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How Shohei Ohtani is connecting with his Dodgers teammates - ESPN

LOS ANGELES — Shohei Ohtani struck out March 28 against St. Louis Cardinals reliever Riley O'Brien and took a seat alone on the bench in the Los Angeles Dodgers' dugout. Moments later, Max Muncy, standing near the top step waiting to take his place in the on-deck circle, called over to him. It was the seventh inning of the Dodgers' home opener, and Muncy wanted to get a better sense of O'Brien, a 29-year-old journeyman right-hander. In that moment, Ohtani got what he probably needed most:

An opening. A chance to connect organically with new teammates. A reminder, perhaps, that nothing breaks down walls like the universal language of sports.

Ohtani walked Muncy through his at-bat, without the benefit of a translator, using hand gestures and a steadily improving grasp of English to explain the break on O'Brien's slider and the depth of his curveball. Soon he was holding court for Teoscar Hernández and James Outman, too, a scene that has become familiar in the season's first two-plus weeks.

Said Outman: «We speak the same language of baseball.»

Ohtani is both the biggest baseball star in the world and the sport's greatest mystery. The enormity of his profile has almost necessitated a life of secrecy, one that has often distanced him from even his own teammates. Few, if any, can relate to his level of fame. The language barrier doesn't help. The reality of his role this season, a designated hitter still in the early stages of his recovery as a pitcher, has put him on what Dodgers manager Dave Roberts described as «an island,» often alone in his work. And the betting scandal that surrounds Ohtani — triggering the firing of his former interpreter and confidant, Ippei Mizuhara, who has since been charged with bank fraud — seems

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