A Yankees vs. Dodgers World Series is a star-studded clash that’s been decades in the making

A Yankees vs. Dodgers World Series is a star-studded clash that’s been decades in the making

It’s hard to envision a more star-studded and magnetic World Series matchup than this one — both a throwback to when baseball reigned supreme in the U.S. while also showcasing the greatest talents in the game today.

The New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers represent the two largest markets in Major League Baseball. They entered the season with the second-largest payroll in the sport (Yankees) and the fifth largest (Dodgers). They will now meet for a whopping twelfth time in the World Series, the most by any two teams. 

Decades ago, the key players were luminaries like Mickey Mantle, Joe DiMaggio, Roy Campanella and Jackie Robinson.

Legends of the game, for sure, and now that star power has returned in 2024. 

Shohei Ohtani — who just rewrote the history books with baseball’s first season of 50 home runs and 50 stolen bases — certainly appears to have a flair for the dramatic, crushing a three-run homer in his postseason debut.

Ohtani, the marquee name in the sport, was part of the Dodgers’ $1 billion offseason overhaul that saw them pad a star-studded roster with two pitching aces — fellow Japanese countryman Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Tyler Glasnow, acquired from the Tampa Bay Rays.

On the Yankees side, general manager and senior vice president Brian Cashman made a major offseason splash of his own — acquiring 25-year-old phenom Juan Soto, whom many consider the most complete hitter in baseball, adding to a lineup that already features American League home run king Aaron Judge and the fearsome Giancarlo Stanton. 

Soto not only delivered with a career season of 41 home runs and 109 runs batted in, but he also just unleashed one of the most epic at bats you will see in postseason play — daring Cleveland Guardians pitcher Hunter Gaddis to throw him a fastball in extra innings Saturday, only to belt it over the centerfield fence and send the Yankees past upstart Cleveland and into their first World Series since 2009. 

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Judge and Ohtani, meanwhile, are both making their first appearance in the Fall Classic, a fact that might seem hard to fathom given their already robust resumes. Judge and Ohtani are both MVP winners and are the favorites to win it again this season. Judge flirted with the Triple Crown by batting .322 with 58 home runs and 144 RBIs. Ohtani nearly matched those numbers, with a .310 average, 54 home runs and 130 RBIs.

“This is sweeter — it’s even sweeter,” Judge said on Fox Sports about reaching the World Series and whether the reality matched expectations. 

“This group we have is something special,” he said. “You know, all the work they put in the offseason, the ups and downs during the regular season, there’s no better group. … That’s what you grind all season for — moments like this.”

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts echoed those sentiments after his team ousted the magical New York Mets to reach their fourth World Series in the last seven years, though with only one ring to show for it, in the Covid-shortened 2020 season.

“I’ve never believed in a group of guys more than I believe in these guys,” Roberts said, ahead of the impending clash of the titans. “Most importantly, they believe in each other.”

The playoffs this season have been a hit with fans as TV viewership is at its highest levels in years.

The last time the two teams faced off in the World Series was in 1981 (the Dodgers won), and Tyler Kepner, the longtime baseball writer now with The Athletic, reflected on the rarity of what we’re seeing. 

“There was a 40- or 41-year span, from 1941 to 1981, where we saw that matchup [in the World Series] 11 times … but in the last 41 years, we haven’t had one.” 

And with Judge and Ohtani headlining the two juggernauts, another feat is now happening that’s taken more than four decades, too. 

“To have two Hall of Fame-type players in MVP seasons making their World Series debuts against each other, that’s only happened once,” Kepner said. “That was George Brett and Mike Schmidt in 1980 — so it is kind of a perfect storm of fun stuff that would happen if it’s Yankees and Dodgers.”


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Dodgers vs. Yankees World Series tickets have reached Taylor Swift level prices

Dodgers vs. Yankees World Series tickets have reached Taylor Swift level prices

Dodgers fans cheer before the start of Game 6 of the NLCS at Dodger Stadium on Sunday. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

The World Series is set: the Dodgers against the New York Yankees, featuring two of baseball’s three biggest spenders.

