Los Angeles Dodgers Star Shohei Ohtani Dominates Game 3 Of World Series
You know that feeling when you’re watching something special unfold before your eyes? That moment when you realize you’re witnessing history? Well, if you were lucky enough to catch Game 3 of the World Series, you just watched Shohei Ohtani put on a clinic that’ll have baseball fans talking for decades.
Ohtani Channels His Inner Babe Ruth
Let’s cut to the chase here – what Ohtani did in Game 3 was absolutely bonkers. The guy went yard twice, smacked a couple of doubles, and became the first player since 1906 to record four extra-base hits in a World Series game. That’s right, 1906. We’re talking about a record that’s older than sliced bread, literally.
But here’s the kicker – this wasn’t just some fluke performance. This was vintage Ohtani doing what he does best: making the impossible look routine. His 12 total bases in a single World Series game? Yeah, that’s a new Dodgers franchise record. Because apparently, breaking one record per game just isn’t enough for this man.
The Numbers Don’t Lie (And They’re Insane)
When you start comparing Ohtani to Babe Ruth, you know you’re in rarefied air. The Japanese superstar became just the second player since the Bambino to have multiple games with 12 or more total bases. Ruth did it because, well, he was Babe Ruth. Ohtani’s doing it because he’s apparently from another planet.
His eighth postseason homer tied Corey Seager’s franchise record from 2020, but let’s be honest – at the rate he’s going, that record might not survive the week. The man is currently 7-for-7 in his last seven at-bats at Dodger Stadium, with 5 homers and 2 doubles. That’s not baseball; that’s video game numbers.
Ohtani Makes History Look Easy
Ohtani makes it look so effortless. His first-inning ground-rule double? Routine. His third-inning solo shot off Max Scherzer? Just another day at the office. That tying homer in the seventh off Seranthony Dominguez? Pure poetry in motion.
And let’s talk about that National League Championship Series MVP award he just picked up. Three homers, six scoreless innings pitched in the clinching game against Milwaukee. The guy’s literally playing two positions at an elite level while everyone else is trying to master one.
The Postseason King
This marks the third time this postseason that Ohtani has gone deep at least twice in a single game – a Major League Baseball first. Read that again. Nobody in the history of this beautiful game has ever done what he’s doing right now.
The baseball gods seem to be smiling down on Dodger Stadium these days, and Ohtani is their chosen messenger. Every swing looks effortless, every hit perfectly placed, every moment building toward something truly special. We’re not just watching great baseball – we’re watching history unfold one swing at a time.
