The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ohtani, Dodgers rally past Padres in MLB’s first game in South Korea

- By Stephen Wade

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — The Los Angeles Dodgers started their Shohei Ohtani era with a memorable win on a night of firsts.

Ohtani’s RBI single capped a four-run eighth-inning rally in his Dodgers debut, and Los Angeles beat the San Diego Padres 5-2 in Wednesday’s opener, Major League Baseball’s first game in South Korea.

“Just a good night overall for Shohei,” Dodgers man- ager Dave Roberts said. “The bigger picture, it’s significan­t because you’ve got such a generation­al talent that is on your ballclub in a big market in Los Angeles. There’s a lot more eyeballs on the Dodgers and on Major League Baseball.”

The game turned when a routine grounder went through the webbing of the glove of first baseman Jake Cronenwort­h as the go-ahead run scored.

Ohtani went 2-for-5 wi h an RBI in his first game since leav- ing the Los Angeles Angels for a record $700 million, 10-year contract with the Dodgers. A crowd of 15,952 was on hand at the Gocheok Sky Dome.

The two-way star, limited to batting following elbow sur- gery, also had a mental error that caused the final out of the eighth. He was called out when he passed second base and then failed to retouch the bag while retreating on Fred- die Freeman’s flyout, causing an inning-ending double play.

A bomb threat did not seem to affect pregame prepara- tions. Police found no explosives and said they acted on a tip that the threat was against Ohtani.

Padres pitchers wa ked nine and hit a batter, and the Dodgers had seven hits, none for extra bases.

San Diego led 2-1 enter- ing the eighth when Max Muncy started with a walk against Wandy Peralta. Teos- car Hernández, also making his Dodgers debut, singled off Jhony Brito (0-1), among the players the Padres obtained in the trade that sent star Juan Soto to the New York Yankees.

James Outman walked and Kiké Hernández’s sacrifice fly tied it. Adrián Morejón relieved and Gavin Lux hit a chopper to Cronenwort­h that the two-time All-Star tried to backhand. The ball went through the webbing of the large first baseman’s mitt. “It could have gone through nings before that. It just hap- pened at that situation and it sucks,” Cronenwort­h said. “I thought it was an easy double play.”

Hernández came home for a 3-2 lead.

“That’s a tough error for Cro,” Roberts said. “Fortu- nate break for us. You got to take them when you can get them.”

Betts and Ohtani followed with RBI singles.

Betts, Ohtani and Freeman became the first MVPs to hit 1-2-3 in a batting order since Philadelph­ia’s Joe Morgan, Pete Rose and Mike Schmidt during 10 games in 1983. The only other instances were by Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine, wi h Rose, Morgan and George Foster on May 13, 1978, and Rose, Morgan and Johnny Bench on May 5, 1976.

Betts, moved to shortstop this season, combined with Ohtani to go 4-for-9 at the top of the order.

Daniel Hudson (1-0), the third of five Dodgers pitch- ers, threw a one-hit seventh. Evan Phillips pitched a perfect ninth for the save, finishing a four-hitter that gave the Dodg- ers their sixth straight win over the Padres in an opener.

With new wife Mamiko Tanaka watching from the strands, Ohtani got his first hit wi h the Dodgers in a 112.3 mph single to right against Yu Darvish. Ohtani was at the plate in the first when Mookie Betts tried to steal second but was sent back because of umpire interferen­ce by Lance

Barksdale on Luis Campusano behind the plate.

Xander Bogaerts put the Padres ahead in the third wi h a run-scoring single off Tyler Glasnow. Bogaerts is the third player wi h hits in five nations after Edgardo Alfonzo and Paul Goldschmid­t, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Bogaerts also has hits in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and England.

Jason Heyward had a sacri- fice fly in the fourth, and San Diego went back ahead in the bottom half when Campusano hit a run-scoring dou- ble-play grounder.

Glasnow gave up two runs, two hits and four walks over five innings, throwing 77 pitches. Los Angeles acquired him from Tampa Bay in December and signed the 30-year-old right-hander to a $136.5 million, five-year contract.

“The whole day was kind of a grind,” Glasnow said. “Loud — cool atmosphere.”

Darvish allowed an unearned run and two hits in 3⅔ innings.

Muncy had the first hit of season, lining a single off the end of his bat in the second and into center.

Starting his 12th season, Bogaerts made his first big league appearance at sec- ond as Ha-Seong Kim moved to shortstop.

In the first game since MLB shortened the pitch clock wi h runners on base by two seconds to 18, Padres pitchers were called for four viola- tions, including two by Per- alta and one each by Darvish and Yuki Matsui.

Matsui, the fourth of eight San Diego pitchers, got two outs in the sixth inning. San Diego’s Ha-Seong Kim, play- ing in his native country, was 0-for-3 with a walk.

 ?? AP ?? L.A.’s Shohei Ohtani follows through as San Diego’s Luis Campusano looks on. Mookie Betts, Ohtani and Freddie Freeman were the first MVPs to hit 1-2-3 since 1983.
AP L.A.’s Shohei Ohtani follows through as San Diego’s Luis Campusano looks on. Mookie Betts, Ohtani and Freddie Freeman were the first MVPs to hit 1-2-3 since 1983.

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