Also some of baseball’s biggest spenders: fans buying tickets for the World Series.

Resale prices soared Monday, on the day after the Dodgers clinched their spot in the World Series. The Fall Classic matchup is the most storied in baseball history, in the two most populated cities in the United States.

The World Series opens Friday. The bottom line at Dodger Stadium: Tickets for two probably will cost you at least $2,500.

Read more: Nine concerns the Dodgers should have about facing the Yankees in the World Series

On Monday afternoon, the minimum price for a Game 1 ticket on StubHub was $1,326, up 23% from Sunday night. The minimum price for any of the four potential games at Dodger Stadium: $1,268.

The Dodgers sold out the tickets available through their website. They control much of the resale market for their tickets, so prices usually do not vary significantly among sites. The minimum price for any game at Dodger Stadium on Vivid Seats, another resale site: $1,202.

StubHub said Monday its sales revenue for this year’s World Series already exceeds its sales revenue for last year’s Arizona Diamondbacks-Texas Rangers World Series, even though this series does not start for four days, and already is four times more than the company generated for the 2022 Houston Astros-Philadelphia Phillies World Series.

In this series, the ticket prices at Dodger Stadium are a relative bargain. The Yankees have not appeared in the World Series since 2009; the Dodgers are making their fourth appearance since then.

On Monday afternoon, this was the lowest Vivid Seats ticket price for Game 3, the first game at Yankee Stadium: $1,536.

That was for a ticket, not a seat. The ticket is standing room only.

Read more: Complete coverage: How the Dodgers made it to the World Series

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


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Dodgers vs. Mets: Walker Buehler delivers vintage performance as Shohei Ohtani leads Dodgers offense in NLCS Game 3 rout

Dodgers vs. Mets: Walker Buehler delivers vintage performance as Shohei Ohtani leads Dodgers offense in NLCS Game 3 rout

NEW YORK — It had been 1,109 days since Walker Buehler looked this good.

In Game 3 of the NLCS on Wednesday, the Dodgers’ starter conjured 18 swing-and-misses from Mets hitters in just four innings of work, his highest raw total in a single outing since his final start of 2021. More importantly, neither he nor the Los Angeles bullpen surrendered a run. The Dodgers, buoyed by a trio of home runs, including a supersonic blast from Shohei Ohtani, won in a rout, 8-0.

For Buehler, it was a sparkling return to form on a chilly evening in the Big Apple.

Once the impenetrable ace of a perennial contender, Buehler is a different pitcher now. Arm injuries robbed him of the better part of three seasons and chipped away at his once unshakable confidence. He endured a stop-start 2024 during which he spent a month away from the team to rehabilitate a bad hip at a private training facility.

Buehler steadied the ship somewhat down the stretch run, but his selection as Los Angeles’ Game 3 playoff starter had as much to do with the team’s infirmary of pitchers as any obvious rebound from the righty. In his first postseason start last week against San Diego in the NLDS, he surrendered six runs in an L.A. loss. With the NLCS tied at one heading into a raucous Citi Field on Wednesday, the Dodgers needed their beleaguered former ace to turn back the clock.

And Buehler delivered.

“I don’t trust anyone more than Walker,” longtime Dodgers catcher Austin Barnes told Yahoo Sports after the game. “His ability to, you know, be alive in those moments. A lot of people can’t. Since I’ve been here, he’s done a lot of big games for us. And no matter what happens early in the season or how he’s been feeling, I trust that he’s gonna go out there and compete.”

The competing came early in Game 3. In the bottom of the second, the Mets loaded the bases with one out behind two walks and an infield single. Gifted a pair of runs in the top half of the frame, Buehler was playing with fire, giving the hosts an opening for a counterpunch. But the brash right-hander bore down, striking out Francisco Álvarez and Francisco Lindor to end the threat.

