Tag Archives: Shohei Ohtani

Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani strikes out nine, hitless at plate in loss to Astros

ANAHEIM, Calif. — The second pitch Shohei Ohtani threw on Opening Day was a 98 mph fastball spotted on the very edge of the inside corner to Jose Altuve. By the end of Thursday night’s first inning, the Los Angeles Angels’ two-way sensation threw seven pitches at a higher velocity. Oftentimes in 2021, while feeling for command after a half-decade without consistent pitching, Ohtani eased into those higher velocities, saving the bigger numbers for tighter situations late in games.

Trusting it early shows just how much has changed for him on the mound in one year.

“He’s just gradually gotten better command of his fastball — that’s what I think the big difference is,” Angels manager Joe Maddon said after his team’s season-opening 3-1 loss to the Houston Astros. “And you saw it again tonight — a lot of 97s and 99s. In the past, the early part of the game would be lower numbers until he needed it. Right now, even when it’s not needed, he’s still doing those things.”

Ohtani — limited, like all Angels starters, to the 80-pitch range because of the shortened spring training — allowed one run on four hits in 4⅔ innings against one of the most dangerous lineups in the league, with one walk and nine strikeouts. Three of those strikeouts came against Altuve, who had struck out three times in a game only three times through 11 previous major league seasons.

Despite the abbreviated pitch count, Ohtani threw seven 99 mph pitches, third-most in his career. The average velocity on his four-seam fastball, which seemed to display a little more cutting action, was 97.8 mph, more than two ticks higher than last year’s average. The effect of that pitch noticeably played up his slider, which induced seven whiffs on nine swings.

Ohtani, coming off unanimous selection as the American League’s Most Valuable Player, began spring training talking about how much stronger he felt.

Perhaps it’s showing up in a fastball that can consistently approach triple digits.

“That’s what I’m hoping for,” Ohtani said through his interpreter. “It’s gonna be a long season, so I don’t know how the fatigue’s gonna play into it, but I’m gonna try to pick my spots and throw hard.”

A sold-out crowd of 44,723 crammed into Angel Stadium to watch Ohtani begin to follow up on arguably the most impressive season in baseball history, when he coupled a .965 OPS with 46 home runs and 26 stolen bases as a hitter with a 3.18 ERA and 156 strikeouts in 130⅓ innings as a pitcher. By taking the ball in the top of the first and leading off in the bottom half of the inning, Ohtani became the first player in history to both throw and face the first pitch of his team’s season.

The Angels’ offense struggled against Astros lefty Framber Valdez, who twirled 6⅔ scoreless innings and at one point retired 15 straight batters. But they finally broke through with two outs in the eighth, when David Fletcher’s sinking line drive scurried past a diving Yordan Alvarez in left field, scoring Brandon Marsh and bringing the tying run to the plate. Up came Ohtani, who launched a 98 mph fly ball that initially stirred the audience but was ultimately caught at the edge of the outfield grass.

“I thought it might have a chance to leave,” Ohtani said after an 0-for-4 night offensively. “I just got a little under it.”

Ohtani was removed as a pitcher with one on and two outs in the fifth partly because Maddon wanted to use lefty reliever Aaron Loup to attack the left-handed-hitting Michael Brantley. Upon returning to the dugout, Maddon approached Ohtani to ask if he wanted to remain in the game and take advantage of a new rule that allows him to keep hitting even after he’s done pitching.

Ohtani’s response: “Of course.”

By the end of the night, Ohtani said, he had almost forgotten he had pitched. He treated the last third of the game as if he were the designated hitter — and he very nearly tied the score while doing so.

“Nothing’s too quick for him,” Maddon said. “Nothing’s too big for him.”

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Angels’ Shohei Ohtani a finalist for AL MVP; fired Cardinals skipper Mike Shildt in running for NL Manager of the Year

NEW YORK — Two-way sensation Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Angels is a finalist for American League MVP in voting by the Baseball Writers Association of America.

The BBWAA revealed finalists for American League and National League MVPs, Cy Young Awards, Rookies of the Year and Managers of the Year on Monday night. The winners — decided on ballots sent at the end of the regular season — will be revealed next week.

Ohtani is in the final three of AL MVP voting along with two Toronto players, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Marcus Semien.

The 27-year-old Ohtani hit .257 with 46 homers, 100 RBIs and a .965 OPS as the Angels’ full-time designated hitter, while also going 9-2 with a 3.18 ERA in 23 starts on the mound. It was his first full season in both roles — he won Rookie of the Year in 2018 even after an elbow injury shut him down as a pitcher after 10 starts.

