Shohei Ohtani: Beyond the Dream (2023)

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Shohei Ohtani: Beyond the Dream (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

[rock music playing,

Queen "We Will Rock You"]

[commentator 1]

Shohei Ohtani, he has done it, wow.

[commentator 2]

Shohei, the unicorn, does it again.

[commentator 3]

This guy's from another planet.

[commentator 4]

With the paint on the four-seamer at 98.

[commentator 5] Dive. On turn!

Right field, a b*llet! And go!

[commentator 6]

He's the modern-day Babe Ruth.

Buddy, you're a boy, make a big noise

Playing in the street

gonna be a big man someday

You got mud on your face,

you big disgrace

Kicking your can all over the place,

singin'

We will, we will rock you

We will, we will rock you

We will, we will rock you

[commentator 7]

Ohtani, a laser and it's gone.

[commentator 8] Ohtani got it. He got it.

[commentator 9] Oh, out call.

[commentator 9 exclaims]

[commentator 10] First ball swinging,

and first pitch crushing.

Got him!

[commentator 11]

Seven incredible innings on the mound

and he just smashes a baseball a mile.

[commentator 12] Shotime.

[crowd cheering]

[music stops]

[Martnez]

Shohei Ohtani is the only player

in modern MLB history

with over 10 pitching wins, 40 homers,

and 15 stolen bases in the same season.

As the sole All-Star to be selected

as a designated hitter and pitcher,

his strikeout and home run count

surpassed records

set by Babe Ruth decades ago.

This is the story

of the most unique player

in baseball history.

[serene music playing]

Born in 1994,

Shohei Ohtani grew up in a small town

in Iwate, Japan.

No one expected a legend in the making

to come from such a rural area.

[Martnez]

This is where his journey began.

[birds chirping]

[Martnez] As a kid,

Shohei watched Major League Baseball

and dreamed of playing there one day.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[commentator 1] Unemotional Ichiro Suzuki.

And a ground ball back at the middle,

and there it is,

he's the new All-time Hit King

in Major League history number 258.

- My, oh, my.

- [crowd cheering]

[commentator 2] Tonight,

it was Hideki Matsui who delivered.

[commentator 3] Randy Johnson

has thrown a perfect game.

[commentator 4]

Pedro Martnez is on the mound.

[commentator 5]

Barry Bonds has hit more home runs

than anyone who has ever played the game.

[commentator 6]

That may be in the upper deck.

A mammoth home run by Ken Griffey Jr.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[commentator] Around the horn of the bases

from third to first, Matsui steps up.

Getting to start on the left field tonight

at 259 average with 9 home runs.

41 runs

[Shohei on recording]

[laughs]

[chuckles]

[commentator in English]

Because, he said, "Well, you're right,

I wasn't feeling well.

[Martnez] In 2009,

Shohei watched Matsui and I

face off in the World Series.

[commentator]

to the left-handed hitting DH.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[crowd cheering]

[commentator] Pedro's pitch to Matsui.

And a flyball in the right, down the line.

Gone. Two-nothing, New York.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[soft grunt]

[commentator 1] Five strikeouts already.

Michael Busch, the batter.

Swing and a miss.

Michael Busch gets blown away with 100.

[indistinct shouting]

[commentator 2] Lowest opening average

in March and April since 1920s.

So over 100 years. Minimum 770 innings.

And Shohei Ohtani

is at the top of the list.

Look at the names on there,

like Pedro Martnez and Bob Feller.

- One, two. Eddie?

- [Eddie] Yes, he wins. Yeah.

[commentator 2] Yes, he did.

[commentator 3] Shohei Ohtani is

on the mound tonight

and could be the right guy on the mound,

certainly for the halos tonight.

There's the fastball getting a check swing

and a miss for strike three.

[commentator 4] Shohei tying Babe Ruth

on the all-time strikeout list

as far as the pitcher and hitter.

Babe Ruth both at 501,

two-way stars The Babe and Shohei.

[commentator 5]

Think Shohei is going to beat it.

Pea swings and misses.

Nasty sweeper from Shohei.

Second strikeout for Ohtani.

[commentator 6] Passes Babe Ruth now,

two-way stars

on the all-time strikeout list.