His strikeout pitch to Lindor — a full-count knuckle-curveball that ducked beneath a monstrous hack from the Mets’ superstar shortstop — was vintage Buehler. He bounced off the mound in a cloud of braggadocio, yelling to himself and nobody and everyone at the same time.

Buehler has always straddled that fine line between confidence and cockiness, sometimes going beyond it.

This is a man who prefers to open twist-off beer bottles with his teeth because “it’s fun and it makes [him] feel cool.” At his best, Buehler is arrogant, swaggering, unapologetic. A rottweiler with high-90s heat. An F-bomb geyser on the mound and on the record. Better than you and well aware of it. That confidence begat success, which only bred more confidence.

It was a powerful, nearly unstoppable cycle, one that propelled Buehler to the top of his craft.

From 2018 through 2021, the swashbuckling right-hander posted the fourth-lowest ERA in Major League Baseball, behind such luminaries as Jacob deGrom, Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander. During Los Angeles’ championship run in the shortened 2020 season, Buehler was the club’s unquestioned ace, the obvious choice to start Game 1 in each of the first three rounds. Across five starts that October, he surrendered five total runs.

The following season, he was even better, earning a fourth-place Cy Young finish with a 2.47 ERA in over 200 frames. He was, quite simply, one of the best pitchers in the world.

Then the injuries came, as they so often do for those in this line of work. In August 2022, a second Tommy John surgery (he had one right after being drafted in 2015) to go with an additional procedure on his flexor tendon. Buehler’s rehab was a sobering reminder that the road back from elbow surgery is not always linear. Twenty-three months — from June 2022 to May 2024 — passed between big-league starts.

Buehler has been strikingly honest about the difficulties of that process, though he was reluctant to classify his Game 3 performance as redemption. To him, at least publicly, it was just another playoff victory.

“It doesn’t mean a whole lot much more to me than winning Game 3 of the NLCS,” he expressed in his postgame interview. “I think later down the road, it may mean a lot to me, but right now, I’m gonna enjoy tonight and then get ready if we have to play Game 7.”

After a high pitch count limited Buehler to just four innings Wednesday, the bullpen quartet of Michael Kopech, Ryan Brasier, Blake Treinen and Ben Casparius didn’t blink, combining for five scoreless. The Mets managed just three baserunners against Dodgers relievers. Postseason prophet Enrique Hernández added a two-run poke, his 15th career playoff homer, to provide some cushion in the sixth inning.

From there, the game appeared headed for a forgettable conclusion. But Ohtani wouldn’t let that happen. In the eighth inning, with two runners on base, the two-time MVP silenced the already quiet crowd with a jaw-dropping, upper-deck moon shot. The homer pushed Ohtani’s playoff line with runners on base to a preposterous 7-for-9 with two homers.

Ohtani’s swing also sent disgruntled Mets fans streaming up the aisles. By the bottom of the eighth, the lower bowl of Citi Field was speckled with empty seats reflecting the stadium lights. It was a strange image. Since the now-infamous team meeting that precipitated a historic turnaround on May 30, the Mets were 27-5 in night games at home. The sight of this team losing in this setting felt rare on its own. The stakes only added to the disappointment.

But as bad as it was for the hosts, there is a lot of series left. New York will send crafty lefty José Quintana, who has been outstanding for going on two months, to the mound in Game 4. Los Angeles will counter with Japanese thrill ride Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

Wednesday, though, was all about Buehler, who is now second in Dodgers history in career playoff starts, behind only Clayton Kershaw. There remains a small chance that Game 3 was his last. Buehler is a free agent this winter, and a return to Chavez Ravine is far from guaranteed.

Then again, three straight Mets wins feels improbable, lining Buehler up for either NLCS Game 7 or a World Series start. Either would be another chance to continue rewriting his story.


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Shohei Ohtani homers to lead off NLCS Game 4 for Dodgers against Mets

Shohei Ohtani homers to lead off NLCS Game 4 for Dodgers against Mets

NEW YORK (AP) — Shohei Ohtani made his point.

