13 reasons Shohei had the greatest game ever

October 18th, 2025

We are so lucky to witness . That has been true for a while, but never has it been more prominently on display than on Friday night in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series.

This was his magnum opus, the greatest all-around single-game performance he has had, especially considering that it came on a night when the Dodgers captured the NL pennant with a 5-1 win over the Brewers.

But we can look beyond Ohtani. This was the most impressive performance we have ever seen in the postseason -- and perhaps in any game, given the stakes.

Here are 13 reasons this was the best single-game output in baseball history:

The history
1. The historic feats started early. Ohtani led off the bottom of the first inning with a home run, becoming the first pitcher to hit a leadoff homer in any MLB game, regular season or postseason. He’s the only player in postseason history to lead off a game he started on the mound, which he now has done twice.

2. But he didn’t stop there. Ohtani went on to hit another homer in the fourth inning and a third in the seventh. He became the first pitcher with multiple home runs in a postseason game.

3. Meanwhile on the mound, Ohtani went six-plus scoreless innings, allowing two hits and striking out 10 batters. He’s the first player in MLB history to strike out even five batters in a game where he hit three homers -- and he struck out 10. And that’s in any game, regular season or postseason.

4. This was the second time in his career Ohtani had at least 10 strikeouts as a pitcher and multiple home runs at the plate in a game (including playoffs). He’s the only player to do that twice in a career. Because of course he is.

5. Ohtani became the first player to strike out a batter and hit a home run in the first inning of a postseason game. He’s also the first player to strike out three batters and hit a home run in the same postseason inning. He had two strikeouts in the fourth before hitting his second homer, making him the first player with multiple career postseason innings with multiple strikeouts and a home run.

6. Ohtani’s three homers in postseason games he pitched (all in this game) are the most of any player in a career in games pitched. The only players to even have two are Bob Gibson and Dave McNally. Speaking of Gibson, entering Friday, there was one pitcher in postseason history to have at least 10 strikeouts and a homer once in a game: Gibson, twice.

7. Ohtani’s was the 13th three-homer game in postseason history. The Dodgers have had each of the last three, with Chris Taylor in 2021 NLCS Game 5 and Kiké Hernández in 2017 NLCS Game 5. The only other franchise with multiple three-homer games in the postseason is the Yankees (two from Babe Ruth, one from Reggie Jackson).

8. It was also the sixth of those 13 three-homer games to come in a postseason series-clinching game. The others were Hernández’s noted above, Adrian Beltre in 2011 ALDS Game 4, Adam Kennedy in 2002 ALCS Game 5, Jackson in 1977 World Series Game 6 and Ruth in 1928 World Series Game 4. None of the other five threw a pitch in those games.

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The Statcast history
9. Ohtani didn’t just hit three homers -- he crushed them, at exit velocities of 116.5 mph, 116.9 mph and 113.6 mph. He became the first player with multiple home runs of at least 116 mph in any regular season or postseason game under Statcast (2015). Again, in a game he pitched.

10. The two 116 mph homers came while Ohtani was in the game as pitcher, marking the two hardest-hit home runs as a pitcher under Statcast. It should be no surprise that Ohtani occupies each of the top eight spots on that list. And that’s just the homers he has hit while in the game as pitcher. Those two also mean he has each of the Dodgers’ 18 hardest-hit balls under Statcast. He’s been on the team for two years.

11. The longest of the home runs went a Statcast-projected 469 feet, leaving Dodger Stadium, per the team. The ballpark has not historically been known for frequent long home runs, but that was before Ohtani, who now has eight home runs of at least 450 feet at Dodger Stadium including playoffs. No other player even has multiple there under Statcast.

Ohtani dominated the Baseball Savant leaderboards in Game 4.
Ohtani dominated the Baseball Savant leaderboards in Game 4.

12. The power was not confined to his at-bats. Ohtani struck out three batters in the first, including two on pitches of 100-plus mph. Entering the day, all Dodgers starting pitchers had combined for one 100 mph postseason strikeout under pitch tracking (2008).

13. He threw each of the 11 fastest pitches in the game by either team. Ohtani also had each of the three hardest-hit balls and the three longest distances. And of course, he induced the most swings and misses, too.

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Sarah Langs is a reporter/editor for MLB.com based in New York. Listen to her on the Ballpark Dimensions podcast with Mandy Bell.

