.54, after back-to-back starts with four or more runs allowed. 

Although he only lasted five innings, Ohtani tied his career high in single-game strikeouts with 13. He has struck out 38.6% of hitters in 39 innings this season. With the 13th strikeout, Ohtani reached 500 career strikeouts in MLB. He is now the first player since Babe Ruth to have 500 career strikeouts as a pitcher and 100 home runs as a hitter. 

It was the second consecutive start where Ohtani allowed multiple home runs: a solo shot from Nolan Gorman in the first inning, and a two-run homer from Dylan Carlson in the fourth. 

Both home runs came off of Ohtani’s sweeper, which was not at its best. The average horizontal break on the sweeper was three inches below the season average. The drier conditions of Busch Stadium may have played a role in the reduced movement. 

Ohtani was disappointed with the short start. “I wanted to get through six or seven innings, minimum, more than the strikeouts, I’m more disappointed that I didn’t get that far in the game,” Ohtani said. 

Former Seattle Mariners reliever and current analyst Kazuhiro Sasaki said that it might be time for Ohtani to make adjustments to his pitch mix. “The average velocity of Ohtani’s fastball was the highest so far this year at 98 mph,” Sasaki said for Nikkan Sports. “Ohtani’s kept his pitch mix consistent this season. With more divisional games on the way, if he changes his pitch tendencies for one or two games he’ll keep teams guessing,” Sasaki said.  

91% of Ohtani’s pitches on Wednesday were either sweepers or fastballs, with the occasional splitter and sinker.  “It felt like they were sitting on certain pitches on certain counts,” Ohtani said. Ohtani had been using more cutters and curveballs in recent starts, but not in this game. Going back to mixing the occasional cutter and curveball, and increasing his splitter and sinker usage may be an adjustment that Ohtani can make to keep hitters on their toes. 

The Angels won the game 6-4 on account of Mike Trout and Jake Lamb homers in the 9th inning. 

The matchup between Ohtani and WBC teammate Lars Nootbaar was highly anticipated by Japanese media. Like the matchup against Masataka Yoshida last month, Ohtani got the upper hand. Ohtani struck out Nootbaar in all three at-bats, on a sweeper, splitter, and fastball. “It looked like he went into another gear in that matchup,” Sasaki said. 

Ohtani’s next scheduled start is an AL West divisional showdown at home against the Houston Astros on May 9, 9:38PM EST/6:38PM PT.

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Ohtani Overcomes Shaky Fourth Inning, Leads Angels To Win

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | April 29, 2023 at 4:28pm CDT

Shohei Ohtani’s franchise-record streak of most consecutive starts with two or fewer runs given up came to an end on Thursday in his start against the Oakland Athletics, surrendering five runs in six innings.

It was smooth sailing early for the 2021 AL MVP, who tossed three perfect innings and fanned five to open the game.

Everything changed in the fourth inning, when Ohtani hit the A’s leadoff man, walked the next hitter, then gave up a three-run homer to Brent Rooker. Ohtani proceeded to hit the next batter, and then gave up a two-run homer to Shea Langliers. He surrendered five runs without recording an out, a rare sight for Ohtani considering his hot start to the year.

Ohtani bounced back from the nightmare fourth inning by keeping the A’s hitless in the fifth and sixth innings. He finished the day with 93 pitches, eight strikeouts, three hits allowed, two walks, and three hit batters. His season ERA is now at 1.82, although opposing hitters are still only hitting .102 against him.

In the postgame interview, Ohtani said that he lost his rhythm and mechanics when he was throwing slide-step with runners on base. “I haven’t thrown in a slide-step much, so I kept trying to find the right balance and timing in my mechanics. It was a technical issue rather than a mental issue.”

Ohtani believes that the outing was a good experience and said that the pre-game bullpen session and the first three innings were the best he felt all year. “That fourth inning is regrettable, but it felt really good coming back in the fifth and sixth. I’ll use it as a learning experience,” Ohtani said.

Ohtani continues to struggle with his command, despite his excellent start to the year. He has walked 13% of hitters, hit six of them, and has thrown five wild pitches.

“He’s human,” said Angels manager Phil Nevin. “You could sense it in the whole stadium, like, ‘What’s wrong with him?’ But nothing was wrong with him. You have to throw it over the plate, and Major League hitters take swings, sometimes they hit them,” Nevin said.

The bigger Ohtani story on Thursday was that he nearly hit for his second career cycle. After hitting a single, a double and a triple in his previous at-bats, Ohtani stepped up to the plate in the bottom of the 8th inning with one out and runners on first and second. He jumped on the first pitch, an 86 mph slider, and drove it to deep center field, but the ball was caught at the warning track.