[commentator 5] Really, nothing like it

in the history of Major League Baseball.

[commentator]

Starting pitcher. Announcers. Fans.

You got to love what you saw here tonight.

Goes for the high fastball.

Strikeout number 17 for Pedro Martnez.

[chuckles]

I'm really, really proud to see

where he comes from

and how he actually had that dream

from so far out.

[Martnez] I grew up just like Shohei.

Just like that, open fields.

I was also very free to move around.

I'd like to be outside,

exposed to nature and free spirit.

But I also had the dream

of becoming a baseball player.

You know who really deserve

a lot of credit?

I think it's his parents,

for educating this kid.

I mean, make him so committed

to what he wanted.

[Shohei in Japanese]

Mm.

[Shohei murmurs]

[Kuriyama in Japanese]

[suspenseful music playing]

[commentator] The 3-2.

- Ohtani hits it hard and a diving s*ab.

- [crowd cheering]

From his D's, the throw, not in time.

Ohtani, big, strong and he's too fast.

[Martnez] As a freshman in high school,

Shohei mapped out his goals

on a "dream board".

His dream was to be drafted first

by eight pro teams,

which he planned to achieve

by perfecting eight factors of his game,

each with eight smaller goals.

This included physicality, mentality,

luck, control,

and humanity amongst others.

It's quite impressive.

I'm more impressed about this,

about how he had it in his mind

before then

than what he's doing.

Because it's hard to draw your dream

and go and achieve it.

[Martnez] I-I wish, I wish I could have.

But I never thought about it.

I I had so many uncertainties

when it came to baseball

and it wasn't easy.

And I know it's not easy for him,

but this is quite impressive

to draw your dream

in a piece of paper

and especially at such a young age.

It's... It's probably more impressive

than the things he's doing in baseball.

Wow. This should be

in the Hall of Fame already.

This should be in the Hall of Fame.

[awkward chuckle]

[chuckles]

[laughs]

Oh

[chuckles]

[commentator] He struck him out.

CC Sabathia with a complete game shut out,

and this is his sixth complete game

as a New York Yankees

Obviously writing this down

and being able to, you know,

to execute this plan is amazing.

I mean, I read everything he wrote down,

arm care and, you know, flexibility

and stability and all those things

that he has written down on that paper.

He's going to be in that

MVP Cy Young race every single year

and will definitely lead him

to the Hall of Fame.

[sucks teeth]

What led to him kinda draw in his dream.

And how is he able to put it all together,

did he know his body that well?

Did he know, uh, that he was going to be

that kind of athlete?

I... I'm so intrigued to know

how he prepared himself so well.

[chuckles]

[Martnez] At six, Shohei wrote

that his favorite sport was baseball.

His dream job was to be a baseball player.

And as an adult, he wanted to be ordinary.

[players shouting indistinctly]

When I was reading, I

[stutters]

I said this is not, you know, normal.

And certainly he's not just anybody.

He's not normal.

Now, I'm intrigued to really,

really get to know Shohei.

[Martnez] At 18, Shohei was scouted

to be a pitcher in the US.

However, a pro team in Japan made an offer

that caught his attention.

He was given the opportunity

to be both a pitcher and a hitter,

something that hadn't been seen

in over decades.

I think when you really look

at that decision in 18,

and not a lot of people

put a weight on it,

but I do and I know Shohei does.

[Balelo] That was a big decision.

And I really believe that there could

have been two paths in a player's career.

I really do.

I think it's that sliding door

and it's door A or it's door B.

And they allowed him to enter door A.

And start in the big leagues,

and then we saw the rest from there.

Did very well.

But if he would have been in door B,

and he would have started possibly

in the minor leagues,

we have no idea

what could have come from this.

They might have labeled him

just as a pitcher, just as a hitter.

We might have not been able to see

this special situation develop

the way it did.

[upbeat music playing]

[Shohei in Japanese]

[deep breath]

Ah

[Matsui in Japanese]

[commentator] And to the count.

Darvish sets the pitch

in their strike three called

[Balelo] You know,

there's 30 teams over here

and all 30 teams scout

what we call the Pacific Rim.

And, uh, it was pretty well-advertised

that Shohei was really looking

to come over

and play in Major League Baseball.