After Ohtani helped cap the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Game 3 win in the NL Championship Series with a three-run, eighth-inning homer, teammate Freddie Freeman gave the Japanese star what sounded like some good-natured ribbing.

“Freddie talked to me to make sure that I joined the party earlier than later,” Ohtani said through an interpreter.

So after Ohtani drove Jose Quintana’s second pitch into the New York Mets bullpen in right-center field in Game 4, Ohtani aimed a finger at the Los Angeles dugout as he left the batter’s box.

“I was able to do that this time in my first at-bat,” he said Thursday night after a 10-2 victory gave the Dodgers a 3-1 series lead and moved then one win from a World Series trip.

Ohtani took Quintana’s first pitch for a ball, then drove a sinker over the middle of the plate 422 feet for his third postseason homer. The likely NL MVP began the night 0 for 22 in the postseason when batting with nobody on base and 7 for 9 with two homers and eight RBIs when hitting with runners aboard.

“I think it was bigger for Sho just getting a hit with no one on base,” teammate Max Muncy said. “Pretty wild numbers.”

Ohtani hit the seventh leadoff homer in Dodgers postseason history. He also walked three times and scored four runs.

“He just has a superpower that you and me can’t do,” teammate Mookie Betts said this week.

The 117.8 mph drive was the third-hardest-hit postseason home run since Statcast started tracking in 2015, after Philadelphia’s Kyle Schwarber in last year’s NLCS (119.7 mph) and the New York Yankees’ Giancarlo Stanton in a 2020 AL Division Series (118.3 mph).

“I can’t even hit the ball that hard with an aluminum bat and Shohei is doing it,” Freeman said.

Quintana hadn’t allowed a home run in his previous eight starts since Aug. 20.

Ohtani’s postseason stats are rather muted by his standards: a .235 average, three homers, nine RBIs, nine walks and no stolen bases.

He led the NL with 54 homers and 130 RBIs in his first season with the Dodgers after signing a record $700 million, 10-year contract and stole 54 bases to become the first 50-homer, 50-steal player. Still recovering from elbow surgery in September 2023, the two-way star isn’t pitching this year.

Last week’s decisive fifth game win over San Diego in the Division Series was the most-watched Major League Baseball postseason game on record in Japan, averaging an estimated 12.9 million viewers, according to MLB.

Ohtani’s latest home run was hit at just after 9 a.m. Tokyo time.

“I’m sure it’s not easy for the people in Japan to be able to watch these games because of the time difference.” Ohtani said.

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb




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‘Rally snake’? Serpent in Dodgers’ dugout didn’t deliver luck

‘Rally snake’? Serpent in Dodgers’ dugout didn’t deliver luck

Baseball players are notorious for playing practical jokes on one another. Several undoubtedly have involved snakes of the rubber, plastic or even robotic variety.

But a snake slithering across the top step of the dugout when your team is trailing by six runs in the fifth inning of a National League Championship Series game? Wrong place, wrong time.

So it dawned on Dodgers pitcher Brent Honeywell Jr., catcher Will Smith and bench coach Danny Lehmann that the serpent in the Dodgers’ dugout on Monday was real and would be best avoided. Honeywell and Smith were returning to the dugout after retiring the New York Mets in the fifth. Lehmann was greeting them from inside the dugout.

They looked down and gave the snake the right of way. A Dodgers clubhouse attendant swooped in and deftly collected the serpentine intruder in a towel.

Could it have been an omen? An AI overview said that seeing a snake when you are down can be considered a positive omen, symbolizing transformation, rebirth and renewal.

Sure enough, Max Muncy homered to put the Dodgers on the board in the bottom of the fifth and a two-run single by Tommy Edman in the sixth cut the deficit to 6-3.

Alas, the Dodgers’ rally stopped there and the Mets closed out the game to win 7-3 and knot the best-of-seven series at one win apiece.