Ohtani’s next scheduled start is against the St. Louis Cardinals on May 4th, 1:15PM EST/10:15AM PST.

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Ohtani’s Hot Start On The Mound Continues, Ks 11 In 7 Scoreless

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | April 24, 2023 at 1:57pm CDT

On Star Wars Night in Anaheim, Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani shined the brightest. The two-way phenom turned in another brilliant start against the Royals on Friday, tossing seven shutout innings and striking out a season-high 11, and leading the Angels to a 2-0 win. 

Ohtani’s season ERA improves to 0.64. He has struck out 32.9% of hitters and has held them to an impressive .093 batting average. 

Friday’s start was the 2021 AL MVP’s first-ever start on three days of rest, thanks to the shortened start on Monday against the Red Sox. It was not an issue for Ohtani, who opened the game by striking out the side. It was the first time this season that the Japanese right-hander did not walk the leadoff hitter. 

Ohtani said that he felt good despite the short rest. “I slept pretty well, and so I came in pretty fresh. I didn’t really have that [short rest] in mind,” Ohtani said. 

Ohtani struck out the last six hitters to wrap up his dominant outing. Hitters whiffed on 42% of their swings, for a total of 22 whiffs, and just three of Ohtani’s pitches were hit hard into fair territory. 

An interesting change in this particular start was the increased cutter and curveball usage. Ohtani threw his cutter 21 times, which is as much as he has thrown it on all of his other starts combined. He threw his curveball nine times, including one looping 68 mph pitch, and hitters whiffed on four of them. 

Ohtani felt like he mixed his pitches well. “It was a good balance [of pitch types], the third time around the order I was able to mix in the curveball well,” Ohtani said. “I felt that hitters were sitting on the breaking ball, but if I threw two different types they’d have a more difficult time.” 

Baseball Savant’s release point chart shows Ohtani’s consistent release point. All six pitches that Ohtani threw on Friday all come from a similar release point but have drastically different movements and speeds ranging from 68 mph to 100 mph, making it difficult for hitters to predict what pitch comes next. 

Angels manager Phil Nevin said that since Ohtani calls his own pitches, he studies hitters and understands when he can use a specific pitch. “From a hitter’s standpoint, I would have no idea what to prepare for,” Nevin said.

Today’s game was the first time Ohtani was caught by Chad Wallach after Logan O’Hoppe was placed on the 10-day injured list. Ohtani was thankful for Wallach. “He was great, he framed the balls on the corners well and got me strikes,” Ohtani said. Wallach also helped out Ohtani at the plate, hitting the go-ahead two-run homer in the bottom of the third.

Ohtani’s next scheduled start is on April 27th against the Athletics at 4:07 EST/1:07 PT.

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MLB Trade Rumors Podcast: Shohei Ohtani, Julio Urias, Aaron Nola, Ian Happ, Juan Soto, Marcell Ozuna

By Simon Hampton | April 19, 2023 at 11:30pm CDT

Episode 3 of the MLB Trade Rumors Podcast is now live on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and wherever you get your podcasts! Make sure you subscribe as well; use this link to find the show on Spotify and this one for Apple. You can also use the player at this link to listen, if you don’t use Spotify or Apple for podcasts.

This week, host Simon Hampton is joined by MLBTR founder Tim Dierkes to discuss a wide range of topics around the baseball world:

  • We discuss Tim’s 2023-24 Free Agent Power Rankings article, including the contract Shohei Ohtani might command, as well as the markets for Aaron Nola and Julio Urias (3:26)
  • The Cubs and Ian Happ agree to a surprising three-year, $61MM extension. So did the player or the club get better value out of this deal? (18:41)
  • A busy week on the extension front includes the Twins agreeing to a four-year, $73.5MM contract with starter Pablo Lopez. We discuss the improvements Lopez has made this season and give our thoughts on the contract (23:04)

Plus, we answer your questions, including:

  • Why do the Giants only seem willing to spend money on position players, and not starting pitchers?  This question also includes our thoughts on the Logan Webb contract (26:59)
  • As Juan Soto gets off to a slow start in 2023, is there any hope for him to return to his 2021 numbers and what does this mean for extension talks? (31:24)
  • Are the Braves wasting a roster spot on Marcell Ozuna? (36:22)

Check out our past episodes!

  • Rays, top prospect debuts, Angels, trade deadline, Gary Sanchez, Francisco Alvarez – listen here
  • Early trade deadline preview, Jake Cronenworth extension and the Padres, Marlins trade ideas, Cardinals rotation, Dodgers – listen here

The podcast intro and outro song “So Long” is provided courtesy of the band Showoff.  Check out their Facebook page here!

