Baltimore Sun

‘Made In Japan,’ embraced by America

Angels’ Ohtani doing things no other player has ever done

- By Stephen Wade

Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Angels is doing things no other player has ever done. His roots are deep in northeaste­rn Japan where he played high school baseball and got his start. High school baseball in Japan is highly competitiv­e and is run in a military-like fashion with countless practices with a focus on the developmen­t of spirit, teamwork and self-sacrifice. Ohtani took that background with him to the United States. Baseball was first introduced in Japan in 1872 and Ohtani is the product of 150 years of evolution that has also produced other top players like pitcher Hideo Nomo and outfielder Ichiro Suzuki.

TOKYO — Shohei Ohtani is doing things no other player has ever done, a point of pride for Japanese like Fumihiro Fujisawa.

Fujisawa is the president of the Associatio­n of American Baseball Research — similar in Japan to SABR, the Society for American Baseball Research. So he knows the numbers. But he has trouble recognizin­g Ohtani, who is built like a tight end in American football.

“In the last five years his body has become bigger and stronger. We see that he’s become an American — not a Japanese,” Fujisawa said.

There have been physical changes, added maturity and cultural adaptation­s. But make no mistake, Ohtani is “Made In Japan” — 100% — with roots deep in the Japanese countrysid­e.

American Robert Whiting, who has written bestseller­s about baseball in Japan, views Ohtani as the result of 150 years of baseball evolution. An American professor in Tokyo in 1872 introduced the game, which is known in Japanese as “yakyu,” or “field ball.”

Ohtani follows two other milestone players — pitcher Hideo Nomo, who joined the Dodgers in 1995, and Ichiro Suzuki, who has more than 3,000 hits and is likely headed to Cooperstow­n when he becomes eligible in 2025.

But there were always qualifiers with those two, and with others. When Nomo excelled, some dismissed him as only a pitcher. Japanese could pitch — they were technicall­y proficient — but couldn’t make it as position players. Then Ichiro came along. Well, he could hit but not for power.

Now comes Ohtani. He pitches, he has power and he’s one player, not two. No asterisks or footnotes needed.

“Ohtani can defeat Americans on their own terms, or the Latin Americans for that matter,” Whiting told the AP. “I mean, he’s bigger than most of them. He’s stronger than most of them, plus he’s pitching every five days and he’s hitting at the top of the order every day. You can make the argument that Ohtani is the best baseball player in the history of the game just because of what he did last year and this year. You could argue that he deserves to be MVP every year as a top-10 hitter and top-10 pitcher.”

No argument from Astros manager and AL All-Star manager Dusty Baker, for whom Ohtani will lead off as the designated hitter in Tuesday night’s All-Star Game.

“He’s not just an All-Star, he’s a megastar,” Baker said.

Whiting is the author of the bestsellin­g book “You Gotta Have Wa,” which looks at Japanese culture through the prism of sports. Another book, “The Samurai Way of Baseball,” follows the career of Ichiro, who was Japan’s most famous player until he retired in 2019. It was also titled “The Meaning of Ichiro.”

Ohtani came up in Japan’s highly regimented baseball system at Hanamaki Higashi High School in largely rural Iwate prefecture in northeaste­rn Japan. Blue Jays pitcher Yusei Kikuchi attended the same high school a bit earlier.

As a teenager, Ohtani constructe­d an 81-box developmen­t chart detailing his goals. The step-by-step process is well known in Japan, and so is Ohtani’s own chart. He lists baseball areas for improvemen­t, but also the mental and personal side.

He specifies, among other things, that to improve he needs to read books, clean the room, improve the slider, get the fastball up in the 100 mph range — and be trustworth­y.

“Ohtani was raised in this Japanese, martial arts-inspired training system where you join a baseball team and you play yearround. It’s not a seasonal thing like the States,” said Whiting, who has lived on and off for 60 years in Japan.

“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 the meals. He’d get up in the middle of night and practice his swing. The same thing with Ohtani. He was cleaning toilets in high school during his first year.”

This is not that unusual. Public schools in Japan have limited cleaning staffs, so students do it to learn discipline and humility.

Ichiro had an edge, often defying the convention­s of Japanese culture. The Japanese phrase “deru kugi wa utareru”’ captures him: “The nail that sticks up gets hammered down.”

Ohtani appears to be the opposite — polite, soft-spoken and discreet, a player whose only focus seems to be baseball. There are few reports about any social life.

“The guy is totally committed,” Whiting said. “It’s not too much to call him a modernday warrior monk.”

“In high school there are countless, endless practices and developmen­t of spirit and teamwork and self-sacrifice,” Whiting added. “That’s the essence of the martial arts. It’s the essence of Japanese life. You see it in the corporatio­ns, in the school systems. He grew up in a culture where there was a lot of discipline.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Shohei Ohtani hits a home run during a national high school baseball tournament on March 12, 2012, in Nishinomiy­a, western Japan.
AP FILE Shohei Ohtani hits a home run during a national high school baseball tournament on March 12, 2012, in Nishinomiy­a, western Japan.
 ?? AP FILE ?? Designated hitter Shohei Ohtani talks with third base coach Takayuki Onishi during a 2016 internatio­nal exhibition series against Mexico in Tokyo.
AP FILE Designated hitter Shohei Ohtani talks with third base coach Takayuki Onishi during a 2016 internatio­nal exhibition series against Mexico in Tokyo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States