In the shadow of McCovey Cove, where less than 24 hours earlier he sent a towering home run into the salty bay, Shohei Ohtani stood tall on the Oracle Park mound—his right arm finally looking like the weapon it once was.
For the first time since undergoing his second Tommy John surgery in the winter of 2023, Ohtani pitched into the third inning, delivering a masterclass in dominance and efficiency. It was just his fifth start as a pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers, but on this warm Saturday evening in San Francisco, it felt like a reawakening.
He threw 36 pitches, but made every single one count.
The first inning? A demolition. Mike Yastrzemski, Heliot Ramos, and Rafael Devers stepped into the batter’s box and exited one by one, all swinging helplessly at Ohtani’s 100-mph heat and a sweeper so wicked it should be outlawed in city limits. Three up, three down. Three strikeouts. All swinging.
It wasn’t just dominance—it was precision. Swagger. A reminder of who he is.
In total, Ohtani worked three shutout innings, allowing just one hit and walking one, while striking out four. He didn’t labor. He flowed. His delivery was smooth, his mechanics clean, and the radar gun lit up like a slot machine jackpot with each fastball he fired. For the Dodgers, currently reeling from a season-high seven-game losing streak, this start was more than just a stat line—it was a sign of life.
Ohtani didn’t need to say a word. His body language told the story. Stoic. Composed. Poised for something bigger.
And the Dodgers needed it. Badly.
There’s been no shortage of drama surrounding this team—injuries, inconsistency, and a fan base growing restless with every loss during the team’s current seven-game losing streak, their longest since the 2017 season. But Ohtani’s outing offered something rare during a stretch like this: hope.
You could feel it in the dugout. See it in the smiles exchanged between innings. The Boys in Blue needed a spark, so the reigning, defending, and undisputed MVP gave them fire.
This was vintage Ohtani, but wiser—more calculated. After two years of questions about his future as a two-way player, Saturday proved he’s still very much that unicorn. And if his elbow holds, the Dodgers might be getting the best version of him yet: efficient, lethal, and built for October.
Oracle Park has humbled many great pitchers. But not this time. This time, it watched Shohei Ohtani carve up the Giants with cold-blooded artistry.
The Dodgers didn’t just need a win. They needed a tone-setter. A belief-restorer. A reason to believe the worst was behind them.
And on a sun-drenched July afternoon by the Bay, they got the start they needed from Ohtani. Now? They need to win to snap their losing streak and even the best of three series before the final game before the All-Star break begins on Sunday.