And he really had a strong desire

out of high school

before he became a Fighter, to come over.

Mr. Kuriyama had a very good rapport

with Shohei and the family,

and so they came to an understanding

that whenever Shohei felt like

it was time to come over

and get an opportunity

to play in the United States,

that they would grant him and honor that,

you know, his wishes to come over.

And his story was a great story.

Nobody wants to grow up

just being a pitcher.

If you look at, you know,

youth sports and high school baseball,

the best player is usually the shortstop,

the pitcher, the best hitter

and all these different things in one.

And like I said, I mean, you know,

he's making it so kids

don't have to choose

and, you know, making it so kids can be,

you know, both

and pursue that dream as, you know,

being a dual, a hitter and a pitcher,

because that's how you start playing

the game.

And that is our dream as kids

is to, you know, hit home runs

and to strike guys out.

And this guy is both in one.

So, you know, he's living out,

I think, every baseball player's dream.

[Matsui hesitates]

Maybe at a tournament it could happen.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[sighs]

[Shohei on recording]

[Kuriyama on recording]

[camera shutters clicking]

[Shohei in Japanese]

[Shohei on recording]

[Darvish in Japanese]

[Darvish in Japanese]

[CC Sabathia] Like I said,

I mean, him being able to play

those, those first couple of years

in Japan as a hitter and a pitcher

to set him up perfectly

to be able to come over here

and have the confidence

and have the routine

to know what he's doing,

to be able to do both of those things

at a high level.

So I think, you know,

he did the perfect thing

of not coming over here when he was 18,

right out of high school,

and being able to develop and learn

how to have the right routine

to come over here

and make this impression on everybody.

[crowd chanting]

[crowd roaring]

[commentator in Japanese]

102.5 mph, a new record!

[crowd cheering]

[upbeat music playing]

[crowd cheering]

[Martnez] At the Nippon-Ham Fighters,

Shohei broke boundaries and records

in hopes of one day making it

to the majors.

[bird chirping]

He must have been really, uh, confident.

Normally, you don't

you don't know what's going to happen.

You're not confident.

You can dream about it

and chase your dream.

But I guess Shohei was unique

every time he thought about

what he wanted to do

because sometimes we want it.

Yes, we want it,

but not all the time we get it.

Hmm

[chuckles]

I don't know what it feels like to be him.

He's the first guy to do what he's doing.

I was trying to convince the Cubs

that we could do it

in a National League setting,

you know, where that he can both pitch

and play the outfield,

which you would have had to have done

to do that.

[Joe] A lot of people were just skeptical

of all that stuff.

I don't know.

I mean, here's a guy that came here

for a specific reason

and everybody had spoken with,

talks about him being one

of the best players they've ever seen.

So my, as a manager of the Cubs

at that time,

my evaluation process

was how do we get them,

get them to do both things

in the National League.

He signed up for a reason.

This is what he does.

And he could pitch and also hit.

Everybody was shying away from that.

I didn't want I didn't get it.

Quite frankly, I didn't get it.

Everybody was willing to at least explore

the idea of allowing him to do both.

Because it's not like

he hasn't done it before.

He was successful in Japan doing both.

He had the ability to and we were going

to let him try to be a two-way player.

And I think that was important to Shohei.

How did Shohei

How did he make the decision?

[Balelo] You know

why did he choose the Angels?

I don't know.

You're going to have to ask Shohei that.

[murmurs]

You'll have to talk to Shohei.

He has that answer.

In our meetings with Shohei, with Nez, um,

we were very upfront, very honest,

and what we felt about Shohei,

we absolutely felt

that he was a two-way player,

or I'm not sure if other teams

had that in mind or not.

I really couldn't answer that.

You know,

Shohei has been asked that question,

and his answer is, "I just felt it.

You know, I just felt like

it was the right place for me."

And he felt comfortable.

Um good people.

Good location.

You know, maybe the right division.

You know, there's all kinds of things.

But at the end of the day,

he was open to playing on the East Coast.

He was open to playing

in the middle of the country.

He was open to playing on the West Coast.

And, um, I can honestly say that

he really was,

because when you think about the teams

that he ended up narrowing it down to

half were NL teams and half were AL teams.

