Dave Roberts expected rust.
What he got instead⦠might be a warning to the entire league.
Spring training is supposed to be messy.
Pitchers are usually off rhythm. Command comes and goes. Timing isnāt quite there yet. Itās the part of the season where results donāt matterāprogress does.
Thatās exactly what Dodgers manager Dave Roberts expected from Shohei Ohtani.
Instead?
He got dominance.
And now, thereās a growing realization inside Los Angeles:
Ohtani might already be ahead of schedule.
The Performance That Changed Expectations
Coming off a long ramp-up, Ohtani took the mound against the San Francisco Giants in what should have been a routine spring outing.
Something to build on. Something to ease into.
But what unfolded looked anything but routine.
Five innings.
Zero runs.
One hit allowed.
No visible struggle. No hesitation. No signs of early-season inconsistency.
This wasnāt a pitcher āworking through it.ā
This was a pitcher in control.

Roberts Saw Something Different
Even Roberts admitted it.
āI thought he would be a little more rusty,ā he said.
That expectation made sense. Most pitchers at this stage are still searching for feelāadjusting mechanics, refining pitches, finding consistency.
But Ohtani didnāt look like he was searching.
He looked like he had already found it.
His breaking ball had bite. His fastball command was sharp. He worked ahead in counts with confidenceāsomething that usually takes weeks to develop.
And most importantly?
He looked comfortable.
The Difference Between āBuildingā and āBeing Readyā
Thereās a subtle but critical difference in spring training:
Some pitchers are preparing.
Others are already there.
Ohtani looked like the second.
Hitters werenāt just missingāthey were overmatched. Even when they made contact, it was weak. Ground balls. Poor timing. No real threat.
Thatās not typical for March.
Thatās October-level control showing up early.

And He Still Wasnāt Satisfied
Hereās what makes it even more unsettling.
Ohtani didnāt walk off the mound satisfied.
He focused on what didnāt go right.
He talked about not finishing hitters. About missing spots. About needing to be better.
While everyone else saw dominanceā¦
He saw flaws.
That mindset changes everything.
Because when elite performance is treated as a starting pointānot a finish lineāthe ceiling becomes something entirely different.
A Dangerous Situation for the League
For the Dodgers, this is a luxury.
They donāt need to rush him. They donāt need to push him. The roster is deep enough to allow patience.
But if this is Ohtani before heās fully built up?
Then what happens when he is?
Thatās the question every opposing team should be asking.

The Bigger Picture
Roberts said it best:
āYou donāt ever underestimate what Shoheiās going to do.ā
At this point, itās not about surprise anymore.
Itās about expectation.
Because Ohtani isnāt just returning.
Heās evolving.
Final Thought
This wasnāt supposed to happen yet.
Not this early. Not this clean. Not this controlled.
But if this is the āunfinishedā version of Shohei Ohtaniā¦
Then the finished one?
Might be something the league isnāt ready for.
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