Major League Baseball (MLB) Los Angeles Dodgers on the 5thIn the final game of the three-game match with the Warriors on the road, Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani knocked out a second base hit, but the Dodgers lost 3:4 in the end, ending the recent seven-game winning streak.
Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani
Dodgers' former Fireball junior Maye was knocked out of 5 hits in the first 5.2 innings in this game, including a 2-point shot by Warriors star heavy gun Riley in the 1st inning and 3rd inning, and the 4 points lost were all points of responsibility, sending 6 strikeouts and 2 four bad saves, and the defense rate was 4.36 after the game.
The Dodgers relied on Marnsey to knock out a second base hit to recover 1 point in the 4th inning, and Marnsy made a contribution in the 6th inning, rolling the earth back to the runner to return to the 2nd point, and after the 7th inning on 1 out, Rojas knocked out the first hit of the season, Yang Chun Cannon helped the Dodgers chase the remaining 1 point difference, and after 2 outs, Shohei Ohtani knocked out a second base hit with a muzzle speed of 109.5 miles, but the Dodgers failed to continue the offense.
Footage of the game
On the 9th inning, the Dodgers finally counterattacked, the first Pachs knocked on the court and then exited, and the former Korean professional base thief Kim Hye-sung came on the court to run, and immediately ran out of the first thief of his career in the major leagues, and then Smith swallowed K, and Kim Hye-sung took advantage of the catcher's pass to the first base to complete the strikeouts to third base, but the follow-up two hitters Rojas and Barnes were both hit by the strikeouts, and the Dodgers missed the tie and ended the recent 7-game winning streak.
Shohei Ohtani knocked out 1 hit in 3 hits in this game, selected 1 4-bad skeeping, swallowed 1 strikeout, and had a post-game batting average of 0.294 and an attack index of 0.970. Ohtani hit a 399-foot deep fly ball in the middle of the field at the 3rd seat with an initial velocity of 110.1 mph, but was caught in front of the wall, and the fly ball would have been a home run in nine of the 30 major league courts (including Dodger Field).