News

From parrots to chemists, the world is captivated by baseball superstar Ohtani

From parrots to chemists, the world is captivated by baseball superstar Ohtani

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani (17) delivers a pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays during fourth inning Game 4 World Series playoff MLB baseball action in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press via AP) Photo: Associated Press


By YURI KAGEYAMA AP Business Writer
TOKYO (AP) — “Ohtani. Home run. Awesome. Ohtani. Home run.”
Cocochan Hayakawa, a chatty parrot with nearly 48,000 followers on Instagram, is one of millions of admirers of Shohei Ohtani, the baseball superstar starring again for the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series.
“He is the greatest,” said Hideyuki Kamimura, who heads a dental clinic in a town north of Tokyo and goes to Los Angeles every year to watch a Dodgers game.
Although the Dodgers are trailing Toronto 3-2 in the World Series, Kamimura still believes Ohtani and the Dodgers will prevail.
He adores Ohtani so much that he has an Ohtani memorabilia collection including three of the player’s helmets, one of which he bought for $10 million at auction.
“Ohtani has always delivered dramatic victorious endings from totally critical situations,” Kamimura said.
It is hard to escape Ohtani in Japan, even while the country is glued to its own World Series equivalent, the ongoing Japan Series. The SoftBank Hawks are vying for their 12th championship versus the Hanshin Tigers, one of Japan’s oldest clubs dating to the 1930s.
While being able to watch Ohtani’s games live — after breakfast in Tokyo time — he’s also popular in advertisements and his face is all over billboards and merchandise and TV.
He’s seemingly everywhere in Tokyo, pitching everything from watches to bottled water to noodles to omusubi (rice balls). He reportedly earns around $100 million annually from endorsements, beside a $2 million salary from the Dodgers.
In one ad for a home security company, Ohtani even faces a legend in Japanese baseball who died this year at 89. A computer-graphics dream faceoff has Ohtani pitching to a young Shigeo Nagashima. The ad ends before the ball reaches the plate.
His Dodgers teammates have made viral fun of Ohtani’s gesture in a sunscreen ad in which he draws the bottle across his face and replicates it while rounding the bases.
To Japanese fans, Ohtani is just about perfect: He hits home runs, pitches great, steals bases and has a reputation for being kind and humble.
Max Bedding, a chemist from Sydney, was visibly happy after he bought an Ohtani cap during a vacation in Japan. Baseball isn’t that big in Australia but Bedding is moving to the U.S. and wanted proof he’s up with the times.
“Being in Japan, I’ve seen how much of a cultural phenomenon he is,” Bedding said of Ohtani. “He is a tremendous athlete.”
___
Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB

Recent Headlines

4 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Kendrick Lamar leads 2026 Grammy nominations, followed by Lady Gaga, Jack Antonoff and Cirkut

Not like us? More like him: Kendrick Lamar leads the 2026 Grammy Award nominations, announced Friday.

10 hours ago in Sports

Broncos’ defense shines in 10-7 squeaker over Raiders despite offensive and special teams struggles

The Denver Broncos aren't collecting many style points but as long as they keep racking up more points than their opponents on the scoreboard, they don't care how ugly it looks.

10 hours ago in Sports

Ex-NFL star Antonio Brown arrested on attempted murder charge in Miami shooting

Former NFL star Antonio Brown has been arrested on an attempted murder charge stemming from a shooting after a celebrity boxing event in Miami, police confirmed Thursday.

11 hours ago in Entertainment

Shaggy recounts his relief mission to Jamaica after Hurricane Melissa and shares how you can help

After the devastating October storm that killed at least 75 people across the northern Caribbean, Shaggy, 57, mobilized relief immediately for Jamaica, shuttling supplies from Miami and hand delivering them to the worst-hit areas.

11 hours ago in Lifestyle

Farmers’ Almanac says it will cease publication after 208 years, citing financial challenges

A 208-year-old publication that farmers, gardeners and others keen to predict the weather have relied on for guidance will be publishing for the final time.