Ex-St. Louis Cardinals skipper Mike Shildt was nominated for NL Manager of the Year less than a month after he was fired. The other finalists are Milwaukee’s Craig Counsell and San Francisco’s Gabe Kapler.

The Cardinals won 17 straight games down the stretch and made the postseason for the third time in four years under Shildt, but the 2018 Manager of the Year was cut loose because of what general manager John Mozeliak termed “philosophical differences.” Oliver Marmol was promoted from bench coach to replace Shildt.

The NL MVP race is down to Philadelphia’s Bryce Harper, Washington’s Juan Soto and San Diego’s Fernando Tatis Jr. Harper is the only former MVP of that trio, earning the honor in 2015 with the Nationals.

In a sign of how voters’ priorities have changed, none of the six MVP finalists played for teams that made the postseason.

Soto, Tatis and Guerrero were all 22 on the final day of the season, and this is the first time a trio of players younger than 23 was among the finalists. The last time even two players that young were finalists was 1956, when Hank Aaron finished third in NL voting and Al Kaline was third in the AL.

Max Scherzer is a finalist for a fourth Cy Young Award after splitting the season between the Nationals and Dodgers, but all the other finalists would be first-time winners.

Milwaukee’s Corbin Burnes and Philadelphia’s Zack Wheeler are finalists in the NL, while the AL honor is down to the Yankees’ Gerrit Cole, the White Sox’s Lance Lynn and the Blue Jays’ Robbie Ray, who is now a free agent.

Postseason star Randy Arozarena and teammate Wander Franco of the Tampa Bay Rays are finalists for AL Rookie of the Year along with Astros right-hander Luis Garcia. Franco appeared in just 70 games but still got attention after reaching base in 43 consecutive games, matching Frank Robinson’s record from 1956 for longest by a player age 20 or younger.

Cardinals outfielder Dylan Carlson, Reds second baseman Jonathan India and Marlins left-hander Trevor Rogers are finalists for NL Rookie of the Year.

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Los Angeles Angels’ Joe Maddon

ARLINGTON, Texas — Los Angeles Angels manager Joe Maddon said Tuesday that Shohei Ohtani’s comments last weekend about wanting to win don’t mean the two-way star wants to leave the organization when he becomes a free agent after the 2023 season.

Ohtani, an American League MVP front-runner with 45 home runs and a 3.18 ERA, said Sunday that although he likes the team, the fans and the atmosphere, his top priority is winning.

“We all feel the same way — we all want to win,” Maddon said before the Angels’ game at Texas on Tuesday night. “If anybody misconstrues that as though he wants to leave, that’s trying to connect some dots that weren’t necessarily what he, not at all what he said.

“He also mentioned how much he loves it here. The inner sanctum of the clubhouse, the guys, the coaching staff, everything about it. The area. The fans. He loves them all. We all want to get to the next level, and we see it as an absolute possibility it’s going to happen here in the very near future.”

The Angels have had a losing record in six straight seasons and missed the playoffs in seven consecutive years, the past four with Ohtani. Maddon and star outfielder Mike Trout have recently condemned the franchise’s largely ineffective roster-building work.

“This can’t continue to go on,” Maddon said last week. “We can’t annually be in this position. This organization is better than that. We deserve better than that.”

Ohtani said Sunday via interpreter Ippei Mizuhara that it was “very frustrating, very disappointing,” and that “I always look forward to being in the playoff race at the end.”

Still, Maddon thinks Ohtani isn’t planning on jumping ship at the first opportunity.

“Don’t forget all the platitudes that he mentioned regarding everything else because I think that overrides just saying that he wants to win and somehow connect that to he wants to leave,” Maddon said.

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Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani has sore arm, might not pitch again this season

CHICAGO — Two-way star Shohei Ohtani won’t pitch Friday for the Los Angeles Angels because of a sore right arm that could sideline him as a pitcher for the rest of the season.

“If there’s any kind of lingering soreness, you may not see him pitch,” Angels manager Joe Maddon said before Thursday’s game against the Chicago White Sox.

Ohtani (9-2, 3.36 ERA) felt soreness while playing catch Wednesday. Maddon said he raised the possibility of the likely American League MVP being shut down on the mound for the rest of the season during a meeting.

Maddon said there were no plans for Ohtani to be examined by a doctor, nor has it been determined when he would try to resume playing catch.

