On Star Wars Night in Anaheim, Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani shined the brightest. The two-way phenom turned in another brilliant start against the Royals on Friday, tossing seven shutout innings and striking out a season-high 11, and leading the Angels to a 2-0 win.
Ohtani’s season ERA improves to 0.64. He has struck out 32.9% of hitters and has held them to an impressive .093 batting average.
Friday’s start was the 2021 AL MVP’s first-ever start on three days of rest, thanks to the shortened start on Monday against the Red Sox. It was not an issue for Ohtani, who opened the game by striking out the side. It was the first time this season that the Japanese right-hander did not walk the leadoff hitter.
Ohtani said that he felt good despite the short rest. “I slept pretty well, and so I came in pretty fresh. I didn’t really have that [short rest] in mind,” Ohtani said.
Ohtani struck out the last six hitters to wrap up his dominant outing. Hitters whiffed on 42% of their swings, for a total of 22 whiffs, and just three of Ohtani’s pitches were hit hard into fair territory.
An interesting change in this particular start was the increased cutter and curveball usage. Ohtani threw his cutter 21 times, which is as much as he has thrown it on all of his other starts combined. He threw his curveball nine times, including one looping 68 mph pitch, and hitters whiffed on four of them.
Ohtani felt like he mixed his pitches well. “It was a good balance [of pitch types], the third time around the order I was able to mix in the curveball well,” Ohtani said. “I felt that hitters were sitting on the breaking ball, but if I threw two different types they’d have a more difficult time.”
Baseball Savant’s release point chart shows Ohtani’s consistent release point. All six pitches that Ohtani threw on Friday all come from a similar release point but have drastically different movements and speeds ranging from 68 mph to 100 mph, making it difficult for hitters to predict what pitch comes next.
Angels manager Phil Nevin said that since Ohtani calls his own pitches, he studies hitters and understands when he can use a specific pitch. “From a hitter’s standpoint, I would have no idea what to prepare for,” Nevin said.
Today’s game was the first time Ohtani was caught by Chad Wallach after Logan O’Hoppe was placed on the 10-day injured list. Ohtani was thankful for Wallach. “He was great, he framed the balls on the corners well and got me strikes,” Ohtani said. Wallach also helped out Ohtani at the plate, hitting the go-ahead two-run homer in the bottom of the third.
Ohtani’s next scheduled start is on April 27th against the Athletics at 4:07 EST/1:07 PT.
mlb fan
It’s fairly odd, the way the Angels avoided having Ohtani pitch in New York and then have him pitch on short rest vs the soft landing Royals.
gbs42
It’s almost like they have a plan of rotating starting pitchers on a regular basis, and this is just how things fell. I wonder if other teams will try something similar.