Tag Archives: Shohei Ohtani

Ohtani rules

Well of course he does, but this is about how and why MLB has adjusted its game to make room for the Shohei Ohtani two-way player phenomenon on Friday by changing its rules to make the non-English speaking face of the game even more prominent.

Ohtani’s two-way career may have gotten started in Japan, but it started here only because his 100-mph fastball gave the high schooler the leverage to turn down the Nippon Ham Fighters and sign with an MLB club. To be fair, Ohtani and the Fighters deserve credit for his development in an environment basically hostile to the idea of a two-way player.

Let’s face it, Ohtani only became the AL’s 2018 rookie of the year and 2021 MVP because teams knew in December 2017 that if they wanted his fastball and splitter, they had to suck it up and let Ohtani try to hit MLB pitching, even if they didn’t want to and didn’t believe it was possible.

Any baseball person who tells you they saw Ohtani as a slugging high school pitcher in Japan and thought at the time he could be a two-way pro is full of shit.

Pro baseball around the world believed in specialization, and no one was going to tell it differently. Nippon Ham was certainly no exception.

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2-way star Masaru Kageura

A lot of players in baseball history have transitioned from pitching to playing in the field, but few have done both for a prolonged period. There were 12 seasons before 1940 in which a player really contributed to wins as a pitcher, batter and a fielder at another position, and the Shohei Ohtani Award’s inaugural winner accounted for four of those.

Hall of Famer Masaru Kageura was more than just a pitcher who could hit and field, or a position player who could pitch. Using Bill James’ Win Shares as a starting point, I identified players who contributed significantly to wins as a pitcher, batter and fielder.

Starting in the 1936 autumn season, through the spring and autumn of 1937 and into the spring of 1938, the Hanshin Tigers right-hander created 25.5 win shares as a pitcher, 31.2 as a hitter, and 4.1 as a fielder, mostly in right field but with 15 games at third and a handful in left.

Here’s his story.

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