Actually, it was more on NL

than there was on the AL side, I believe.

So, um

And that was before the DH rule.

So an NL team that was going to get Shohei

would be looking at him as a pinch hitter

and allowing him to hit while he pitched.

He was gonna be limited at that point,

unless he picked up a glove,

went to the outfield,

or maybe went to first base.

So that was something an NL team

was going to have to juggle a little bit,

knowing that the DH rule

was possibly coming.

And eventually it did.

[light upbeat music playing]

[Martnez] After five years in Japan,

Shohei finally decided to come to the US.

He had chosen the Los Angeles Angels.

[upbeat music intensifies]

Thank you very much.

And, uh, Shohei, welcome.

Thank you.

[crowd cheering, clapping]

[crowd cheering]

[in English]

Hi. My name is Shohei Ohtani.

[crowd cheering]

He's 23 years old.

So there's a lot of growth there,

both on the physical side,

on the mental side,

and on his baseball side

He struggled his first spring training

in 2018, really struggled.

[Balelo] Uh, what he does is

very difficult and challenging.

But it was Shohei was the one saying,

"I'm going to go ahead

and play this thing out." And he did.

[hopeful music playing]

It's hard to play Major League Baseball,

right?

But it's even harder

when you come to a foreign land

and don't know the language

and you're trying to navigate

all of that stuff.

[CC Sabathia]

You have to give these guys credit.

The guys from the DR,

the guys from the Asian countries

that come over here

and can perform at a high level

in a foreign place

without knowing the language

and really understanding, you know,

things, the first couple of years.

Like even my transition

from coming from Vallejo, California,

to, you know, on these big stages,

whether it was Cleveland,

Milwaukee or New York.

It was a hard transition.

You know what I'm saying?

It's a hard thing to get used to.

And for us as teammates,

you have to have sympathy

and understand what these guys

are going through

and try to help out as much as you can

to help our team win.

When you come from a totally different

culture, totally different league,

and you have to come over,

it's a daunting task.

There's always a question of,

you know, "Can I do this?",

no matter how talented you are.

He's a non-roster guy at this point.

Remember,

he signed a minor league contract

because he came out early from Japan,

so they could have easily sent him

to Triple-A to go find himself.

A lot of people doubted him.

There were a lot of media.

There were a lot of people.

A lot of industry people that said,

"Wait a second, he's not getting it done."

On their first take and their first

glimpse of him in spring training in 2018

when he had that first opportunity

to start in Oakland.

[clicks tongue]

We saw Shohei Ohtani.

[electronic music playing]

[crowd cheering, clapping]

[commentator 1]

Now the one, two. Swing and a miss.

Down goes Semien, one down.

[commentator 2] But that's how good.

And I'm sure Xavi is very impressed now.

So Ohtani goes after the first pitch

he sees as a major leaguer,

and he's got himself a base hit.

So Shohei Ohtani does not

We wouldn't have maybe

had that opportunity

if he was with a different organization

that said, "You know what,

he needs a little more seasoning."

[Balelo] You know, the rest is history.

[suspenseful music playing]

[crowd cheering]

[CC Sabathia]

If he comes to the New York Yankees

and we're in Tampa,

and he struggles as a hitter

that first year in spring training,

they immediately just put him on the mound

and like, "Hey, you're just a pitcher.

You know, the bat doesn't play here,

and we're just going to keep you

on the mound."

Him going to Anaheim and, you know,

not being a huge, huge media presence

and him being able to like, you know,

figure out his swing over here

and kind of get rid of the leg kick

and just, you know, go from,

you know, just with the heel,

like kind of like the little heel tap,

I think that helped out big time.

And, you know, his developing and being

able to turn into what he's turned into,

which is what I think is,

you know, probably one of the best

baseball players ever.

I think those decisions

have set him on that course.

[birds chirping]

I just think we saw the talent.

Shohei didn't really need

any major overhauls.

And I think the biggest thing was

we didn't want to put too much on him

until he felt comfortable.

Shohei evolved the way you would expect

a young player to evolve.

He just didn't go from here to here.

He went from here to here

and will continue to grow.

