The Capital

There’s 2 ways to look at it all

- By David Brandt

The two-way baseball superstard­om of Shohei Ohtani these past three seasons has been nothing short of absurd.

Tape-measure homers on the regular. Fastballs that hovered around 100 mph. Sometimes, just a few minutes apart.

In a sports world littered with questionab­le hyperbole, Ohtani’s on-field heroics lived up to every bit of the hype. It’s why there was a palpable sense of melancholy around the sport after the Angels announced that the 29-year-old Japanese sensation has a torn ligament in his elbow and won’t pitch again this season.

Ohtani planned to seek a second opinion before deciding if he’d have Tommy John surgery for the second time.

“A tough day for him,” Angels general manager Perry Minasian said when the news broke. “Tough day for all of us.”

In retrospect, the absurdity of Ohtani’s performanc­es and ability was only matched by the absurdity to think it could continue forever. There’s a reason the list of two-way baseball superstars is basically a two-man list: Babe Ruth and Ohtani.

Even Ruth didn’t do the two-way thing for long, and that was more than 100 years ago. The Babe was a legit pitcher and hitter in both 1918 and 1919 before becoming a fulltime hitter, swatting 714 homers. Still, with every highlight from the strapping 6-foot-4, 210-pound Ohtani, every effortless double off the wall, every overpoweri­ng strikeout, it felt like the limits of human performanc­e didn’t apply. Last month, Ohtani left a game with body cramps and was right back in the lineup the next day, prompting one beat writer to write that “maybe they just updated his software overnight.”

But even machines break down eventually.

Ohtani will still be a coveted free agent this winter — maybe the most coveted in baseball history — but there’s little doubt the injury could cost him millions of dollars. Some around the sport thought he might be baseball’s first $500 million man before the injury.

Now, something in the neighborho­od of Aaron Judge’s $360 million, nineyear deal seems a better baseline, though Ohtani has the added benefit of being a truly internatio­nal icon. There aren’t many people who can match Judge as a hitter, but Ohtani is in that discussion. And there’s also the possibilit­y that Ohtani returns to the mound. He’s certainly defied expectatio­ns before.

But here’s the truth: The list of successful pitchers following multiple Tommy John surgeries is pretty short.

Ohtani is batting .304 with a league-high 44 homers, 91 RBIs, 97 runs, seven triples and 17 stolen bases. He has a 10-5 record on the mound with a 3.14 ERA and 167 strikeouts in 132 innings while giving up just 85 hits.

That might be the best five-month performanc­e in baseball history. Hope you savored it — because it may never happen again.

If this is the end of Ohtani’s two-way dominance, it was quite a show.

But who knows? Betting against Ohtani seems unwise.

After all, doing the unfathomab­le is kind of his thing.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/AP ?? The Angels’ Shohei Ohtani stands in the on-deck circle in a game against the Reds on Wednesday in Anaheim, Calif.
MARK J. TERRILL/AP The Angels’ Shohei Ohtani stands in the on-deck circle in a game against the Reds on Wednesday in Anaheim, Calif.

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