Lodi News-Sentinel

Have Giants come up short in Ohtani race? Conflictin­g reports that a deal is in place

- Evan Webeck

The top-secret saga of the most-coveted free agent in baseball history took its wildest twist yet Friday, with conflictin­g reports emerging that Shohei Ohtani, the twoway megastar, had decided on his next team.

If J.P. Hoornstra of Dodgers Nation and formerly of the Southern California News Group, a partner of the Bay Area News Group, is to be believed, then the San Francisco Giants have come up short once again in their attempt to attract the game’s top talent on the open market.

Hoornstra cited anonymous sources Friday morning saying that Ohtani had made his decision and that the global sensation will expand his audience north of the border, eschewing the Giants and the perceived front-runners in Los Angeles for the Toronto Blue Jays. Multiple other reports, including ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez and

Ben Nicholson-Smith and Shi Davidi of SportsNet, quickly pushed back and said no decision had been made.

MLB Network’s Jon Morosi reported later Friday that Ohtani was, indeed, en route to Toronto, though no paperwork had been signed yet, only for that to be refuted hours later by a litany of other national reporters who said he had been home in Southern California all along.

Morosi said Thursday that a decision was “imminent” and expected “within 24 hours” while ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported that a decision was expected by the end of the weekend. If a deal is finalized Friday, it will come on the anniversar­y of Ohtani’s surprise decision to sign with the Angels in 2016.

In the void of informatio­n through traditiona­l sources, hawkeyed fans believed they tracked Ohtani on a private jet from Orange County’s John Wayne airport that was set to land in Toronto

Friday afternoon. The jet, it turned out, according to a CBC photograph­er who witnessed it land at Pearson Internatio­nal, was carry Canadian businessma­n Robert Herjavec, of “Shark Tank” fame.

Adding another bizarre twist to one of the most mysterious free agency sagas in history, a Toronto opera singer posted on social media that Blue Jays pitcher Yusei Kikuchi had made a reservatio­n for “50+” people at a Toronto sushi restaurant, a party that apparently didn’t include Ohtani.

The most tightly held secret of all? The name of his adorable dog, who appeared with him while accepting his MVP award on MLB Network. Rumor is, according to multiple reports, that it might have something to do with his desired destinatio­n.

The entire process has been shrouded in secrecy, reportedly at the request of

Ohtani, and no club, nor his agency, CAA, has formally announced a deal, which is expected to set records for North American sports, potentiall­y upward of $600 million or more.

The Giants, meanwhile, were believed to have made their pitch to the two-time MVP Saturday at Oracle Park, with a San Francisco Chronicle photograph­er capturing president Farhan Zaidi, manager Bob Melvin and part-owner Buster Posey departing the ballpark.

That came a day after Ohtani met with the Dodgers, according to the Orange County Register’s Bill Plunkett. Manager Dave Roberts also spilled the beans, sharing some details to reporters at the Winter Meetings, that they met for “two to three” hours, calling Ohtani “clearly our top priority.”

Departing the Winter Meetings, however, it appeared momentum had shifted north.

Blue Jays general manger Ross Atkins raised suspicions when his scheduled media availabili­ty Monday at the Winter Meetings was moved to Zoom, appearing in front of a white backdrop that gave no clues to his whereabout­s, and The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal later reported that he was

in Dunedin, Florida, hosting Ohtani at the club’s brand-new player developmen­t complex.

The consensus leaving the meetings was that Ohtani was down to at least the Blue Jays and Dodgers, with the Giants, Cubs and Angels on the periphery.

If their pursuit did, indeed, fall short, Ohtani’s name will merely be added for a second time to a list of second-runs for the Giants after previously falling short in pursuits of Aaron Judge last offseason, Bryce Harper in 2019, Giancarlo Stanton in 2018 and Ohtani’s initial posting in 2017.

One consolatio­n prize: he wouldn’t land with the division-rival Dodgers, long thought to be the favorites.

Still seeking the type of attraction they haven’t had since Barry Bonds, or at least Posey, Zaidi and Co. will turn their eyes elsewhere on the free-agent market, which is expected to heat up once the biggest domino has fallen. They haven’t been shy about their intentions.

“San Francisco’s a star-power town,” Melvin said in Nashville. “So I think we need some players, one, two or whatever, that the fans really identify with. Whether it was the Willie Mays days, the Barry Bonds days (or) Buster Posey, star power is important to San Francisco.”

 ?? KEVORK DJANSEZIAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Angels’ Shohei Ohtani (17) speaks with a Japanese television reporter after a win on May 21 in Anaheim.
KEVORK DJANSEZIAN/GETTY IMAGES The Angels’ Shohei Ohtani (17) speaks with a Japanese television reporter after a win on May 21 in Anaheim.

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