Sports
How Shohei Ohtani's 'mystique' is transforming the Dodgers' future
Shohei Ohtani’s stardom has made an immediate impact among Dodgers players and staff, who marvel at the level of attention the team is receiving.
(Dave Murray / For The Times)
You got him.
That was the message that Shohei Ohtani’s agent, Nez Balelo, delivered to the Dodgers’ president of baseball operations, Andrew Friedman, right around noon Pacific time on Dec. 9.
Three little words to end one of the biggest free-agent sagas in recent baseball history.
Three magic words likely to shape the next chapter of the Dodgers’ storied history.
For years, the Dodgers had dreamed of signing Ohtani, baseball’s first two-way star in roughly a century. For months this winter, they strategized ways to woo the two-time American League MVP to Chavez Ravine.
It all reached a head in early December, when a wave of online speculation and incorrect media reports — most of them centered on a private jet flight to Toronto — tested the Dodgers’ confidence, turning thoughts of missing out on Ohtani into a seemingly legitimate possibility.
“It was like watching election returns,” team president Stan Kasten recalled. “You really don’t have any inside information, so you’re just sitting at home watching on TV, following on Twitter or X. Because we didn’t know any different.”
Finally, on the Saturday afternoon following the league’s annual winter meetings — and the day after Ohtani-to-Toronto rumors reached their peak — Balelo was ready to inform the Dodgers of his client’s actual decision.
The agent called Friedman, who was sitting in his car at an Orange County soccer field where his son was playing in a youth tournament.
Friedman quickly answered, taking Balelo’s call just as he wrapped up a Zoom meeting on his iPad with another player the Dodgers were pursuing.
“I think [it’s about Ohtani’s decision], but I’m not sure,” Friedman recalled recently, sitting in his office at the Dodgers’ Camelback Ranch spring training facility. “So I get off the Zoom. Put my iPad away. And I answer as I open the car door and am walking out to the field.”
Three words later, everything changed.
“You got him,” Balelo informed Friedman.
“Excuse me?” Friedman responded.
“You got him,” Balelo reiterated. “Shohei is a Dodger.”
Shohei Ohtani stands on the field during spring training workouts at Camelback Ranch in February.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
In the three months since that day, the franchise has quickly learned all that reality entails.
The Dodgers knew signing Ohtani would expand interest in the club exponentially. They knew it would attract an influx of international media, casual fans in their home market and attention from every other corner of the baseball world in between.
But what they couldn’t have imagined, even in their most fanciful dreams, is how intensely Ohtani’s presence would drive buzz over the course of the offseason — or just how beloved he’d be to his new fan base before even playing his first regular-season game.
“It has transcended anything that came before,” Kasten said of the fan response Ohtani has received so far, and the spectacle his arrival has created for the franchise. “And yes, it has transcended even our rosiest projections.”
When Mark Langill thinks of the most iconic Dodgers of all time, the club’s official team historian thinks of a commonly shared, difficult-to-define but singularly recognizable trait.
“The one word that comes to mind is mystique,” Langill said. “There’s only a couple players I can think of that would have that type of mystique.”
Jackie Robinson had it, of course, not only for breaking Major League Baseball’s color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers but also for his seven All-Star appearances, 1949 MVP Award and veteran role on the club’s first World Series-winning team in 1955.
Sandy Koufax did too, emerging as the preeminent figure of the team’s early Los Angeles years with his three Cy Young Awards, five ERA titles and four World Series rings before an early retirement at age 30.
“‘You only get one Koufax in your lifetime,’” Langill recalled the late, legendary broadcaster Vin Scully saying. “That always struck me, in terms of how he put Sandy in a special category.”
Plenty of other celebrated names have achieved similar superstar status at Chavez Ravine since then, from Hall of Fame pitchers Don Drysdale and Don Sutton to heroes of the 1980s such as Orel Hershiser and, perhaps most notably, Fernando Valenzuela.