Ohtani, 27, hasn’t pitched since Sept. 10, when he was tagged for six runs on nine hits in 3⅓ innings in a loss at Houston.

Maddon said Ohtani would like to continue pitching in an attempt to get his 10th victory.

“[Ten wins] always looks better than nine,” Maddon said. “But you can’t let that be the driving factor.”

The arm discomfort won’t prevent Ohtani from continuing to serve as a designated hitter. Ohtani entered Thursday’s game against the White Sox ranked second in the major leagues with 44 home runs and 74 extra-base hits and fourth with a .599 slugging percentage.

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Corey Kluber implodes vs. Angels, Yankees lose third straight

ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Yankees envisioned Corey Kluber making important starts and Zack Britton pitching the eighth inning in even more.

But as the Yankees dropped a third straight game Monday night, they saw Kluber implode in the fourth inning and the replacements for Britton give up the go-ahead run in the eighth in an 8-7 loss to the Angels at Angel Stadium.

And with the Rays now the hottest team in the sport — having won eight consecutive games, the Yankees saw their deficit grow to seven games in the AL East.

DJ LeMahieu said this is the time of year when players begin to pay attention to the standings and he remained confident in the Yankees’ chances.

“If we take care of business, we’ll be in a really good spot at the end,’’ LeMahieu said. “It’s a good division.”

“Our goal doesn’t change,’’ Gary Sanchez said through an interpreter. “That’s to win the East, no matter what.”

To do that, the Yankees will have to find out what they have in Kluber down the stretch.

In his return from a shoulder strain that sidelined him since May, the right-hander didn’t allow a hit for the first three innings before he allowed five runs in the fourth.

Corey Kluber struggle in his return to the Yankees on Monday.
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A back-and-forth game remained tied until the bottom of the eighth, when ex-Met Juan Lagares delivered a two-out RBI single off Clay Holmes for the go-ahead run and the Yankees couldn’t answer in the ninth, as the Angels used seven pitchers in the win.

It was the first time since June 30-July 4 that the Yankees lost three in a row.

Aaron Boone defended the decision to keep Kluber in the game despite three consecutive singles, a lineout to center and a walk before Jack Mayfield crushed a grand slam.

“One mistake really got him,’’ Boone said.

Kluber was encouraged by how he felt and like Boone, regretted just the Mayfield at-bat.

“I made a bad pitch in a big spot,’’ Kluber said. “It’s one pitch wish I could get back.”

The result wasted a resurgent performance from a Yankee offense that had been held down for most of the previous two games in Oakland.

LeMahieu doubled to left to lead off the game and came around on Anthony Rizzo’s opposite-field double to left.

Aaron Judge followed with a sharp single to leave runners on the corners for Giancarlo Stanton, who grounded into a double play.

Gary Sanchez looks on as Jared Walsh 0 and Max Stassi congratulate Jack Mayfield after his grand slam on Monday night.
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Rizzo scored on the play, but that’s all the Yankees would get off Angels’ opener Mike Mayers.

Given an early 2-0 lead, Kluber retired 10 of the first 11 batters he faced, with just a two-out walk to Phil Gosselin in the first.

But Kluber, barely hitting 90 mph, faltered in the fourth.

The Yankees scored three two-out runs in the fifth to tie the game.

A single by LeMahieu knocked in Brett Gardner. Rizzo singled to center and moved to second on an error by Marsh. Judge delivered an infield hit to make it 5-4 and Stanton followed with a single to center to tie the game.

With runners on the corners, the struggling Joey Gallo struck out.

Andrew Heaney took over for Kluber to start the bottom of the fifth and immediately gave up a towering blast to Shohei Ohtani to put the Angels back in front by a run.

A two-out RBI triple by Lagares gave the Angels another run in the sixth.

Stanton continued his tear at the plate by hitting one into the rocks over the center-field fence, a two-run shot measured at 457 feet that tied it again.

Peralta pitched a scoreless seventh and allowed a leadoff single to Marsh in the eighth. Marsh advanced to third on a pair of groundouts before scoring on Lagares’ RBI single against Holmes.

“We’re playing really good ball,’’ LeMahieu said. “We just came out on the short side of things the last three days.”

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Jack Morris suspended by Bally Sports Detroit for remarks about Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani

Detroit Tigers television analyst Jack Morris has been suspended indefinitely by Bally Sports Detroit after he used an accent in describing what the Tigers should do when pitching to the Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani.

