Current:Home > NewsShohei Ohtani hears rare boos from spurned Blue Jays fans - then hits a home run -×
Shohei Ohtani hears rare boos from spurned Blue Jays fans - then hits a home run
View
Date:2025-04-18 14:41:05
Shohei Ohtani finally took to the skies in Toronto - at the expense of the Blue Jays, no less.
Hearing boos for one of the few times in his career after erroneous December media reports had him ticketed to join the Blue Jays in free agency, Ohtani silenced the Rogers Centre crowd Friday night with a towering home run in his first at-bat in Toronto since the free agent frenzy.
Ohtani hit his seventh home run of the season off Toronto starter Chris Bassitt, bringing some sense of closure to one of the stranger offseason episodes in major league history.
In case you forgot: An MLB Network report stated Ohtani was on his way to Toronto on Dec. 8, and a separate report indicated Ohtani had reached agreement with the Blue Jays - sparking an online frenzy to track a flight from Southern California to Toronto.
One problem: Ohtani was not on the plane. And no agreement was in place.
MLB SALARIES: Baseball's top 25 highest-paid players in 2024
Instead, a day later, Ohtani announced on Instagram he had reached agreement with the Los Angeles Dodgers. His 10-year, $700 million deal ensured the globe's biggest baseball star would join one of the game's most storied franchises.
It also set the stage for a lackluster offseason for the Blue Jays, who failed to significantly upgrade a playoff team and currently are off to a 13-13 start.
So it was little wonder that the home crowd was a little salty Friday night - not that Ohtani had anything to do with sparking their false hopes nearly five months ago.
"I was as surprised as any fans in terms of the news going around," Ohtani said this week in Washington, via interpreter Will Ireton. "I was just following the news. I knew I wasn’t on that flight, so I was curious, too. But I did meet with the Blue Jays organization and the impression I got was it’s a really, really great organization.
"The fans are great and I love the city too, so I’m really looking forward to going to Toronto."
You'd think it was nothing personal, but Blue Jays fans did not take it that way.
Ohtani's response, then, was strictly business.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- LIV Golf Masters: Results, scores leaderboard for LIV tour as DeChambeau finishes top 10
- Colts sign three-time Pro Bowl DT DeForest Buckner to hefty contract extension
- Opioid settlement cash being used for existing programs and salaries, sparking complaints
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- A Second Real Housewives of Potomac Star Is Leaving After Season 8
- An AP photographer explains how he captured the moment of eclipse totality
- Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer's Love Story Will Truly Warm Your Blood
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Semiautomatic firearm ban passes Colorado’s House, heads to Senate
Ranking
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Dawn Staley rides in Rolls-Royce Dawn for South Carolina's 'uncommon' victory parade
- 2024 Boston Marathon: How to watch, stream, route and start times
- Is orange juice good for you? Why one woman's 'fruitarianism' diet is causing controversy.
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- In historic first, gymnast Morgan Price becomes first HBCU athlete to win national collegiate title
- 1 killed, several injured when big rig plows into Texas Department of Public Safety office in apparent intentional act, officials say
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, 'Amazing to see you!'
Recommendation
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Supreme Court rejects appeal from Black Lives Matter activist over Louisiana protest lawsuit
Major news organizations urge Biden, Trump to commit to presidential debates
The NBA’s East play-in field is set: Miami goes to Philadelphia while Atlanta goes to Chicago
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
As the Federal Government Proposes a Plan to Cull Barred Owls in the West, the Debate Around ‘Invasive’ Species Heats Up
Robert MacNeil, longtime anchor of PBS NewsHour nightly newscast, dies at 93
How Apple Music prepares for releases like Taylor Swift's 'The Tortured Poets Department'