Five pitches. Eight strikeouts. One warning sign.
Shohei Ohtani just reminded everyone why heâs unstoppable⌠and human.

Just days before Opening Day, Shohei Ohtani delivered a performance that felt like a statementâand a reminder.
A statement of dominance.
A reminder of how thin the margin really is.
In his final Spring Training appearance against the Los Angeles Angels, the Dodgers superstar stepped onto the mound and immediately took control. This wasnât just a tune-up.
It was a glimpse of whatâs coming.
And for three innings, it looked terrifying.
Ohtani came out firing, unleashing a full arsenal that left hitters guessingâand missing. Fastball. Curveball. Sinker. Splitter. Sweeper.
All five pitches were working.
All five were dangerous.
In just two innings, he piled up five strikeouts, overwhelming the Angels lineup with movement, precision, and raw power. There was no rhythm for hitters, no pattern to solve.
Just chaos.
Then came the third inning.
And somehow⌠it got even better.
Ohtani struck out the side in a flawless 1-2-3 inning, painting corners with surgical accuracy. Every pitch looked intentional. Every swing looked late.
By the end of that inning, he had already racked up eight strikeouts on just 55 pitches.
It felt effortless.
It felt dominant.
It felt like Opening Day had arrived early.
But thenâbaseball reminded everyone itâs never that simple.
The fourth inning brought a slight shift. A walk. Some pressure. But Ohtani responded the only way he knows howâthree more strikeouts, once again shutting down any momentum before it could grow.
Through four innings, he had thrown 79 pitches and looked firmly in control.
And then⌠everything changed in just seven pitches.
Manager Dave Roberts gave him one more inningâthe fifth.
Three straight hits.
A run scored.
Suddenly, the perfect rhythm was gone.
Just like that, dominance turned into vulnerability.
It wasnât a collapse.
But it was a reminder.
Even for someone like Ohtani, perfection doesnât last forever.
Still, zoom outâand the bigger picture becomes clear.
This outing wasnât about flawless results.
It was about readiness.
And in that sense, Ohtani delivered exactly what the Dodgers needed.
His velocity was there.
His pitch mix was sharp.
His commandâwhen locked inâwas elite.
He generated swings and misses with every pitch type, a rare level of versatility that few pitchers in the league can match.
And just to make sure no one forgot who he isâŚ
After stepping off the mound, Ohtani grabbed a bat.
And delivered a hit.
Because of course he did.
Thatâs the part that still feels unreal.
Heâs not just preparing to pitch.
Heâs preparing to dominate both sides of the gameâagain.
Manager Dave Roberts had a clear goal going into this start: build Ohtaniâs workload. Stretch him out. Prepare him for the grind ahead.
The target?
Six innings. Around 75â80 pitches.
Maybe even touching a seventh inning if everything aligned.
But one thing was certain:
âThereâs no way heâs going eight,â Roberts said.
Not yet.
Because for the Dodgers, this isnât about one start.
Itâs about a season.
A championship chase.
And protecting the most valuable player in baseball while still unleashing his full potential.
That balance is delicate.
And Tuesday showed exactly why.
For four innings, Ohtani looked untouchable.
Then, in a matter of moments, the game reminded everyone how quickly things can shift.
And maybe thatâs what makes him so dangerous.
Not perfection.
But the ability to dominateâeven when things arenât perfect.
As Opening Day approaches, one thing is clear:
Shohei Ohtani is ready.
But the rest of the league?
They might not be.
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