Clayton Kershaw has taken up that mantle for the most recent generation of Dodgers fans, serving as a cornerstone piece for one World Series and an unprecedented decade-long run of regular-season success.
And now, only three months removed from his signing, Ohtani is already showing signs of possessing the same potential, animating the fan base in ways that extend well beyond his talents on the field.
Shohei Ohtani warms up near the batting cage before taking some swings during spring training in February.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
“When he walks into a room, there’s a presence. Like, ‘That’s Shohei.’”
— Dino Edel, Dodgers third base coach
“I think that’s what we’re seeing now,” Langill said. “Everybody has a different description of [why they’re drawn to him]. Everybody is excited, but for different reasons. … That’s why I think of that word ‘mystique.’ It’s just something you can’t define.”
Indeed, ask around the Dodgers organization about the early impact of Ohtani’s presence, and answers will vary widely.
Players have marveled at the international attention the 29-year-old attracts, felt most acutely by the masses of global press members — most of them Japanese — who have descended upon their Camelback Ranch facility in Arizona this spring.
“When you bring in the Japanese culture, how much they love baseball, and just from talking to other people about how much he means to their country,” Kershaw said, “it’s pretty amazing.”
“I definitely think there is that mystique, that aura that follows him being the international superstar he is,” closer Evan Phillips added. “I think that’s where a lot of the extra attention comes from.”
Other members of the organization have noted the overwhelming crowds for spring training practices at the Camelback Ranch complex, where the sight of Ohtani simply walking from one backfield to another has sent patrons sprinting for a glimpse of the $700-million signing.
“When he walks into a room,” said third base coach Dino Ebel, who previously crossed paths with Ohtani during his rookie year with the Angels, “there’s a presence. Like, ‘That’s Shohei.’”
The Dodgers’ merchandise and marketing departments might have the best insights into the player’s instant popularity.
Fans wearing Shohei Ohtani jerseys arrive at Camelback Ranch for a game between the Dodgers and Chicago White Sox on Feb. 27.
(Christian Petersen / Getty Images)
According to Kasten, there has been a “run” on Ohtani gear at the club’s in-stadium team store, both from local fans eager to get a No. 17 jersey or T-shirt as well as from a wave of Japanese tour groups that have visited the ballpark since Ohtani’s signing.
Online sales have also been so robust, Kasten said the league’s merchandise manufacturer, Fanatics, has been “challenged” trying to “keep up with our demand.”
“We think we have enough [merchandise] to get through the early part of the season,” Kasten said. “But we need to reload as fast as they can do it. … It’s just so much.”
Ohtani’s presence has had a similar impact on ticket sales. Prices for the Dodgers’ March 28 home opener skyrocketed on secondary markets following the two-time MVP’s December signing. Tickets for Ohtani-related promotional nights, such as a bobblehead giveaway in May, have also spiked in cost.
“There are very, very few players in all of sports who literally drive ticket sales on their own,” Kasten said. “Jordan was one. LeBron. Maybe some quarterbacks. … But I think Shohei has that extra dimension, where people will come out just to see him personally. And that is extremely rare.”
Dodgers fan Alberto Valenzuela attends DodgerFest at Dodger Stadium wearing a batting helmet with a Shohei Ohtani bobblehead on top.
(Kyusung Gong / Associated Press)
To Langill, each of those extra dimensions is what make the interest level surrounding Ohtani unique.
He can have the on-field impact of Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, the Dodgers’ most recent star acquisitions before Ohtani.
His reserved demeanor and private personal life — epitomized by the shock of his unexpected marriage announcement this spring — give him the “curiosity factor” of a Koufax or Kershaw.
Yet, his celebrity profile could also cause a stir reminiscent of Fernando-mania in 1981, or the craze that accompanied Manny Ramirez’s arrival in 2008 — when a stadium that “before didn’t sell personalized jerseys and things,” according to Langill, renamed a section of the ballpark “Mannywood” and started selling Manny wigs to an enamored fan base.
