Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More ohtani height Shohei Ohtani. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status. Height, Weight. 6'4", lbs ; From. Oshu, JPN ; College. -- ; Drafted. Undrafted. Shohei Ohtani, stands at an impressive height of 6'4. Shohei Ohtani #17 · Shohei Ohtani · Status: Active · Nickname: Showtime · Born: 7/05/ in Oshu, Japan · High School: Hanamaki Higashi, Iwate, JPN · MLB Debut.
Pitch Tracking. Note: Years are in reverse order. Note: This tells how many of this player's home runs would have been out of other stadiums. This accounts for different wall heights, distances and environmental effects. Note: Shifts are through the season, Shaded starting from the season, Shift: three or more infielders are on the same side of second base, Shade: positioned outside of their typical responsible slices of the field.
Learn more about how positioning is defined here. Rank Loading Bat Tracking Statcast Fielding Run Value. Expresses value at preventing a runner taking extra bases as a fielder. Statcast Baserunning. Expresses value at advancing extra bases as a runner not including steals. Batting Rolling Stats Line Charts. Statcast Zone Charts. Loading Chart San Diego Padres. Los Angeles Dodgers.
Louis Cardinals. San Francisco Giants. Chicago Cubs. Ohtani height Minnesota Twins. Washington Nationals. The hundred-mile-an-hour fastballs, the big sweeping curves, the barrage of broken records, almost comic in their specificity and their frequency: the first player to hit two home runs and throw a shutout on the same day, the first player to hit forty home runs and record ten wins in a season.
Two-thirds of the way through the season, he was leading the league in not only home runs but also triples—something only two players in history have accomplished. And he seemed to be getting better. In , he won the American League most-valuable-player award unanimously, mostly for his offensive production. He arrived in the major leagues with a fastball and a nasty splitter; he now commands seven pitches—and they all have different complexions, depending on what the situation requires.
Simply being a credible pitcher and a credible hitter would have been incredible enough—according to a Baseball Prospectus analysis of the best two-way players since , only a handful of Negro League players pitched and hit regularly for a sustained period. Now the regular season is ending and the postseason is beginning—without the Angels, who, as is their habit, wasted the talent of Ohtani and his superstar teammate Trout, fading from playoff contention after the trade deadline.
Is he real. Yes, the answer came with a laugh. Too real, perhaps: flesh and blood, bone and tissue. There had already been, from time to time this season, indications that Ohtani was human—he suffered broken fingernails, blisters, fatigue. When he joked with De la Cruz, he knew something that the rest of us learned only later: during the first game that day, he had torn his ulnar collateral ligament, a thin band of tissue on the inside of the elbow which keeps the joint stable.
This was a disaster: U. He will soon be a free agent, and the injury might cost him tens of millions of dollars, if not much more. Instead of brushing off De La Cruz, he smiled. Like everyone else in baseball, he knows the risks involved in throwing a ball at or beyond the threshold of human physiognomy.
Researchers once looked into the amount of force that major-league pitchers generate on their shoulders. Even a young, healthy arm is taxed to an unfathomable degree. Velocities have risen too rapidly for medical studies to keep up, but, anecdotally, U.
USA Today recently reported that, of the sixty-four hardest-throwing pitchers this season, nearly half had either undergone Tommy John surgery to repair their U. Ohtani came back after his first Tommy John surgery, of course. And he did what he must have felt he needed to do: throw harder and harder, despite the risk. He trained with weighted balls, which are known to help increase pitch velocity but which also, according to what limited evidence there is, put the elbow under extra stress.
He sometimes throws a hundred and one. One analyst ranked him as the second best strikeout artist in the league. This year, he pitched every sixth day. And it seemed to work. But he admitted to some additional fatigue, and there were times when the team adjusted the schedule to give him a little extra rest.
The adjustments were minor, considering the herculean task. He was taking practice swings when most pitchers ice and rest. What did he think about all this. We know that he ranks sleeping as one of his primary activities and likes to make omelettes, that he sometimes plays Clash Royale online with his teammates. Even after he showed that he could succeed as both a pitcher and a hitter, plenty of smart people wondered what heights he could reach if he focussed on only one task.
It took imagination to think that he might get better at each of his tasks by doing both. And it took faith to imagine that he could do it without too high a cost. After decades of hand-wringing about the gloomy state of the national pastime, the league has tried to make the game faster, crisper, more highlight-friendly.
To an extent, these efforts have worked. Television ratings show mixed results, but attendance is up, after years of decline. Ohtani has something to do with this. Through July, his nine road starts as a pitcher were attended by an average of nearly four thousand more fans than the host teams usually drew.