All that was left were pithy comments, beginning with this call from FOX play-by-play commentator Joe Davis: “We’ve had ‘Snakes on a Plane’, ‘Snakes on a Train’ and the latest Hollywood hit: ‘Snake in the Dugout.’”

On X, comments ranged from obligatory nods toward infiltration by the Arizona Diamondbacks to wondering if Shohei Ohtani‘s deceitful former translator and inveterate gambler Ippei Mizuhara had returned.

More than one referred to Dodgers manager Dave Roberts’ claim after Game 2 of the NLDS that San Diego Padres third baseman Manny Machado threw a ball in his direction, saying, “That was very bothersome. If it was intended at me, I would be very — it’s pretty disrespectful.”

After the Dodgers won the series, Roberts admitted his comments about Machado might have been a bit of gamesmanship to motivate his players. So, of course, a social media comment posited that Roberts said of the snake, “I was told that [Mets shortstop Francisco] Lindor did this in between innings, it has our guys really fired up.”

Jokes aside, Honeywell wasn’t fazed, throwing two more scoreless innings. After all, he’d seen a far larger and more menacing reptile in a dugout.

In 2015, when he was a Tampa Bay Rays minor leaguer, Honeywell stepped into the dugout to see his teammates gawking at an alligator.

“There was an 8- or 9-foot alligator in the dugout under the bench,” Honeywell told The Times. “It had rained a bunch. They just got him out of there. It crawled back in the water.”

Faced with another scaly creature Monday, Honeywell hoped the snake would be a good omen for the Dodgers.

“I hoped it was a rally snake, and we pushed a few runs across right after that, but … “


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Mets’ Sean Manaea, Edwin Diaz unfazed by Dodgers hitters in NLCS Game 2 win

Mets’ Sean Manaea, Edwin Diaz unfazed by Dodgers hitters in NLCS Game 2 win

After allowing nine runs in Game 1 of the NLCS on Sunday, the Mets pitching staff held the powerful Dodgers’ lineup to just three runs in Monday’s Game 2 win.

Starter Sean Manaea struck out seven and tossed five innings before the bullpen took over with the bases loaded in the sixth inning. Phil Maton, Ryne Stanek, and Edwin Diaz each escaped a jam and threw 1.1 IP to close out the final four innings. More impressively, the four pitchers held the heart of the Dodgers order hitless — a combined 0-for-19 with five walks against Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Teoscar Hernandez, Freddie Freeman, and Will Smith.

Manaea struck out Ohtani twice and got him to pop out, as the star slugger finished 0-for-3 with two walks. After the win, the left-hander asked how it was to get the likely NL MVP out three times, saying it’s just part of his job.

“It’s great, he’s just one of the guys in the lineup,” Manaea said. “I’m just trying to do my job and put up zeros. Obviously, he’s very talented, so I’m just trying to get on to the next guy and do my job.”

New York took a commanding 6-0 lead in the second inning after Mark Vientos‘ grand slam, as Manaea said the run support certainly helps, but doesn’t change his game plan.

“It doesn’t really change anything, still just trying to attack guys and get ahead and go right after them,” Manaea said. “With a big lead like that it just makes it so you can breathe a little bit. Not trying to do too much. Definitely helps out a lot.”

With New York up 6-3 in the eighth and two runners on, Carlos Mendoza opted to bring in Diaz to get the final four outs of the game. The closer threw four straight sliders before getting Enrique Hernández to fly out and end the eighth.

“I just was following Alvy [Francisco Alvarez],” Diaz told SNY’s Steve Gelbs after the game. “I was feeling good with my slider today. I think I threw it really good in the bullpen. I just follow him, made good pitches, and get the out in the eighth.”

Diaz then got into some trouble in the ninth by letting up a single and walking Ohtani, but he found a way to settle down and throw strikes with his fastball instead to get the final three outs.

“We are winning by four runs, I get some traffic, the blooper, and then the walk to Ohtani,” Diaz said. “Then I say I got to keep trusting my stuff. My fastball was really good today We started throwing it and we got outs.”