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Boston Rain Cuts Ohtani Start Short

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | April 18, 2023 at 11:15am CDT

Shohei Ohtani took the mound at the historic Fenway Park in Boston for his fourth start this season on Monday. Ohtani’s start was unfortunately cut short to two innings due to over two combined hours of rain delays.

The Angels’ ace, who entered the game with a 0.47 ERA, held Boston hitless but allowed a single run in the short outing. The combination of poor weather and delays initially seemed to play a role, as the Japanese right-hander’s early season control issues continued. Ohtani walked leadoff hitter Raimel Tapia, then threw two wild pitches that moved Tapia to third. Tapia then scored on a Rob Refsnyder groundout. Ohtani bounced back and struck out his Team Japan teammate Masataka Yoshida on an elevated 98.4 mph fastball, the hardest pitch he threw on the day.

During Ohtani’s warmup at the start of the 2nd inning, the Fenway Park grounds crew rushed onto the mound to pour quick dry dirt, leading to a short delay. The delay took about 10 minutes and was extended even further by a PitchCom issue. The delay did not faze Ohtani, who tossed a clean, efficient inning and struck out two.

During the top of the 3rd inning, the rain had reached a level where the tarp had to come out, causing an 85-minute delay. Angels skipper Phil Nevin knew that Ohtani would have to come off the mound during the second rain delay. “As much as I know he [Ohtani] keeps himself ready to go and pitch, it got past that 30-40 minute mark and I wasn’t going to send him back out,” Nevin said.

The preparation for this game was already challenging for Ohtani and the Halos even before the rain delays. The original start time on Monday was 11:10 AM EST for Patriots’ Day, which meant that it was an 8:10 AM start for Angels players. Because of the unique start time, the Angels rested core players including Mike Trout and Anthony Rendon. “That was the hardest part,” said Ohtani regarding the early start, through interpreter Ippei Mizuhara. “The bus left at 7:30, so I was up and moving by 6:45,” said Ohtani.

The game was Ohtani’s second start at Fenway Park. When asked about his experience, Ohtani said, “It’s one of my favorite parks, so I always look forward to pitching here, but the conditions didn’t allow me to have fun fully. Other than that I always look forward to pitching here.”

Ohtani’s first pitching appearance at the famed ballpark last May was one of the most dominant pitching performances in his big league career. He tossed seven shutout innings, struck out 11, got a career-high 29 swings-and-misses, and threw 81 of his 99 pitches for strikes.

Monday wasn’t the first time Ohtani has expressed his fondness for the ballpark. “That’s one of my favorite ballparks,” said Ohtani after the shutout performance last year. “I was looking forward to pitching here, and I felt like it left a really good impression on me.”

The Red Sox reportedly came close to signing Ohtani out of high school back in 2012, however, they were not on his final list of destinations when he was posted in 2017.

Ohtani is now at a 0.86 ERA, and his next turn in the rotation is supposed to be on Sunday, but today’s short outing might change the Angels’ plans. Angels beat writer Jeff Fletcher reported that Nevin said that “they will talk” about Ohtani’s upcoming pitching schedule.

UPDATE: The Angels have decided to move up Shohei Ohtani’s start from Sunday to Friday, according to Angels beat writer Jeff Fletcher. Ohtani will face the Kansas City Royals on Friday at home in Anaheim. Ohtani works on five days of rest, so his next projected start after Friday will be on April 27th against the Oakland Athletics, which is also at home. Based on Fletcher’s projected schedule, the move will allow Ohtani to face AL West rival Houston Astros and also squeezes an extra start out of him since his turns in the original schedule would have had him pitching on rest days.  

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“I’ve Never Seen Shohei Like That”: Team Japan Manager Discusses Ohtani

By Dai Takegami Podziewski | April 17, 2023 at 9:13pm CDT

Following the success of Team Japan at the World Baseball Classic, manager Hideki Kuriyama has been making multiple TV appearances in recent weeks, one of them including the documentary sports show GET SPORTS. In the interview, Kuriyama revealed behind-the-scenes stories of Team Japan and their biggest star, Shohei Ohtani. 

Ohtani’s tournament MVP campaign showed Kuriyama and baseball fans around the world a new side of Ohtani. 

The Origin of Kuriyama and Ohtani’s Relationship
Ohtani and Kuriyama’s relationship dates back to before Ohtani entered the pros in Japan. “Since the first time I ever saw him in high school, I thought it was out of the question to have him choose between pitching or hitting,” said Kuriyama, in a 2021 interview. 

