Ohtani Dominates as Dodgers Beat Mets; First Time Pitching, No Hitting

Shohei Ohtani had gone 16 innings without allowing a run this season when MJ Melendez got the New York Mets on the board with a ground-rule double.

Ohtani responded with four fastballs that exceeded 100 mph. This helped him get out of the only trouble he faced all night and punctuated another stellar outing.

“I can’t go full throttle the whole time,” Ohtani said after the Los Angeles Dodgers’ sweep-clinching 8-2 victory over the Mets. “But considering where the game was at that point, I felt like I just really had to go full throttle.”

Ohtani Focuses on Pitching

Given the 94 mph sinker he took near the right shoulder three days earlier and the four-game series that will follow at mile-high altitude in Denver shortly thereafter, the Dodgers kept Ohtani out of the lineup. It marked the first time he pitched but did not hit since May 28, 2021, the year before Major League Baseball instituted what’s known as “The Ohtani Rule”.

Dalton Rushing started at DH and hit a grand slam, putting the game out of reach in the eighth inning. Ohtani allowed just the one run while striking out 10 batters in six innings.

“It was actually really good to watch him just focus on one thing,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “I thought that just channeling all that energy into pitching was helpful. The last couple outings, I felt he was fighting himself a little bit at times. But tonight, he was really good.”

Fastball Key to Ohtani’s Success

Ohtani threw his four-seam fastball 53.7% of the time, by far his most this season. Through his first two starts, only one of his eight strikeouts came on the fastball. On Wednesday, though, four of the first five did.

Ohtani generated 22 swings and misses against a scuffling Mets offense, his most in a game since 2023. Thirteen of them came off the fastball, a career high.

  • His four fastest came in the fifth.
  • The fifth inning began with a couple of walks that were followed by Melendez’s RBI double, which snapped Ohtani’s 32⅔-inning regular-season scoreless streak dating to last year.

With two on and one out, Tommy Pham saw an 0-1 fastball at 100.2 mph and another at 100.3 mph to strike out. Francisco Lindor then saw a first-pitch fastball at 100.1 mph and a second at 100.4 mph, lining out to end the threat.

In the sixth, Ohtani struck out the side on a 97.4 mph fastball, a 71.5 mph curveball and an 88.1 mph splitter, boasting the variance of his arsenal.

“I mean, it’s Shohei — I don’t have too much more to say on top of that,” Rushing said. “I think it was cool to see him basically just put all of his attention into what he’s doing on the mound. Not that he wasn’t

Three starts in, Ohtani’s ERA is just 0.50.

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