He added on his fastball: “It’s really good, good life. I have a lot of good life in my fastball, it feels really, really good. I think that’s the pitch that can get me out of trouble. I will keep throwing it.”

Like Manaea, Diaz said he doesn’t change his approach when facing a hitter like Ohtani. The star is now 0-for-4 against Diaz in his career (including postseason) over six plate appearances.

“My last two ABs against him, I’ve walked him, but at the same time I try to challenge him,” Diaz said. “He’s one of the best in the league, but I got really good stuff. I trust my stuff always against any hitters. To him, I just go after him. Hit the ball, if you get to two strikes, I will try to make you chase.”

With the NLCS now tied at 1-1 and heading back to New York for Games 3 through 5, Diaz and the Mets hope to continue this run and wrap things up at Citi Field.

“Personally I feel great, got a W here in LA,” Diaz said. “Going back home, play three more games there, we have a chance to take the series at home…. Just continue what we’re doing and we’ll be fine.”


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Sean Manaea shutting down Shohei Ohtani helps Mets quiet Dodgers bats in Game 2

Sean Manaea shutting down Shohei Ohtani helps Mets quiet Dodgers bats in Game 2

LOS ANGELES — Sean Manaea may have put the Mets in a good position Monday just by the manner in which he handled the Dodgers’ leadoff hitter.

Shohei Ohtani went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts against the Mets left-hander, certainly a key — but not everything — in containing this scary Dodgers lineup.


Sean Manaea of the New York Mets throws a pitch during a Game 2 win over the Dodgers on Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

“He’s just one of the guys in the lineup and I was trying to do my job and put up zeroes,” Manaea said after the Mets’ 7-3 victory in Game 2 of the NLCS at Dodger Stadium. “[Ohtani] is very talented and I was just trying to get on to the next guy.”

Manaea allowed two earned runs on two hits and four walks over five innings. Max Muncy homered against him in the fifth before Manaea’s walk to Mookie Betts in the sixth led to the Dodgers’ second run.


Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) reacts after flying out against the Mets in the fifth inning during Game 2 of the NLCS. Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

“[Manaea] was not only getting ahead, but staying on the attack,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “A perfect example was the way he went after Ohtani the first couple of at-bats. I thought everything was working.”


Brandon Nimmo’s barking left foot is receiving daily treatment, but for now it’s not enough of an issue to remove him from the Mets’ lineup.

The outfielder has been dealing with plantar fasciitis since May and aggravated the injury during the NLDS against the Phillies, according to Mendoza. On Sunday, Nimmo was removed for a pinch-hitter in the ninth inning with the Mets trailing by nine runs.

Mendoza said the injury bothers Nimmo the most when he slows down from jogging, but running full-speed isn’t a problem.

“He is going to have to continue to get treatment,” Mendoza said. “He is going to have to continue to take medicine and go day by day.”


Mendoza officially named Luis Severino as the Mets’ starting pitcher for Game 3 on Wednesday. The right-hander departed before the first pitch to fly back early to New York. The Dodgers will counter with Walker Buehler.


Francisco Lindor’s leadoff homer was the sixth in franchise history by a Mets player in the postseason. Curtis Granderson was the last Mets player to lead off with a homer in the postseason, in Game 5 of the 2015 World Series. Jose Reyes, Lenny Dykstra, Wayne Garrett and Tommie Agee are the other players on the list.


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How fast is Shohei Ohtani? Breaking down Dodgers star’s sprint speed, where he ranks among fastest MLB players

How fast is Shohei Ohtani? Breaking down Dodgers star’s sprint speed, where he ranks among fastest MLB players

The excellence of Shohei Ohtani could be summed by in one sentence: he couldn’t pitch in 2024, so he decided to steal nearly 60 bases. 