Bally Sports Detroit said in a statement Wednesday that it was “extremely disappointed” with Morris’ remarks and that the former major league pitcher will undergo bias training “to educate him on the impact of his comments and how he can be a positive influence in a diverse community.”

“We have a zero-tolerance policy for bias or discrimination and deeply apologize for his insensitive remark,” the network said.

The Tigers said in a statement that they were “deeply disappointed” with Morris’ comments.

“We fully support Bally Sports Detroit’s decision and their on-going commitment to ensure that all personnel are held to the highest standards of personal conduct,” the team said.

Later in the broadcast Tuesday night, Morris said before the ninth inning that he “did not intend for any offensive thing and I apologize if I did. I certainly respect and have the utmost respect for this guy and don’t blame a pitcher for walking him.”

Morris made his earlier comment in the top of the sixth inning when Ohtani, who is from Japan, was on deck with the game between the Tigers and Angels tied at 2. Bally Sports Detroit play-by-play announcer Matt Shepard asked, “Now what do you do with Shohei Ohtani?”

Morris said with an accent: “Be very, very careful.” Ohtani was then intentionally walked.

The 66-year-old Morris, a five-time All-Star who pitched for 14 seasons with the Tigers, was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2018. He is in his second regular stint on Tigers television broadcasts, having returned in 2019.

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Shohei Ohtani donated Home Run Derby earnings to Los Angeles Angels’ staff members

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Shohei Ohtani donated his winnings from this week’s Home Run Derby to members of the Los Angeles Angels’ support staff, according to multiple reports Friday.

The news was first reported by the Orange County Register.

Ohtani donated the $150,000 he received to more than a couple of dozen people, including clubhouse staff, trainers and members of the media relations department, the reports said. The two-way Japanese sensation handed out the checks before the Angels’ game Friday night against the Seattle Mariners.

Besides becoming the first Japanese player to participate in the Home Run Derby, Ohtani was the first one in All-Star Game history to be selected as both a pitcher and a hitter. He threw a perfect first inning and was 0-for-2 in the AL’s 5-2 victory on Tuesday.

Ohtani was the top seed in Monday’s derby but was eliminated in the first round after he lost a swing-off to Washington’s Juan Soto.

Pete Alonso of the New York Mets won the derby and took the $1 million prize. Baltimore’s Trey Mancini was second and took home $500,000.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Home Run Derby ‘definitely’ an event Los Angeles Angels star Shohei Ohtani wants to try again

DENVER — After dropping a dramatic first-round Home Run Derby matchup to Juan Soto on Monday night, Los Angeles Angels star Shohei Ohtani said he wants a return engagement.

Following a wild 24 hours in which he started the All-Star Game as a pitcher and got the victory, batted leadoff as a designated hitter and partook in the derby, Ohtani said he planned on participating in a future derby — with one condition.

“I definitely want to participate again,” Ohtani said Tuesday through an interpreter. “But for that to happen, I need to have a good first half of that season.”

Ohtani’s participation in future All-Star Games is not likely to be in question anytime soon. Fans voted the 27-year-old as the American League starter at DH and should do the same for the foreseeable future. Perhaps Ohtani will determine his worthiness for participation based on his performance, but based on the reaction to his derby debut, the desire for him to grace Dodger Stadium’s derby in 2022 with his presence will be significant.

In front of a packed Coors Field on Monday, Ohtani was the No. 1 seed and the main attraction. He missed home runs on his first nine swings — and then proceeded to wallop 22 home runs, tying Soto. Ohtani was gassed after the round but returned to match Soto’s six home runs in what was supposed to be a tiebreaking round. Soto homered three times in a swing-off and Ohtani rolled over the first pitch, ending the matchup and leading to an ovation from a crowd that dissipated upon his departure.

On Tuesday, Ohtani pitched a scoreless first inning — including a fastball that sizzled at 100 mph — and wound up the victor as the AL beat the National League 5-2. He went 0-for-2 at the plate.

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New York Mets’ Pete Alonso beats Baltimore Orioles’ Trey Mancini in final round to repeat as Home Run Derby champion

DENVER — New York Mets slugger Pete Alonso became the third back-to-back Home Run Derby champion, edging out Baltimore Orioles first baseman Trey Mancini in the final round Monday night in front of an electric, sold-out crowd at Coors Field.

