‘Superhuman’: Japan in awe after Ohtani makes baseball history
At a speciality Iwate produce shop in Tokyo’s Ginza district, photo albums of the player and printed posters saying “Congratulations Ohtani!” were on display.
“He is amazing. Just amazing. I’m in awe,” shopkeeper Keisuke Takahashi told AFP, adding that many customers had come to the shop especially on Friday.
Outside on the city streets, consultant Tamio Watabiki, 76, said Ohtani was “like a hero for Japan”.
“With all the gloomy news these days, his performance is the only thing that brightens my day and cheers everyone up. I’m looking forward to what he does every day.”
The 30-year-old Ohtani capped a monster performance by adding another home run in the ninth inning, finishing the game with 51 homers and 51 steals so far this season.
In Tokyo, 23-year-old Yume Hareyama, herself from Iwate, called Ohtani the region’s “source of pride”.
“There used to be nothing noteworthy about Iwate except perhaps its large expanse of land … but he has made our region famous and helped revitalise it,” she said.
Social media users were similarly awe-struck.
“He is too incredible … truly superhuman,” one wrote on X.
Nicknamed “Sho-Time”, Ohtani was a high-school baseball prodigy who signed with the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters in 2013 and spent five seasons there before joining the Los Angeles Angels.
There he won two American League Most Valuable Player awards in six seasons but left last year for free agency.
Following weeks of frenzied speculation, he joined the Dodgers in December.
His 10-year, US$700-million deal was the richest contract in the history of North American sport.
Source: CNA