Ohtani has flashed a little bit of speed throughout his career, but it isn’t a coincidence that he recorded 59 stolen bases this season to shatter his previous high of 26. The former and future MVP evidently made a conscious effort to wreak havoc on the basepaths, and the uptick in steals can’t just be attributed to MLB rule changes — he only stole 20 bases in 2023, when the changes were implemented.

The shift in approach made Ohtani the first player in MLB history to post a 50-50 season, putting him on track for his third MVP award and first in the National League.

Just how fast is Ohtani? Here’s the data on his speed and how it stacks up against MLB’s fastest players.

SN’s MLB HQ: Live MLB scores | Updated MLB standings | Full MLB schedule

How fast is Shohei Ohtani?

Ohtani averaged a sprint speed of 28.1 mph this season, ranking 152nd out of 488 players with at least 25 competitive runs, according to Baseball Savant.

The Dodgers star has above-average speed, all things considered, but it’s not the kind of speed one would expect from someone with 59 stolen bases. Ohtani doesn’t rival the 30 mph sprint speed of stolen base leader Elly De La Cruz; in fact, he’s closer to the league average of 27 mph than he is to De La Cruz or Bobby Witt Jr.

Still, Ohtani has taken advantage of his opportunities on the basepaths. He walks often enough to have more chances than most players, and his height gives him a bit of an advantage when it comes to getting from one base to the next. At the same time, height can also slow a player down. Ohtani (6-4) and De La Cruz (6-5) have broken that mold with their success on the basepaths.

“You don’t expect a guy to be built like that to be able to move how he does,” teammate Gavin Lux said in May, summing up the experience of watching Ohtani run the bases.

Having a feel for the moment, including what kind of lead to take and when to run, is an important skill as well, and Ohtani’s 93.7 percent success rate on stolen base attempts speaks to how well he does in those categories. 

MORE: How to get Dodgers playoff tickets

Fastest MLB players in 2024

Here are the 12 fastest average sprint speeds from the 2024 MLB season, according to Baseball Savant, among players with at least 25 competitive runs:

Player Sprint speed (mph) Team SB
Bobby Witt Jr. 30.5 Royals 31
Johan Rojas 30.1 Phillies 25
Elly De La Cruz 30.0 Reds 67
Tyler Fitzgerald 30.0 Giants 17
Pete Crow-Armstrong 30.0 Cubs 27
Victor Scott II 30.0 Cardinals 5
Jorge Mateo 29.9 Orioles 13
Jose Siri 29.9 Rays 14
Garrett Hampson 29.8 Royals 7
Jeremy Pena 29.8 Astros 20
Johnny DeLuca 29.8 Rays 16
Wyatt Langford 29.8 Rangers 19

Ohtani can run, but he isn’t close to the top of the leaderboard at 28.1 mph. Sprint speed doesn’t directly correlate to stolen base total, though.

Many of the fastest players are part-time players, including Victor Scott II and Johnny DeLuca, because speed alone doesn’t justify putting a player in the lineup every day. Others just don’t take as many chances, and some stars, including Witt, are careful not to take too many injury risks.

De La Cruz and Ohtani played a brand of baseball this season that was built on creating havoc on the basepaths. That Ohtani was able to rack up 59 stolen bases without blazing speed might make his achievement that much more remarkable. 


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Dodgers’ Walker Buehler Had 0,000 Watch Stolen During Robbery at Racetrack

Dodgers’ Walker Buehler Had $100,000 Watch Stolen During Robbery at Racetrack

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Walker Buehler had a watch worth over $100,000 stolen while he was attending a horse race at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif. on Sept. 28, according to multiple reports. ABC7 Eyewitness News was first to report the news.

Buehler, a fan of horse racing, was joined at the race track by his wife McKenzie and Dodgers teammate Jack Flaherty. A mob of thieves surrounded Buehler and snatched the expensive watch, though the Dodgers pitcher—nor his wife or Flaherty—was not harmed during the incident, the Arcadia Police Department said in a statement posted onto its account on X, formerly Twitter.