“The history book of the Dodgers is already filled to the brim with so many things,” Langill said. “But this chapter [with Ohtani], I think so many people are excited about because you just don’t know what’s going to happen. It’s the great unknown.”
To Friedman, Ohtani’s first three months with the team have mostly felt like one big blur.
As soon as Balelo delivered the news on that Saturday afternoon in December, Friedman had just minutes to alert Kasten, owner Mark Walter and the rest of his front office before Ohtani made the announcement publicly on Instagram.
In the days and weeks that followed, there were introductions to make, news conferences to organize, and other marquee players — including fellow Japanese star Yoshinobu Yamamoto, whose recruitment included an in-person meeting in which Ohtani took part — the team needed to add around him.
“It prevented me from feeling the elation of [the signing],” Friedman recalled. “I’m not sure it ever really set in.”
Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani smiles in the dugout before a spring training game against the Angels on March 5.
(Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
That remained the case through much of the winter. The sight of Ohtani around Dodger Stadium (where he worked out during the winter) and Camelback Ranch still seemed strange to Friedman. The fact he was under contract with the team for the next 10 years — barring Friedman or Walter leaving the franchise, at which point the two-way star could opt out of his deal — still didn’t feel real.
“It was just like he was visiting,” Friedman said. “It just hadn’t quite hit me.”
That finally changed once Ohtani played his first Cactus League game.
That day, on a sunny Tuesday afternoon last month, No. 17 jerseys filled the concourses (outnumbered only by fans with “Kershaw,” “Freeman,” or “Betts” displayed across their backs). A lively weekday crowd serenaded the new designated hitter with ovations and cheers.
Then, in his third at-bat, Ohtani launched an opposite-field home run as Friedman and Co. looked on, eliciting regular-season-level reactions from the stands.
“Until then,” Friedman said, “I hadn’t fully appreciated that Shohei was a Dodger.”
Now, it’s impossible to imagine the franchise’s future without him — on the field and beyond.
“I’ve said this a couple times, but our goal is for this period of time to be looked back on as the golden era of Dodger baseball,” Friedman said. “That is an incredibly high bar. But obviously, signing Shohei, and what that potentially means as we look out, definitely increases the chances of that.”
Sports
‘Demon’ Finn Balor settles score with Dominik Mysterio at WrestleMania 42
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
LAS VEGAS – Finn Balor and Dominik Mysterio were once brothers in arms in the Judgment Day. The two helped the faction run “Monday Night Raw” for several years.
As championships and opportunities came and went, the rift between Balor and Mysterio grew. It came to a head when Balor caused Mysterio to lose the Intercontinental Championship to Penta. Balor leaving the Judgment Day left Mysterio and Liv Morgan as the leaders with JD McDonagh, Raquel Rodriguez and Roxanne Perez sticking around.
Finn Balor is introduced before his match against Dominik Mysterio during WrestleMania 42 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nev., on April 19, 2026. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
The latter four chose to ride with Mysterio and attacked Balor on one episode of Raw.
The bitter war led to a match Sunday night at WrestleMania 42. To make matters more interesting, Raw General Manager Adam Pearce made the match a street fight hours before the show was set to begin.
Balor had vowed to bring the “Demon” out and he certainly did.
JACOB FATU PUTS DREW MCINTYRE IN THE ‘REAR VIEW’ IN UNSANCTIONED MATCH AT WRESTLEMANIA 42
Finn Balor is introduced before his match against Dominik Mysterio during WrestleMania 42 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nev., on April 19, 2026. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Balor made his way to the ring in his “Demon” gear, dripping with red and black paint. Mysterio was in a mask with other Mysterio supporters.
The two then proceeded to beat the crud out of each other.
Mysterio wrapped Balor’s head in between a chair and hit a 619 on him. He tried to pin Balor, but to no avail. At another point, Mysterio tossed Balor through a table set up in the corner.
As many have learned, it’s hard to keep your demons down. Mysterio learned the hard way.
