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His pitch mix is right recipe for win
August 29, 2025
|Los Angeles Times
Ohtani uses his entire repertoire in a sparkling five-inning outing to get his first victory on the mound as a Dodger and cap a sweep of Reds

Photographs by ERIC THAYER For The Times THE DODGERS' Shohei Ohtani gave up a run and struck out nine in five innings to help beat Cincinnati and extend L.A's lead in the West to two games.
Ever since resuming two-way duties earlier this year, Shohei Ohtani had been throwing the ball well.
It wasn't until Wednesday, however, that he finally pitched like a frontline starter, too.
Coming off his second career Tommy John surgery this year, Ohtani immediately lit up the radar gun with 100-mph fastballs and amassed gaudy strikeout totals with a devastating sweeper. In his first eight pitching starts of the season, he gave up just five runs in 16 innings for a 2.37 ERA, racked up 25 punchouts against just five walks, and looked every bit of the hard-throwing ace he was before spending a year and a half rehabbing his right elbow and serving only as a designated hitter.
But, during that time, Ohtani was also throwing in only short bursts, as part of a deliberate effort to slowly build him up. He tossed one inning in his first two starts. Two innings, then three, then four, in each pair of outings after that. Rarely did he face a lineup two times through. At no point did he see the same batter three times in the same game.
He was, in effect, an opener.
And in that role, raw stuff was enough.
Recently, however, Ohtani had encountered a new challenge. Since getting the green light to make more typical five-inning starts, he had failed to actually complete the fifth in his first two attempts.
The struggles weren't surprising, with five of the nine runs Ohtani had given up in his previous two outings coming in either the fourth or fifth innings. For all of Ohtani's talent, it was clear there was tactical rust that still needed to be cleared.

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