“In one incident, a victim was walking among a large crowd of patrons,” the statement said. “While walking within the crowd, the victim was encircled by a group of unknown suspects. These suspects limited the movement of the victim, creating confusion.

“While the movement of the victim was limited, one of the suspects was able to remove the victim’s watch from their wrist. After removing the watch, the group of suspects dispersed and left the area. At that time, the victim realized their watch was stolen and reported the incident to Santa Anita Park security. At no time during the incident was the victim threatened.”

Buehler was one of three victims to have a watch stolen that day at the race track, police said. The Dodgers have not yet commented on the incident. Buehler’s agency, Excel Sports Management, said the following in a statement obtained by Russell Dorsey of Yahoo Sports.

“Following Walker’s final regular season start on Sept. 27th, he and a number of other players did not travel to Colorado for the final regular season series,” the agency said. “That weekend, Walker and his wife McKenzie, were attending horse races at Santa Anita Park.

“While walking from the paddack to their seats, Walker was unknowingly the victim of a snatch and grab robbery of his watch. The incident was reported to police and is currently under investigation. 

“We are grateful Walker and McKenzie were not harmed and Walker is focused on the playoffs.”

The news comes as Buehler prepares to take the mound for the Dodgers in Game 3 of the National League Division Series against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. The series is currently tied at a game apiece.


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Thieves steal watch from Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler – NBC Los Angeles

Thieves steal watch from Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler – NBC Los Angeles

A group of thieves surrounded at least three Santa Anita Park visitors, including Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler, and slipped off their wristwatches in a series of distraction thefts at the racetrack in Arcadia, California.

In each case reported in late September, the victim was walking in a large crowd at the park east of Los Angeles when they were approached by the thieves, some of whom distracted the victim as an accomplice removed the watch.

Buehler, who is scheduled to start Game 3 of the Dodgers’ National League Division Series Tuesday night in San Diego, was at the horse racing track Sept. 27 with his wife McKenzie when he was robbed, Excel Sports Management said in a statement. Thieves surrounded Buehler and took the pricey wristwatch from his arm.

“While walking from the paddock to their seats, Walker was unknowingly the victim of a snatch and grab robbery of his watch,” Excel Sports Management said in the statement. “The incident was reported to police and is currently under investigation. We are grateful Walker and McKenzie were not harmed and Walker is focused on the playoffs.”

Buehler, who grew up in Lexington, Kentucky, has a micro-share ownership in Authentic, the 2020 Kentucky Derby champion. He was at the track with other players who did not travel to Colorado for the Dodgers’ final series of the season, Excel Sports Management said.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was asked Tuesday about the robbery.

“It happened a couple of weeks ago, so it’s old news for Walker,” said Roberts. “I’m happy that he’s safe, but it just keeps us all on alert that things like this can happy. What a scary time.

“You can always replace a watch, but it wasn’t a cheap watch.”

One of the watches targeted in the robberies was estimated at about $100,000. Another was valued at $250,000, police said

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Arcadia police issued a news release Tuesday with details about the three distraction robberies reported on the same weekend at Santa Anita Park. In one theft, the victim was walking with a large group when the thieves surrounded them.

“While the movement of the victim was limited, one of the suspects was able to remove the victim’s watch from their wrist,” the Arcadia Police Department said in a statement.

The victim did not realize the watch was missing until the thieves left the area, police said. There was no indication that the thieves threatened the victim during the theft.

A similar crime was reported by another person later that same day. The victim in that case did not notice the watch was missing until several hours later, police said.

In a third case that day, the victim was approached by a group of thieves, one of whom attempted to hug the victim. A second thief began to remove their watch, but the victim noticed.

“The victim felt his watch being removed and confronted the suspects, who immediately left the area,” police said.

The man notified park security and police, who took one person into custody. The 24-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of grand theft and being in possession of a fraudulent social security cards

“We are fully cooperating with the Arcadia Police Department’s investigation,” Santa Anita Park said in a statement.


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