Los Angeles Times

Ohtani’s night is cut short

- jeff.miller@latimes.com Twitter: @JeffMiller­LAT

inning. After a second delay, this time 41 minutes in the top of the sixth, Ohtani was pulled.

“I was ready to go back out,” he said. “I wanted to go back out. But the medical staff told me that after two rain delays it’s not a great idea. I have to listen to them.”

Ohtani said he never had experience­d a rain delay before with many of the games in Japan being played in domes.

His final pitch of the game, to Jeimer Candelario, reached a season-high 101 mph and resulted in a ground ball to the mound.

He gave up one run and three hits, struck out out five batters and walked three.

In the third inning, though, Nicholas Castellano­s did something nearly as rare as what Ohtani is doing: He doubled off Ohtani’s split-finger pitch.

Before Wednesday, hitters were one for 44 in at-bats ending on the split-finger, the .023 average the lowest for any starter on any particular pitch in 2018.

After Ohtani departed, the game quickly unraveled for the Angels. In the span of 10 pitches, the Tigers had the bases loaded, Bedrosian giving up a single, a walk and hitting a batter.

After striking out Grayson Greiner, Bedrosian surrendere­d a two-run single to Jose Iglesias before being replaced by Jim Johnson.

“I just couldn’t locate my pitches,” Bedrosian said. “I just couldn’t get a grip on the breaking balls.”

The meltdown ended an impressive stretch for the Angels bullpen. Taking out Akeel Morris’ rough two innings in a mop-up role against Detroit on Monday, the relievers, over the previous 10 games, had a 0.93 earned-run average.

Even without factoring in the decision, Ohtani still did something notable, the sort of ridiculous developmen­t that during this season has become the routine.

This was unofficial­ly, but almost certainly, the first time that a player, in the morning, appeared on the initial All-Star ballot as a hitter and that night started as a pitcher.

Ohtani’s candidacy figures to be a compelling story over the next few weeks, the rookie expected to generate massive interest in the U.S. and Japan.

He could be voted in by the fans as a designated hitter or, if not, selected by the players, coaches and managers as a hitter or a pitcher. There’s also a second fan vote that picks the final All-Star on each roster.

Given his performanc­e and his popularity, Ohtani would seem to be a natural to be on the American League team, something that would render this sloppy, rain-marred game a mere afterthoug­ht.

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