Shohei Ohtani hits for the cycle, a breakdown

What Happened

Shohei Ohtani, the two-way superstar for the Los Angeles Angels, takes the field against the Tampa Bay Rays. Ryan Yarbrough of the Rays is on the mound to start the game. In the first inning, Ohtani steps up to the plate with two men on base and no outs. He contemplates bunting to advance the runners, but then unloads on a two-seam fastball, driving it over the wall for a towering three-run home run. "The way the ball comes off Ohtani's bat is just so special," the announcer remarks. In Ohtani's next at-bat, he ropes a stand-up double into left field off Yarbrough. The Rays then try a steady diet of curveballs, but Ohtani refuses to bite, working a full count before lacing a triple down the line. "They were playing him to go the other way, but he just pulled it down the line for the easiest stand-up triple," the announcer notes. Now facing reliever Hunter Wood in his final at-bat, Ohtani sees mostly fastballs. After fouling off a couple, Wood tries a slider, which Ohtani pokes into shallow center field for a single, completing the cycle. "I don't even know if he knew about it or cared about it," the announcer says, as Ohtani's teammates excitedly retrieve the ball for him. "Anything to make you guys happy, I guess," Ohtani says with a shrug. Ohtani's historic performance has put the Angels firmly in control of this game against the Rays. His ability to impact the game on both sides of the ball, as both a dominant pitcher and a feared slugger, is truly unmatched in today's MLB. The Angels dugout is buzzing with excitement over Ohtani's accomplishment, even if the humble superstar doesn't seem to fully grasp the magnitude of what he's just achieved.

Full Transcript

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Shohei Otani hit for the cycle yesterday

we got Yarbrough the boar pitching for

the Rays opening them up with a

curveball away now Otani thinks about

bunting because you got two on move