Hartford Courant (Sunday)

When it comes to video games, Soto doesn’t mind striking out

- By Gary Phillips

When A.J. Preller informed Juan Soto that he had been traded to the Yankees, the Padres general manager reached a preoccupie­d 25-year-old.

“When I received that call, I was actually playing Nintendo with my friends,” Soto said over an introducto­ry Zoom call in December. “It’s one of my hobbies to play video games and to spend time with my friends and have a good time.”

Perhaps Soto was using the console to take his mind off the trade rumors that had been swirling since the end of the 2023 season and throughout the Winter Meetings. However, the slugger doesn’t always use video games to get away from baseball.

The three-time All-Star considers MLB: The Show, a PlayStatio­n staple, to be the game he’s best at. Big surprise there.

But instead of launching home runs as his digitized self, Soto prefers a challenge that drives real-life pitchers crazy.

“I like to face myself and strike him out,” a laughing Soto told the Daily News. “Unless I’m winning by a lot! If I’m winning by a lot, I put it right in the middle so the guy can hit it and feel good about myself.”

The lefty swinger, known for his elite ability to control the zone, added that he’s easier to K in the video game than he is in major league games.

Soto would not reveal his go-to sequence for striking himself out, as he feared he might provide useful informatio­n to pitchers that he has to face in the real world.

“I cannot give you that!” he said, his tone comical and serious all at once.

So The News decided to ask the Yankees’ undisputed video game expert what he would do to get Soto out.

“In The Show? I don’t know,” Tommy Kahnle said. “But in real life, he got me the first time I faced him. I didn’t really know who he was. I knew he was just a young, upcoming kid. And a first-pitch fastball, he took me off the wall. And then the next at-bat was in the playoffs. Three changeups, strike out!”

Kahnle, thankful that he no longer has to face Soto on the mound, reasoned that he would probably attack him the same way in The Show if he were pitching as himself. His changeup is his No. 1 weapon, after all.

Speaking of weapons, Soto’s hobby is not limited to baseball. He also plays Call of Duty, though not as much as he used to.

“I’m not on [Blake] Snell’s level,” Soto said, referring to his ex-Padres teammate and a known Twitch streamer. “He’s crazy good. I was good, but I stopped playing it for a little bit and they changed the game.

“Now I’m bad. I haven’t played in a while.”

It’s unusual to hear Soto say he’s bad at something, but COD isn’t the only game that gives him fits. He said that FIFA is “the game I’m worst at.”

“I like to play everything,” Soto said, adding that NBA 2K is also in rotation. “I tell the guys I play everything. I’m average in everything. I’m not really good at one, but I’m average.”

At this point, some Yankees fans may be worrying that Soto spends too much time playing video games.

However, he doesn’t bring them into the clubhouse. Rather, it’s an activity reserved for the end of the work day when Soto has returned home or to a hotel.

“When I’m here, I’m focusing on one thing: how we figure out how to win a game,” he said. Bringing video games to the clubhouse, I don’t think that’s gonna be good for me. I don’t know, maybe for somebody else it works. It helps them out to, I don’t know, relieve some stress.”

Kahnle has a noticeably different approach.

While the reliever’s young children cut into his video game habits over the winter, the long baseball campaign offers plenty of downtime. Kahnle often spends it with a suitcase-like gaming station. When it folds open, the top half houses a TV, while the bottom half stores a PlayStatio­n, controller­s, games and other accessorie­s.

During the season, Kahnle can often be seen playing the system in front of his locker before games. It’s as much a must-have on road trips as his favorite glove, and it’s a hit on team flights.

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP ?? The Yankees’ Juan Soto stands in the dugout before a spring training game against the Red Sox on March 13 in Tampa, Fla.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP The Yankees’ Juan Soto stands in the dugout before a spring training game against the Red Sox on March 13 in Tampa, Fla.

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