Balor would not give up. Balor clotheslined Mysterio, hit him with a chair multiple times before wrapping his head in between the chair and drop-kicking him into the corner. Balor put Mysterio onto a table and hit the Coup de Grâce for the win.
Dominik Mysterio is introduced before his match against Finn Balor during WrestleMania 42 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nev., on April 19, 2026. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Balor excised his own demons, while Mysterio is still haunted.
Sports
Ryan Ward has a solid debut, but bullpen blows it again as Dodgers lose to Rockies
DENVER — What do you know? The once-stampeding Dodgers have been caged by the Colorado Rockies.
With a 9-6 loss Sunday at Coors Field, the two-time defending World Series champions lost back-to-back games for the first time this season. The Dodgers again couldn’t hold a lead, letting the Rockies tee off for 15 hits.
Nor could the Dodgers keep up offensively at the hitter-friendly park — though they put some pressure on in the ninth inning, when Shohei Ohtani led off with a ground-rule double and the Dodgers scored twice to cut the lead to three runs. Then the new guy, Ryan Ward, made the final out in his big league debut, robbed of a hit and a chance to keep chipping away by a diving Troy Johnston in right field.
Before that, the Rockies — who beat the Dodgers twice in 13 meetings all of last season — chased starter Roki Sasaki from the game in the fifth inning and then ruffled the Dodgers’ relievers. That included closer Edwin Díaz, who came on in the eighth and promptly gave up three singles, a walk and two runs before being pulled with the Dodgers trailing 8-4.
Dodgers starting pitcher Roki Sasaki gave up three runs on seven hits in 4-2/3 innings Sunday against the Rockies in Denver.
(David Zalubowski / Associated Press)
He and Blake Treinen combined to face eight batters without getting an out.
“They both weren’t sharp,” said manager Dave Roberts, who had theories but not many answers — though he did have real concern, especially about Díaz, who recently had his right knee checked out by the medical staff.
Roberts said the closer wanted to pitch after nine days off, even though it wasn’t a save situation. But his velocity was slightly down (95.4 mph vs. 95.8) and so, “today was a tough evaluation,” the manager said.
“It really was,” Roberts said. “Because, you know, I know what it’s supposed to look like, and when it doesn’t look like that, it gets a little concerning, really.”
And losing for the second time to the Rockies, who are now 9-13? Being in danger of losing their four-game series, after arriving in Denver without having lost to a National League opponent, against a club that hasn’t made the postseason since 2018?
It’s well below the bar the Dodgers have set, and it added a bitter note to Ward’s otherwise sweet debut.
Ward punched a big league clock for the first time wearing No. 67 and cranked his first hit off Rockies starter Michael Lorenzen in the fourth inning, lining a changeup to right field for a single that scored Andy Pages, made it 3-0 and got the 20-some members of Ward’s party up, jumping in place, hugging and high-fiving.
“When I was on first base, I got to see them all jumping around up there,” Ward said. “That was a pretty special moment.”
He also singled in the sixth and swung on the first pitch in his first at-bat, a fly out in the third inning.
The Dodgers gave Sasaki a 2-0 lead in the third. Alex Freeland drove in Hyeseong Kim, and Shohei Ohtani doubled in Freeland — and extended his career-best on-base streak to 51 games, moving past Willie Keeler into third place in Dodgers history.
Sasaki went 4-2/3 innings, threw 78 pitches and gave up three runs on seven hits, striking out two and walking two. His ERA after his fourth start: 6.11, worst in the six-man rotation.
The Dodgers fell behind 6-5 in the seventh when Treinen — who was cleared Friday after he was struck in the head by a batted ball during batting practice — gave up four consecutive hits, including a two-run home run by Mickey Moniak.
The result likely will be a minor detail when Ward tells the story years from now about getting the call after first baseman Freddie Freeman was placed on the paternity list.
The Dodgers’ No. 19 prospect and reigning Pacific Coast League MVP spent the last seven years in the minors. Last season, he hit 36 home runs and drove in 122 runs with a .937 on-base-plus-slugging percentage for triple-A Oklahoma City, and he has a 1.020 OPS and four homers this year.
