McGregor, Maguire, and··MLB record of only two people in history, Ohtani trying again

He has become the No. 1 home run player. Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers is constantly running towards the milestone with only three players in Major League history. At an away game against Colorado at Coors Field in Denver, Colorado on Monday, Ohtani appeared as the first and designated hitter, and successfully got on base three times by making one hit, one RBI, one run and two walks from three times at bat, including his 21st homer of the season. The Dodgers beat Colorado 5-3 with Gavin Stone allowing two runs in 5.1 innings as the starting pitcher for Ohtani’s stellar performance, and finished the four consecutive games with a 3-1 victory.

In place of Betts, who was away for a while after suffering a fracture in the back of his left hand against the Kansas City Royals on the 17th, Ohtani, who played as a leadoff in this four-game series, performed better than this. In this four-game series, “leadoff Ohtani” has a batting average of 0.444 (8 hits in 18 times at bat), an on-base percentage of 0.524, a slugging percentage of 0.944, and an OPS of 1.468 two homers, seven RBIs and three walks.

In his first at-bat in the top of the first inning, Ohtani hit an 89.1 mile sinker coming into the middle of the 2B-1S ball count against Colorado starter Ty Blak, hitting a solo home run that went slightly over the fence. It was Ohtani’s 21st home run of the season, which led Ohtani to lead the NL home run alone over Marcel Osuna (Atlanta).

Since then, Ohtani has walked with two outs and runners on first and third base in the top of the second inning to continue the bases loaded chance, but failed to enter the home due to the failure of subsequent hits. In the third at-bat in the top of the fourth inning, after a close match with a full count, he struck out swinging on an 81.1 mile (about 130.5 kilometers) changeup that Block threw tightly on the low outside course. Ohtani, who only hit a fly to center field in his fourth at-bat in the top of the sixth inning with no outs and runners on first base, got on base with an intentional walk in the top of the eighth inning.

After a brief slump, Ohtani is flying again. In the last five games, he showed tremendous strength with a batting average of 0.476, OPS 1.75, four homers and nine RBIs, returning to his initial terrifying appearance. Ohtani is challenging again for the third two major league home run kings in history as he climbed back to No. 1 in the National League home run king race, which once seemed to be moving away. 토토사이트 추천

Since 1901, there have been only two players in the MLB who have been home run kings in both the National League and the American League: Fred McGregor and Mark McGwire. McGriff hit 36 home runs in 1989 while playing for the Toronto Blue Jays, and in 1992, he hit 35 home runs for the San Diego Padres to win the National League home run.

Maguire was followed by Maguire. In 1987 and 1996, when he was with the Oakland Athletics, Maguire hit 49 and 52 homers, respectively, to rank No. 1 in homers in the American League, and later moved to the St. Louis Cardinals, where he became the NL home run king for two consecutive years from 1998 to 1999.

Ohtani, who finished the season early last year due to elbow injury but became the homerun king of the American League with 44 homers, is displaying pace to hit 44 homers so far in the National League this year. Ohtani is the best.

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