His final playoff line may not be repeated in our lifetime - even by him.
The 2 walks are a tiny blemish that I would like removed
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His final playoff line may not be repeated in our lifetime - even by him.
The 2 walks are a tiny blemish that I would like removed
I think he hit the ball exactly where Sanlmar's drone was taking that palm tree picture.
I don't think I've even seen a ball hit that hard/far in Dodger Stadium. The second it left the bat, I thought, "Obviously that's gone, but is it going to leave the stadium?" Sure enough, it did.
Anyway, I guess it's a recency bias, because 5 HR have been hit farther than this one in stadium history:
1) Willie Stargell Pittsburgh Pirates Aug. 5, 1969 506 feet Right-field pavilion
Makes sense why I don't remember this one. I was still 2 1/2 years from setting foot on this earth.
2) Mark McGwire St. Louis Cardinals May 22, 1999 483 feet Left-center field pavilion
Needs an asterisk, for obvious reasons. I do remember it now, though. This was during the frustrating and depressing Dodgers era from 1997-2003 when they couldn't even make the postseason.
3) Mike Piazza Los Angeles Dodgers Sept. 21, 1997 478 feet Left-field pavilion
Remember this one very well. I don't care what anyone says, I still think Piazza wasn't on roids. I wore my #31 jersey (which somehow still fits despite my being 60 pounds heavier since I bought it) to the game last week.
4) Giancarlo Stanton Miami Marlins May 12, 2015 475 feet Left-field pavilion
Imagine how his career could have been if he just stayed healthy. Of course, that could be said even more about Mike Trout.
5) Shohei Ohtani Los Angeles Dodgers July 21, 2024 473 feet Right-center field pavilion
For some reason nobody's talking about this one tonight. Yes, Ohtani apparently missed the #5 all-time record set by... Ohtani.
6) Shohei Ohtani Los Angeles Dodgers October 17, 2025 469 feet Right-center field pavilion
Somehow the basically the same HR as last year, but 4 feet shorter and in the postseason. #1 in Dodgers postseason history, though.
So okay... it's the 3rd longest hit by a Dodger in their home stadium, and 2 of the 3 are by Ohtani himself.
If anything, combined with tonight's pitching performance, this should erase people's memories of his fail 2025 postseason thus far. Now he has 4 HR in the 2025 playoffs, spread over 2 games. Plus one decent start and one (so far) excellent start.
The baseball press are going to erect a bronze statue in time for the World Series.
As a Dodgers fan, Ohtani's struggles since wildcard game 2 (blame me, as I was at the stadium that night) were an ongoing irritant. Shohei sat there for 6 years with the Angels, never even sniffing the postseason. The desire to actually be a champion was a big part of what made him choose the Dodgers, and it also helped that LA has a decent sized Japanese population, plus he didn't have to leave southern California.
So in 2024 he hit .230 in his first postseason with a .767 OPS, and he didn't pitch, but his team won the World Series. Okay, not horrible, but not Ohtani-like.
But then he comes back as 2-way player in this postseason, and proceeds to hit .158 with a .641 OPS -- and much worse over that 8-game stretch following his big wildcard game 1. His pitching performance was okay, but he did fall behind 3-0 in the 2nd inning. I kinda felt like the Dodgers would end up winning the 2025 World Series, but it would be remembered to have happened with Ohtani virtually absent.
It's nice to see a historic performance (presumably) closing out the Brewers to send the Dodgers back to the Fall Classic. After all he's done in MLB since coming here 8 years ago, he deserves it.
All the pressure is on Dave Roberts now
Walking Yelich at this point is almost like walking a pitching in the days before the NL DH.
He has been clueless this postseason.
Omg Vesia will likely pollute Ohtani’s line
Fuck you Dave. Kershaw nods his head
Vesia wants his apology, San.
Good god.
It’s a Friday night and I’m watching baseball.
No, I’m witnessing history. This is crazy
Well if I knew this was going to happen, sure.
The prices were really high, and I already went to 2 postseason games. Almost went yesterday, when the prices fell a lot, but as I said, I just wasn't feeling it. Kinda tired yesterday and just didn't feel like all the hassle.
Regarding this game, I thought to myself that we still have the World Series coming up, and I'm probably going to attend one of those games. So I figured I'd save the Jew $$$ and use it for one of those.
Call it LA playoff fatigue.
I hate to be Debbie Downer here, but Sasaki no longer seems like a reliable closer.
Which makes sense, because... he never was one.
I'm just hoping it won't matter if the starting pitching continues this way.
“Greatest night of baseball by a player in the history of the game”
Let the debate begin
Weird to think about but this is only the 4th full season NL Dodgers pennant in my adult life (2017, 2018, 2024, 2025), though they had 4 full season NL pennants while I was still under 18 (1974, 1977, 1978, 1988). And then there were the two partial season pennants in 1981 and 2020, both of which translated to World Series wins. Both of those irregular titles never felt completely real, so it was nice for me to see '88 and '24 -- the only two full season World Series wins since I've been alive.
Seattle even had a late slam to win my +105 bet on them. Was about ready for Tellafriend to thank me for posting another pick he could fade.