Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

He’s ‘a treasure of Japan’

Ohtani gets hero’s welcome in return home for WBC

- By Stephen Wade

TOKYO — He’d paid about $80 for his ticket. He wore a Japan cap above a blue Los Angeles Angels jersey. And as he enthused about the sensation that is Shohei Ohtani, baseball fan Hotaru Shiromizo was talking about far more than sports.

Shiromizu, 23, was part of the quilt of thousands of colorfully dressed fans outside the Tokyo Dome on Thursday afternoon. They paced, they camped out, and they discussed their hopes of seeing Ohtani pitch — and hit — against China in Japan’s opening game in the World Baseball Classic.

“He’s a legendary player, but he’s more than just a good player,” Shiromizu said, using his translator app to help clarify a few thoughts in English. “His aspiration­s — his achievemen­ts — have had a positive influence on all Japanese people.”

He added: “All the kids want to be like Ohtani.”

Part of an evolution

He does things modern players don’t. He’s a throwback who pitches, bats and can play in the field. Many call him the finest player in the majors. If that’s the case, then he’s better than Americans — Latin Americans, too — at what they consider their own game.

He’s the culminatio­n — so far, at least — of an evolution in Japanese baseball that began when the game was introduced to the country in 1872 by an American professor. And his fame has now surpassed that of players like Ichiro Suzuki and Hideo Nomo, who came before him.

One of them could hit really well. One could pitch the same way. But Ohtani? He does both, and with more power — on the pitcher’s mound and at bat — than either Ichiro or Nomo.

“I suppose the idolizatio­n of Ohtani in Japan reflects its inferiorit­y complex vis a vis the fatherland of baseball that is the U.S.,” said Koichi Nakano, who teaches politics and culture in Tokyo at Sophia University.

“Baseball is so major here, but it has long been said that Japanese baseball, called yakyu, is different from ‘real’ baseball in America” Nakano said. “So each time where there is a Japanese ‘export’ that was successful in MLB, the Japanese are enthralled.”

The wait to see Ohtani play again in Japan is also driving the buzz around him — and the sellouts at the Tokyo Dome.

It had been almost 2,000 days since Ohtani played his last inning in Japan on Oct. 9, 2017, for the Nippon Ham-Fighters before leaving for California. That appearance drought ended in a practice game Monday when Ohtani hit a pair of three-run homers off the Hanshin Tigers.

Keiichiro Shiotsuka, a businessma­n waiting outside the stadium, called Ohtani “a treasure of Japan.”

Talent and character

Ohtani has a sterling reputation. No scandals. No tabloid stories about his social life. He’s overflowin­g with $20 million in endorsemen­ts, more than any other major leaguer. And he could sign the largest contract in baseball history — $500 million has been kicked around — when he becomes a free agent after this season.

Ohtani came out of Japan’s regimented baseball system at Hanamaki Higashi High School in largely rural Iwate prefecture in northeaste­rn Japan. The military-like system has its critics, but Ohtani is making it look good.

“Ohtani was raised in this Japanese, martial arts-inspired training system where you join a baseball team and you play yearround,” Robert Whiting, who has written several books on Japanese baseball and lived here off and on for 60 years, said in an interview last year with The Associated Press.

“Ichiro, in his first year in high school was probably the best player on the team, but he couldn’t play. He had to do the laundry and cook. He’d get up in the middle of night and practice his swing,” Whiting said. “The same thing with Ohtani. He was cleaning toilets in high school during his first year.”

In explaining how baseball took root in Japan, Whiting and others have pointed to the importance of a game in 1896 in Yokohama between Japanese and Americans. Japan won 29-4, and many of the players were from Samurai families.

The result was front-page news in Japan. The victory is thought to have given Japan confidence as it was modernizin­g, coming out of centuries of isolation, and showed it could compete against the industrial­ly advanced West.

On Thursday night, so many years later, Japan got itself more front-page baseball news. Ohtani allowed one hit in the four innings he pitched and struck out five, ending up as the winning pitcher in an 8-1 Japan victory. He also doubled off the left field wall in the fourth to score two. So fans like Shiromizu got what they came for — Ohtani pitching, hitting and not disappoint­ing the 41,616 who showed up.

“Ohtani is the latest of these idols, but he might be even bigger than any before,” said Nakano. He noted that only Ohtani hits and pitches both — just like the old-timers used to. “He is ‘Made in Japan,’ but more real now than America players.”

 ?? HARUKA NUGA/AP ?? A billboard showing pictures of Shohei Ohtani hangs near a train staion in the famed Shibuya shopping district in Tokyo.
HARUKA NUGA/AP A billboard showing pictures of Shohei Ohtani hangs near a train staion in the famed Shibuya shopping district in Tokyo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States