And it's easy for people

to maybe look at this and possibly,

um

criticized the decision because he hasn't

been in the postseason in five years.

But, you know, things happen for reasons.

And I believe that

his choice was the right choice

at the time,

and it could be the right choice

for the rest of his career.

And if you're not in the right clubhouse

or in the right organization,

it could be, you know, um,

not a great experience.

I struggled to be who I was in baseball.

And, uh

I can only tell you

that my dream was unexpected.

At the time I came up,

there were a lot of doubts.

And I couldn't help

but to second-guess myself,

my height, my size, my abilities.

Based on what others said,

I became a little bit shy, uh,

I became less confident.

I I was humbled by the game,

I was humbled by other people,

but I I never let go of my dream.

That was the biggest thing I ever did,

was to never quit.

And I was close and I thought about it,

but I'm glad I didn't.

[sucks teeth]

Hm

[clears throat]

Coming from where I came from,

I grew up where I played baseball.

It was nothing but Black kids.

I mean, we played,

we were really good too.

We played at a high level,

but there was only people

that looked like me,

and I get to the minor leagues

and there's nobody on my team

that looked like me.

And as I even go up even higher,

then there's nobody even around

that looks like me, you know?

So, yeah, I mean, it's tough

and I speak the language,

so I can only imagine coming here

from the DR

or coming here from Japan or Korea

and trying to fit in and play baseball.

Like it's it's-it's pretty rough.

It's pretty hard.

So the fact that

we have the translators now,

we have the different things in place

that can help, you know, um,

guys throughout the minor leagues

and even in the big leagues,

I think it's a big change in baseball,

and from what I've seen in the 25 years

that I've been in the game.

[sighs]

[commentator 1]

Heads out toward the right-center field.

Going back on it is Zimmer.

-At the wall, goal!

- [crowd cheering]

Big fly, Ohtani-san!

[commentator 2] Shohei Ohtani!

His first major league home run!

[crowd cheering]

[uplifting music playing]

[commentator 1]

We felt something magical tonight.

He showed it on Sunday.

[chuckles]

Uh

[Shohei sucks teeth]

[Shohei in Japanese]

But I think when it's your dream

and it's something

that you've been striving for

and it's your goal, um,

in your mind you're ready.

You know what I mean?

So you just, you're gonna take on

any challenge that comes with, you know,

your dream of being

the best baseball player,

you know, that you can be.

[light music playing]

[Martnez] Even then,

Shohei's path in the majors

was filled with twists and turns.

[commentator 1]

Aberdeen shortstop position to win.

- Omar Vizquel got...

- [screams]

[commentator 2] Got him in the elbow.

[commentator 1]

He is a right-handed thrower

and is a left-handed batter.

You expose that throwing arm

to a pitch inside.

[commentator 3]

That's it for Ohtani, 66 pitches tonight.

I didn't get to experience

his great pitching

because he hurt his arm his first year.

And it happened pretty quickly in a game

where all of a sudden his velocity dropped

and didn't show a lot of pain,

but the ball wasn't coming out of his hand

and it didn't take long

for the diagnosis to come

that he needed Tommy John surgery.

But he still, he still wanted to hit,

and, um, he hit up

until almost the end of the season.

Shohei was the one saying,

"I'm not getting this surgery yet.

I'm gonna go ahead

and play this thing out." And he did.

And he had a big month,

and it could have made the difference,

uh, to be rookie of the year.

[in English]

To all the Angles fans, thank you.

Hopefully I will not need this cheat sheet

the next time I'm up here.

Thank you.

- [audience clapping]

- [uplifting music playing]

[Balelo] And that tells you a lot

about his character

and his drive

and his passion wanting to play

and see the year through.

And it was the right decision.

There's gonna be moments where his body

is not going to respond like he wants.

You can have perfect mindset.

You can have perfect mechanics,

but there are days where your body

just says no, you cannot execute,

fastball in, fastball away,

slider or changeup.

[commentator] Look at this.

This is a guy that used to throw 98

to 100 miles an hour.

And these are the baby steps

that you don't see

and we don't see as fans.

We're saying,

"Well, the guy had Tommy John

and he'll be back by July and August."

I mean, it's amazing to watch this guy

from like, what, 15 or 20 feet

-tossing that baseball.