Ward made it a point to improve his chase rate, draw more walks and get on base more frequently, everything the Dodgers asked of him. He also passed the broadest patience test.
“The plate discipline, being a better hitter … he’s done all that,” Roberts said. “He’s improved his defense. But honestly, for me, just not to let his lack of opportunity in the big leagues deter him. That’s easy when you get frustrated and let it affect performance, and he hasn’t done that.”
If anything, Ward said, the waiting made him better.
“I used it to keep going. ‘OK, if I’m not there yet, what do I have to do to get there?’” he said. “‘What part of my game do I need to work on to keep getting better?’
“I used it as fire to keep working.”
That will be the Dodgers’ assignment too.
In the finale of the four-game series Monday, the Dodgers are expected to start left-hander Justin Wrobleski (2-0, 2.12) against Colorado left-hander Jose Quintana (0-1, 5.63).
Sports
ESPN’s Stephen A Smith hears boos from WrestleMania 42 crowd
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
LAS VEGAS – Danhausen’s curse may be real after all – just ask Stephen A. Smith and the New York Mets.
While the latter dropped their 10th game in a row, Smith got his share of the curse on Saturday night during Night 1 of WrestleMania 42. Smith was in attendance for WWE’s premier event of the year and heard massive boos from the crowd.
Stephen A. Smith attends WrestleMania 42: Night 1 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada, on April 18, 2026. (Andrew Timms/WWE)
Smith was sitting ringside to watch the action. The ESPN star appeared on the videoboard above the ring at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. He appeared to embrace the reaction and smiled through it.
The boos came after Danhausen appeared on “First Take” on Friday – much to the chagrin of the sports pundit. Smith appeared perplexed by Danhausen’s appearance. Smith said he heard about Danhausen and called him a “bad luck charm.”
Danhausen said Smith had been “rude” to him and put the dreaded “curse” on the commentator.
WWE STAR DANHAUSEN SAYS METS ‘CURSE’ ISN’T EXACTLY LIFTED AS TEAM DROPS NINTH STRAIGHT GAME
Stephen A. Smith attends WrestleMania 42: Night 1 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada, on April 18, 2026. (Andrew Timms/WWE)
Smith is far from the only one dealing with the effects of the “curse.”
Danhausen agreed to “un-curse” the Mets during their losing streak. However, he told Fox News Digital earlier this week that there was a reason why the curse’s removal didn’t take full effect.
“I did un-curse the Mets. But it didn’t work because, I believe it was Brian Gewirtz who did not pay Danhausen. He did not send me my money so it did not take full effect,” Danhausen said. “Once I have the money, perhaps it will actually work because right now it’s probably about a half of an un-cursing. It’s like a layaway situation.”
Danhausen enters the arena before his match against Kit Wilson during SmackDown at SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on April 10, 2026. (Eakin Howard/Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
On “Friday Night SmackDown,” WWE stars like The Miz and Kit Wilson were also targets of Danhausen’s curse.
-
California4 minutes agoCalifornia couple charged with murder in death of toddler skip court
-
Colorado10 minutes agoUPDATE: Northbound Powers reopned after major crash
-
Connecticut16 minutes agoCT Lottery Cash 5, Play3 winning numbers for April 19, 2026
-
Delaware22 minutes agoMan speeds past leading runner in photo finish at Delaware Marathon
-
Florida28 minutes agoFlorida Lottery Fantasy 5, Cash Pop results for April 19, 2026
-
Georgia34 minutes ago
Gaudette & Patel Pitch Past No. 3 UNC, 5-2
-
Hawaii40 minutes agoA Deep Dive into Hawai‘i’s Shell Jewelry Industry – Hawaii Business Magazine
-
Idaho46 minutes ago
Idaho Lottery results: See winning numbers for Pick 3, Pick 4 on April 19, 2026