At the time, Ohtani faced pressure to choose to be a pitcher or a field player and also wanted to go to the big leagues straight out of high school. 

Kuriyama, then manager of the Nippon Ham Fighters, was at the heart of negotiations to convince Ohtani to sign with the team after drafting him in 2012. Kuriyama and the Fighters made the unprecedented pitch to Ohtani to provide him with the resources and opportunities to make the two-way play work. 

They were a successful pairing, with Ohtani earning individual accolades and breaking barriers in two-way play and the Fighters winning the Pacific League pennant and the Japan Series in 2016.

The Quarterfinal vs. Italy
Japan cruised to a 9-3 win against Italy in the WBC Quarterfinal, buoyed by Ohtani’s solid start on the mound. The game against Italy was filled with moments of surprise for Kuriyama. 

The first came in the 3rd inning, where with one out and a runner at first, Ohtani laid down a bunt and got on base. The bunt sparked the scuffling Japan offense and led to a 4-run inning. 

The unexpected move stunned the sold-out Tokyo Dome crowd and Kuriyama, who did not signal for Ohtani to bunt. 

“Well, it was typical of Shohei to do something so unexpected like that. But my honest reaction was what the hell was that bunt?” Kuriyama jokingly said. “It was terrible! He couldn’t have laid down a better bunt?”

On the pitching side, Ohtani came out in the middle of the 5th inning after giving up a 2-run double. Kuriyama is known for not going to the mound when making a pitching change, but this game was different. Pitching Coach Masato Yoshii urged Kuriyama to go up on the mound for the change.

“It was my first time going up to the mound to take him [Ohtani] off,” Kuriyama said. 

What truly shocked Kuriyama was that Ohtani apologized as he walked off the mound. “It was a moment of honesty from him. Those words hit heavy. It was the first time I ever heard an apology from him during a game . . . He’s always been the type to focus on what’s next and focus on what he can do to solve the issue before making an apology.’”

The Semifinal vs. Mexico

The WBC semifinal was arguably the most dramatic game of the tournament, with Japan coming back to win in the ninth inning 6-5 on a 2-run walk-off double from Munetaka Murakami.

Ohtani ignited the comeback down 5-4 in the ninth with a lead-off double. His helmet came flying off as he ran to second, and once he reached base he fiercely urged his team to follow up. Despite his many years of managing Ohtani, it was a side of Ohtani that Kuriyama had never seen before.  

“ If you watch it over, you can see that he’s choked up on the bat ever so slightly. In over a decade of knowing him and managing him, I’ve never seen Shohei play with so much emotion. . . Then it clicked for me. THIS is what he wanted to do. To do everything in his power to try to win in a do-or-die situation.”

Kuriyama also shared what led up to the moment.

“I heard about it after the fact, but apparently, he told the bench, ’I’m going to go get a hit and get on base.’”

This wasn’t the first time Ohtani called his shot. Back in 2016, Kuriyama started Ohtani as the lead-off hitter and the starting pitcher for the first time. It was the first time in 70 years that a pitcher hit lead-off in the NPB. Ohtani responded by hitting a leadoff homer.

 “He told us [the bench] that he was going to go and hit a home run and opened the game with a lead-off home run like it was no big deal,” Kuriyama said. 

The Final vs. Team USA

The WBC championship game was another instant classic. Ohtani took the mound in the ninth to close out the game for Team Japan, who held a 3-2 lead over Team USA. 

After walking Jeff McNeil, Ohtani got Mookie Betts to ground out into a double play. With two outs in the ninth inning of a one-run game, baseball fans got their dream matchup: Shohei Ohtani vs. Mike Trout. Ohtani struck out Trout on a nasty sweeper to win the game and delivered a third WBC title to his country. 

It wasn’t always a guarantee that Ohtani was going to pitch in the Final because of the congested tournament schedule, but the plan to close the game with Yu Darvish and Ohtani was always in the back of Kuriyama’s mind. 

“I always knew that we were going to have to face Team USA, in America, for us to win the championship. I wanted to use pitchers who have experience pitching in the US. Based on the [WBC] schedule, starting pitchers can only go once or twice. But I kept thinking of ways to let Shohei and Darvish pitch three times, and the only way to do that is starting twice in the early going and pitching in the final,” Kuriyama said.

Ohtani had not closed a game since 2016, in the clinching game of the Japan Series with the Nippon Ham Fighters. 

“Shohei is the type of player that the more homework you give him and the more you challenge him, his talent is maximized. After all this time together, there’s no doubt about that,” Kuriyama said.

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