- [machine clunks]

[Shohei in Japanese]

[sucks teeth]

I mean, 2020, let's just call it

was a very rough year in general.

And when you take a player

out of his routine in his element,

it's tough to be successful.

So 20 was a rough year,

and that was Joe's first taste of Shohei.

In 2020,

because there was a lot of issues,

he had coming off injuries

and he wasn't quite the same.

But 2021, um, it was, it became more

[clicks tongue]

galvanized through our conversations,

how we're gonna do this.

- And it worked out pretty well.

- [machine thuds]

[chuckles nervously]

[chuckles nervously]

Quite frankly, Sho,

I never doubted that you could.

[Joe] I didn't, um

Uh, when he came back,

2021 spring training,

was a totally different player.

I mean, I'd seen him in 2020.

Things weren't quite right.

His hitting was off.

His throwing off was off.

His throwing motion was off.

But he came here for a reason.

You came here for a reason.

So for me, it was my responsibility

to make this work.

There was never any doubt, um,

about wanting to do it

from my perspective,

I thought I had to convince other people

to give it an opportunity or try.

So Sho, for me, absolutely,

everything I said to you

was from my heart, always will be,

and I thought you can do it

and of course you have.

[Shohei on recording]

Uh

The fact that he thought we were there

to tell him or ask him to not do that,

um, I guess I am surprised

because that's the reason,

that's the point about asking questions

or having conversations.

Sometimes you have the absolute wrong idea

or impression

of what somebody's thinking.

But it tells you the type of person

Shohei is, extremely humbled.

Like what are they coming in to tell me

when they're thinking,

okay, we need you to be this guy

and do both

and go out and run with it.

But he's thinking,

are they gonna shut it down?

Are they gonna just shut me down

on doing both?

So, I love the humbled approach by Shohei,

but clearly that was never mentioned.

It was never even a thought,

and, um, oh, maybe it was one

of their thoughts,

but it was never expressed to me.

Um, but yeah, they did just take off

all the restrictions

and the restrictions were

you know, certain rest days, pitch counts,

you know,

there were a lot of things

that days off after before, you know,

it was just, it was just too much.

[Balelo] It was simply put,

- Shohei is gonna do what he's gonna do.

- [crowd cheering]

We ask one thing, communicate with Joe.

Joe communicate with Shohei.

If he's tired, he'll tell you he's tired.

He needs a day.

If not, let him go. Let him out there.

That's what they did.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[inhales sharply, grunts]

[Shohei in Japanese]

[Joe] He observes everything.

He weighs everything

that comes in his direction.

So as a manager, you better understand

from the beginning, um,

he's not gonna come.

He's never gonna be disrespectful, ever.

Uh, but everything you say to him,

he's gonna take it in and evaluate it.

Um

And again, always with due respect

to whomever, it's whoever his manager is,

and I'm here to tell you,

I don't even know if he'd admit it.

There's times he absolutely disagreed

with whether it was me or somebody else.

But he'll keep it to himself.

He listens to everything.

He sees everything

just like he does in the game of baseball.

He takes it all in.

He never speaks too quickly.

He never speaks fast.

It's very, I'm not, the word,

it's not guarded, it's evaluated.

Everything he does is evaluated.

[Balelo] That's the way he operates.

He looks at everything.

If there's nine negative things

and then there's that one positive,

he's looking at that positive

and running with it

and trying to make the most of that

to offset the other nine negative.

Here's the real question.

If Shohei did not like

any of his managers,

the question is

would he say anything about it?

I don't think so.

[commentator] go nuts if he goes deep.

We felt something magical tonight.

He showed it on Sunday.

[crowd cheering]

Amazing. Absolutely amazing.

[commentator laughs]

[Balelo] Because the thing

that Shohei does best

is enjoys the game like he loves the game,

and he plays it with tremendous passion,

and I never want

to take that away from him.

I don't want anything

to get in the middle of that.

Hmm

[Shohei in Japanese]

Hmm.

Yeah, I wasn't like Shohei.

[chuckles]

And I appreciate him, um,

you know, sacrificing his life

to give us a great show.

You know what I mean? I appreciate that.