Franchise history or winner-take-all? Here's what's at stake in ALCS Game 6

10:55 AM GMT+9

Friday brought one of the most thrilling postseason evenings in recent memory, with the Mariners putting together a raucous eighth-inning comeback in the opener, and then doing something that nobody has ever done -- and surely will never be matched, unless of course it’s by him -- in the nightcap.

The Dodgers' NLCS sweep of the Brewers means there will be no more days with multiple baseball games until the spring. But the one baseball game on Sunday is more than enough, to say the least. It will feature either the Blue Jays forcing a Game 7 or the Mariners reaching their first World Series in franchise history.

Throughout this postseason, I’ll be previewing the next day’s action, game by game. Here’s a look at three storylines for Sunday’s ALCS Game 6.

ALCS Game 6: Mariners at Blue Jays (SEA up 3-2)
8:03 p.m. ET, FS1
SP: (SEA) vs. (TOR)

This is a lot to ask of Yesavage

There isn’t a person involved with the Blue Jays who doesn’t attest to Yesavage possessing maturity that goes beyond his years. Kevin Gausman, Max Scherzer, manager John Schneider, they all rave about the kid. “You kind of lose sight of the fact that he's 22,” Schneider said.

But the thing is: He is 22. And he’s not just 22: He’s a 22-year-old who has only pitched in five Major League Baseball games in his entire life. Five! Now, two of those games have been in the postseason, but it should be said that only one of them went well. We all remember that dominant start against the Yankees in the ALDS, but the Mariners knocked him around pretty good in Game 2 of this series, tagging him for five runs in four innings of a 10-3 Seattle win.

And now the sixth game of his MLB career is, basically, the most important Blue Jays game in more than 30 years. The Jays have Chris Bassitt, Eric Lauer and potentially Braydon Fisher available if Yesavage struggles early … but if he struggles early, at that point, it might be too late. Of course, if he does what he did against the Yankees … he’ll be a Canadian legend.

For all the big hitters in the Blue Jays lineup -- including the injured Bo Bichette, who has yet to play this postseason -- the best hitter they had during the regular season was Springer. He has carried that over into the postseason, putting up a .933 OPS, which shouldn’t be a surprise: There’s no hitter in either lineup with more October experience.

But the sight of Springer taking a fastball off his knee in Game 5 was a little terrifying; the sound alone made you double over. He left the game -- after being booed by some of the Seattle fans in attendance, much to the irritation of Schneider -- right before the Mariners made their wild, riotous eighth-inning comeback. Schneider is confident Springer will be OK for Game 6 -- "George is about as tough as they come,” he said. “I think he'll have to really, really be hurting to not be in the lineup on Sunday” -- but that looked extremely painful.

Suffice it to say, this Blue Jays lineup can’t afford to lose Springer, or even have him playing at significantly less than 100 percent. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is on an all-time heater, but the Mariners have already started walking him any time he can do any real damage. It’s just a lousy time to have a player as important as Springer compromised in any way.

Can the Mariners meet the moment?

This here, right now, is the closest the Mariners have ever come to a World Series. This is their fourth trip to the ALCS, and none of the first three saw them win more than two games (which they did in both 1995 and 2000). In their most recent trip (2001), a team that won a record 116 games during the regular season was bounced in an emotionally devastating five-game series. After that, it was another 21 years before Seattle made it back to the playoffs at all.

The Mariners should not be deluded by their victories in Games 1 and 2 at Rogers Centre. This crowd is going to be losing its collective mind from first pitch on Sunday, as we have long gotten accustomed to from Toronto fans. (And Seattle fans, of course.) Toronto has been waiting a long time for a trip back to the World Series, after all.

But even with all that: Everything is lining up for the Mariners. They’ve had this incredible season, highlighted by making history seemingly every time he came to the plate. They have a rotation that’s lined up well and is already a team strength. They’ve got a lineup that, thanks to Eugenio Suárez’s resurgence of late, looks deeper than it has since the Trade Deadline. And they’ve got the aura of a team that may, at last, be having its moment in the sun.

This is not to say that the Mariners advancing is a lock, that they’ve punched their ticket, that anything has been settled at all. It’s just to say that if they fall short now, after all this, it will be the most heartbreaking thing to happen to a franchise and a fanbase that has had its heart broken many, many times. The Mariners are just one game away from uncharted territory -- from the promised land. Now they just have to get that one … last … win.

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