The Palm Beach Post

Ohtani electrifie­d in his spring debut for Dodgers

- Bob Nightengal­e

PHOENIX – Well, just in case anyone was wondering whether Shohei Ohtani could possibly live up to the hype, in one glorious afternoon Tuesday he had Dodgers fans reveling, teammates marveling and his manager running out of superlativ­es.

One swing.

One sky-high, fly ball.

One opposite-field homer.

That’s all it took to remind everyone why the Dodgers dropped $700 million on the generation­al talent.

Ohtani, who until eight days ago had not faced even batting practice off a pitcher since last September, stepped up and hit a towering home run in his final swing of the day as he made his Dodgers debut against the Chicago White Sox.

“It’s remarkable, it really is,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “Obviously, there’s been so many huge moments for him in his career, and he always seems to rise to those moments.”

In his first game since undergoing elbow surgery last September, Ohtani struck out on three pitches in his first atbat. He grounded into a double play in his second at-bat. And then he hit a 377foot home run deep into the Arizona sky, 102 mph off his bat, over the left-field fence off White Sox reliever Dominic Leone.

The big fella is back.

“It was definitely a big first step,” Ohtani said.

And a huge step for Dodgers-kind. It may have been just a meaningles­s spring training game on the schedule (the Dodgers won 9-6), but everyone in that Dodgers clubhouse knew when they arrived this would be an exhibition game like no other.

Ohtani, wearing a white sweater, black pants and a backwards baseball cap on his head, walked to his locker at 8:35 in the morning. Heads turned, conversati­ons stopped, and the man of the hour was the focus of the day.

“Even when Ohtani just goes out there for a stretch,” teammate T.J. McFarland says, “you get this uproar. It’s cool. It brings excitement to the game.”

There may have been just 6,678 tickets sold for the mid-week game, but there were an estimated 40 million fans in Japan, MLB officials said, getting up at 5 a.m. to catch Ohtani’s first plate appearance in a Dodgers uniform.

Oh, how life has changed since Ohtani’s first spring-training game in 2018 with the Los Angeles Angels.

“It was obviously a lot different,” Ohtani said, “because six years ago, seven years ago, I had no idea what I was really doing. But now, I kind of got the hang of it.”

You think?

Ohtani was just a novelty in those days, a young player from Japan trying to become a two-way player.

Today, he is baseball’s modern-day Babe Ruth, capturing our imaginatio­n — and leaving us wondering just how lethal the Dodgers’ offense can be.

Roberts ended the mystery of where Ohtani would bat in his star-studded lineup this season by opting to go with Mookie Betts in the leadoff spot, followed by Ohtani, Freddie Freeman and Will Smith.

The last team to have three former MVPs bat consecutiv­ely in a regularsea­son game was the 1996 Boston Red Sox with Mo Vaughn, Jose Canseco and Kevin Mitchell.

“I just have a good feeling,” Roberts said, breaking into a wide grin, “there’s more to come.”

 ?? TOMAS DINIZ SANTOS ?? Dolphins lineman Liam Eichenberg participat­es in the Dolphins Challenge Cancer.
TOMAS DINIZ SANTOS Dolphins lineman Liam Eichenberg participat­es in the Dolphins Challenge Cancer.
 ?? Columnist USA TODAY ??
Columnist USA TODAY

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