[CC Sabathia] But if you looked at me

during my career,

you can see I was always thinking

about other stuff.

[chuckles]

Baseball was just something that I did,

and I was really good at

and I loved to do,

but it wasn't kind of who I was, you know?

I mean, me and my wife

got married really young.

I had kids really early

and that those distractions

helped me be a great baseball player.

Like me having a life outside of baseball

really helped me

because if I would have just locked in

on baseball,

this is one thing like I'm too obsessive

and I would have,

I wouldn't have last very long.

I would have burnt out.

So having my wife, having kids,

having other things

that I'm super interested in

outside of baseball,

that helped me be a great player.

[Darvish in Japanese]

[pensive music playing]

[Martnez] Despite all the hardships,

Shohei persevered.

[machine clunks]

[commentator 1] Got it, got it, got it!

[commentator 2]

Oh, wow, where did that one go?

[crowd screaming]

[commentator 1] Oh, he's gonna get to jog

around the bases!

[upbeat music playing,

Tainy x Bad Bunny "Mojabi Ghost"]

That's what is, gone!

He did it again!

- [commentator 2] They knew it off the bat.

- [commentator 1] Wow!

He's a beast!

[commentator 1 laughs]

He gets it done, wow!

- [commentator 2] That's gorgeous.

- [commentator 1] Oh, yeah.

[commentator 1] Did he get it?

Did he get it? He did, wow!

[commentator 2 laughs]

Oh, my!

He did it!

[commentator 3] Throw him the crown.

AL Player of the month.

[commentator 4] It is Shotime!

[announcer] The 2021 American League's

Most Valuable Player, number 17,

Shohei Ohtani.

[Martnez] In 2021,

he unanimously won

the American League MVP award,

the following year, he was runner up.

He became one of the best players

in all of Major League Baseball.

[Joe] Shohei is a pitcher,

makes hitters look really bad

based on command and movement,

and he knows what he's doing.

He's always creating out there

in that blink moment

to make an adjustment,

react without even thinking

and just do the right things.

His baseball acumen

is as high as I've been around.

Shohei Ohtani and Yu Darvish

are so similar in so many things

that they do,

both as a person and a human being

and then as a pitcher and as an artist.

[inhales sharply]

Shohei is fearless,

but the psychology part

of the other players is really important,

and you have

to really pay attention to it.

And that, that is the only part

that he's gonna have to learn as he goes.

Pitching movement on the pitches

is a God-given talent for him.

It's It's also something you can work on.

But understanding what the other athlete

is trying to do against you

is critical.

And I think that's the only part

that Shohei is going to have to leave

to understand in the game.

[lively music playing]

[Martnez] In 2023, Shohei wrote

a new chapter in his story.

Team Japan finished in third place

in the last two tournaments.

Guys, they always come in prepared.

They won the inaugural and second WBC.

So let's take a look at their roster.

This rotation highlighted by Shohei.

[newsreader]

Actually on Samurai Japan and

and that's a really important part

of Japanese baseball culture

is the national team.

It's the national team up here

and your club team is below that.

And so that's why there is continual play

with the national team.

It'd be as if we had Team USA

playing in tournaments every single year.

It's that important

in the Japanese baseball consciousness.

As a result, I think you're gonna see him

be very comfortable this spring.

[Darvish chuckles]

[chuckles]

[commentator 1] Shohei Ohtani second

start here in the World Baseball Classic.

[commentator 2]

Some filth off the table for strike three.

[commentator 3] He strikes out swing here

against Ohtani and 102.

[commentator 4] One win away

from playing for

a World Baseball Classic championship.

Here we go. Ohtani rips a piece

into the right side of the field.

He ended the gap.

[crowd cheering]

Cut off by Thomas in center field.

Ohtani steps in second

in the lead on double.

[commentator 5] The fans behind the dugout

chanting "MVP. MVP."

[commentator 6]

Mike Trout, oh, my goodness.

Trout's gonna stop at second.

Oh, my goodness. What a clinic.

The two biggest stars in the world

are gonna lead their teams on the field.

Mike Trout and Team USA.

Shohei Ohtani and Team Japan.

[birds chirping]

[suspenseful music playing]

[suspenseful music intensifies]

[crowd cheering]

[commentator]

They've been teammates for five years.

