Ohtani, who won the American League’s Most Valuable Player Award last year thanks to his two-way brilliance, is off to a bit of a slow start in the season’s first 26 games. He is hitting .240 with four home runs (he had 46 last season). On the mound he has been stronger, with a 3-2 record that shortchanges his 3.08 E.R.A. and the fact that he has allowed only 1.03 walks and hits per inning pitched.
A few humdrum early stats has hardly taken away from the wow factor. Since he has been doing it for a year, fans might still need to sometimes remind themselves of the remarkable fact: Shohei Ohtani is a starting pitcher who bats for himself and is his team’s designated hitter on the days he does not pitch.
That has given him a string of superlatives that often include the line “first since Babe Ruth.” (And it happens that Ruth did a lot of his pitching at Fenway, when he was a member of the Red Sox.)
“I hope we don’t start taking that for granted like it’s old hat,” Angels Manager Joe Maddon said after the game. “It’s just so unusual. It’s otherworldly on this level; of this game, which is I think the most difficult game.”