Mancini, who spent the 2020 season undergoing chemotherapy treatments after being diagnosed with colon cancer, entered with the second-longest odds of winning the event. But he beat Oakland Athletics first baseman Matt Olson and Colorado Rockies shortstop Trevor Story to advance to the final round, where he totaled 22 home runs.

Alonso followed Mancini in the final, hitting four home runs in his first six swings. He was at 12 when he took a timeout with 36 seconds remaining in his initial two minutes. He produced five more, reaching 17 entering his 60 seconds of bonus time, then hit six more within the next 29 seconds to finish with 23 home runs and capture the trophy, along with a bejeweled, spinning necklace.

Alonso also hit 23 home runs to beat Toronto Blue Jays star Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in the final round of the 2019 event. Last year’s All-Star Game and related festivities were canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Los Angeles Angels two-way sensation Shohei Ohtani, the event’s headliner and No. 1 seed, was eliminated by Washington Nationals star Juan Soto after an exhilarating first round that included two tiebreakers and a combined 61 home runs, 10 of which traveled 500-plus feet.

Ohtani started slow, producing only one home run in his first 16 swings. But he rallied late — thanks in part to an impromptu phone call from Angels teammate Mike Trout — and hit two home runs within the last 10 seconds of his round to tie Soto’s original total of 22. They each followed with six home runs in the one-minute tiebreaker. But Soto went 3-for-3 in the ensuing swing-off while Ohtani produced a hard grounder to the right side, ending his night.

This year’s Derby — a three-round, eight-player, bracket-style tournament with timed rounds — was staged in the sport’s most notoriously hitter-friendly ballpark, with baseballs that were not stored in the humidors that attempt to normalize the mile-high environment.

The first round showed that.

It produced 208 home runs, three of which exceeded the previous Derby record of 513 feet, set by New York Yankees star Aaron Judge in 2017. Statcast began tracking home run distances at the event six years ago.

Ohtani hit 15 home runs that traveled 475-plus feet, and Soto hit one 520 feet into the third deck in right-center. Kansas City’s Salvador Perez amassed 28 home runs, the most ever by a catcher, and he barely had a chance at advancing out of the first round. He lost to Alonso, who hit 35 home runs, third most in any Derby round.

Three of the four first-round matchups went down to the wire. Olson trailed Mancini by one, and his last swing produced a deep drive to right field that hooked foul. Texas Rangers outfielder Joey Gallo, who got hot late, was one shy of tying Story, but his last swing with time remaining produced a fly ball that fell shy of the center-field fence.

Story, who is expected to be traded before the end of the month, hit only 12 second-round homers, a total Mancini surpassed with relative ease.

Alonso was one shy of tying Soto’s second-round total of 15, then called timeout with a little over a minute left, declined a water, turned to hype up the crowd, continued to bop his head to the music and promptly hit two majestic home runs to advance into the final round.

He finished with 74 total home runs and joined Ken Griffey Jr. (1998-99) and Yoenis Céspedes (2013-14) in winning consecutive titles.

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Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani in rare company with upper-deck home run in Seattle’s T-Mobile Park

SEATTLE — Shohei Ohtani’s league-leading 33rd home run of the season Friday night put him in rare company in the history of the Seattle Mariners’ home ballpark.

Ohtani’s solo shot in the third inning off Marco Gonzales soared into the top deck of right field at T-Mobile Park. The Angels’ two-way phenom is the sixth player to reach the upper deck of the right-field seats since the stadium opened in 1999, according to the Mariners.

MLB’s Statcast projected the homer at 463 feet.

Ohtani’s blast left a buzz through the ballpark and caused a couple of fans sitting alone in that section of the stadium to duck as the ball drew closer. It landed above the fifth row of seats before hitting a concrete wall and ricocheting back down into the lower levels.

The Angels dugout erupted in excitement and disbelief after Ohtani’s left-handed swing. Justin Upton put his hands on his head in shock when it landed in the upper deck.

The homer is Ohtani’s 16th in the past 21 games, making him just the seventh player in MLB history to hit that many in a 21-game span within a single season. He joins Barry Bonds, Giancarlo Stanton, J.D. Martinez, Kyle Schwarber, Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa.

Ohtani is also the first player since Albert Pujols in 2006 to hit 33 or more homers in his first 82 games of a season. He’s on pace for 61 this season.

The others to have reached the upper deck at T-Mobile Park are Joey Gallo (2020), Daniel Vogelbach (2019), Nomar Mazara (2019), Carlos Delgado (2001) and Mo Vaughn (1999).

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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