The best against the best.

The matchup we've all been wanting to see.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[commentator]

First time they'd ever faced each other.

Baseball wins tonight.

Here's the pitch and the dirt and 102.

[Shohei in Japanese]

[commentator]

The final strike in the ninth inning.

Looking for heroics.

Three and two from Ohtani.

He throws, Trout strikes out. Swinging.

[crowd cheering]

Ohtani and Japan.

Celebrate a World Baseball Classic

championship.

What an ending

to an all-time tournament.

What a game.

[emotional music playing]

[thunderous crack]

[whooshes]

[crowd cheering]

[Martnez] At the World Baseball Classic,

Shohei achieved his dream

of becoming one of the greatest

baseball players in the world.

[ambient music playing]

[clunks]

[crowd cheering]

Now that Shohei has won the WBC,

is he still writing down his dreams?

[Martnez] At 18, Shohei wrote,

"Life doesn't make dreams.

Dreams make life.

I will dedicate my life to baseball."

Best way I can describe it.

I mean, he's passionate about baseball.

He's always gonna be great at the game.

He's gonna do it for, what,

maybe 10 more years, something like that.

But what happens after that?

When you lead a long life,

you got to fill in the blanks, man.

[Joe] And you, you want to be

a complete person.

That is interesting beyond just the game,

I think.

[Matsui in Japanese]

[chuckles]

His thing is baseball.

This is his thing that

that is fulfilling everybody else's life.

Right? Like, look, we're sitting here

doing a whole documentary about him

and he's, you know, three

or four years into his career.

I think whatever Shohei, you know,

fills his life with,

whether it's baseball

or things off the field,

I think he'll be fine.

And I mean, burning out

after a Hall of Fame career,

you know what I mean, like, all right

[laughs]

I'll take that any day.

[CC Sabathia laughs]

[Matsui in Japanese]

[Darvish in Japanese]

[chuckles]

Hmm.

[inhales sharply]

Uh

[crowd cheering]

[electronic music playing]

[crowd cheering]

Well, I think all of us

that played this game

are extremely devoted to it,

and we understood, uh,

and understand how difficult it was.

We lived baseball.

[inhales deeply]

How old is he? 28?

Nah, he's okay.

[chuckles]

[Kuriyama in Japanese]

The only thing I can see from him

is, "What's next?"

For the next generation of players.

Uh, is he gonna pass

all these things that he did

to the next generation?

Because it's challenging to do

what he's doing.

[upbeat music playing]

[clunks]

[whooshes]

[clunks]

This is for Shohei, my buddy,

with all the respect

and best wishes to you, Shohei.

[Shohei mutters]

[chuckles softly]

[chuckles]

[Shohei in Japanese]

It'll be interesting

what the future brings,

um, but right now,

we're just enjoying this ride,

and so is he.

And, um, I'm excited about where he's at.

I think he's just scratching the surface.

I'm excited about his future

and where it's going.

Um

It's going to be a really fun ride.

And it has been so far.

What I would like Shohei to understand

is the journey to a championship

sometimes gets rocky,

and that's what I would tell him.

It's very rarely a clean slide up

and you get your championship.

You have to be patient

and you have to understand

that your time will come.

And that road to the top is, is not easy

or else everybody would be up there.

Good luck the rest of the way.

Keep going and hopefully, we'll see you

in Cooperstown here soon.

[Kuriyama in Japanese]

[uplifting music playing]

[upbeat music playing,

Ghost Machines "Can't Get Enough"]

All out revving up like a V 12

Braveheart screaming bye

I'm a raise hell

Circuitry in my veins got the Intel

No shoes rocking on my feet

All eyes magnetized

coming down that street

Feels good, so good

So good to be me

I got what you want

I got it so good

I got what you want

And you just can't,

you just can't get enough

No, you just can't get enough

[crowd chanting, applauding]

[crowd chanting]

MVP! MVP!

MVP! MVP! MVP!

[crowd chanting loudly]

MVP! MVP! MVP!

MVP! MVP!

[chanting continues]

MVP! MVP! MVP!

MVP! MVP! MVP!

[chanting fades]

[upbeat music playing,

"Lost in Paradise"]
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