Shohei Ohtani: Complete Career Stats, NPB Records, and MLB Profile (Updated May 2026)
By The Yakyu Analyst | Japan Baseball Lab
| Full Name | 大谷 翔平 (Ohtani Shohei) |
| Born | July 5, 1994 — Oshu City, Iwate Prefecture |
| Height / Weight | 193 cm (6’4″) / 95 kg (210 lbs) |
| Bats / Throws | Left / Right |
| Position | Two-Way Player (SP / DH) |
| Current Team | Los Angeles Dodgers (MLB, 2024–) |
| Previous Team | Los Angeles Angels (MLB, 2018–2023) / Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters (NPB, 2013–2017) |
| Contract | 10 years / $700 million (signed December 2023, deferred to $46M/yr effective 2034) |
| MLB MVP Awards | 4× (2021 AL, 2023 AL, 2024 NL, 2025 NL) |
- Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Early Life & Background
- 3. Hanamaki Higashi High School (2010–2012)
- 4. NPB Career: Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters (2013–2017)
- 5. MLB Career: Los Angeles Angels (2018–2023)
- 6. MLB Career: Los Angeles Dodgers (2024–present)
- 7. International Stage
- 8. Historical Records and Milestones
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Early Life & Background
- Hanamaki Higashi High School (2010–2012)
- NPB Career: Nippon Ham Fighters (2013–2017)
- MLB Career: Los Angeles Angels (2018–2023)
- MLB Career: Los Angeles Dodgers (2024–present)
- International Stage
- Historical Records and Milestones
1. Introduction
Shohei Ohtani is the most statistically unique player in the history of professional baseball. That sentence is not hyperbole — it is a falsifiable claim that survives analytical scrutiny. No player in the post-1900 era has combined double-digit pitching wins with double-digit home runs in the same season (he has done it three times). No player has won four MVP awards across both leagues. No player has served as both the starting pitcher and the leadoff hitter in an MLB All-Star Game. The historical comps that analysts have reached for — Babe Ruth, of course — are instructive precisely because Ruth himself abandoned pitching after age 24, and his two-way peak lasted approximately three seasons. Ohtani has sustained his at a higher absolute level across eight MLB seasons.
Understanding Ohtani’s current performance requires understanding where he came from — a family of athletes in Iwate Prefecture, a high school program in Hanamaki that developed him as a two-way player before NPB teams had a framework for deploying one, and five NPB seasons that announced capabilities that most English-language analysts failed to adequately translate before he arrived in Anaheim in 2018.
For the biomechanical analysis of his pitching mechanics, see our companion piece: [Link: The Engineering of Ohtani’s Arsenal — A Biomechanical Analysis]
2. Early Life & Background
Ohtani was born on July 5, 1994 in Oshu City (then Mizusawa City), Iwate Prefecture — an inland city of approximately 120,000 people in Japan’s Tohoku region. His father, Toru Ohtani, played outfield for Mitsubishi Electric Kobe in Japan’s industrial baseball leagues. His mother, Kayoko, was a competitive badminton player at the national level. He is the middle of three children, with an older brother (Ryuta, who also played baseball competitively) and a younger sister.
The athletic genetics on both sides of the family are relevant context: Ohtani’s rotational athleticism — the hip-to-shoulder separation and explosiveness that underlies both his pitching velocity and his exit velocity — has a documented familial baseline. His father worked with him on throwing mechanics from early childhood, emphasizing the “three principles” he applied to all youth players he coached: play loudly and energetically, practice catching seriously, and run full speed to the end every time.
Youth Baseball
Ohtani began organized baseball at age eight, joining the Mizusawa Little League where his father was a coach. He played shortstop and pitcher from the beginning. By age 11 — fifth grade — he was recorded throwing at 110 km/h (68 mph), an exceptional velocity for his age group. His middle school years (Oshu City Mizusawa South Junior High School) were spent with the Ichinoseki Little Senior league, where he developed his pitching beyond 130 km/h and participated in national-level junior competitions, including one in which he hit two out-of-park home runs against a team that had finished second in the world tournament — a result that, in retrospect, was a preview of his adult dual-threat profile.
3. Hanamaki Higashi High School (2010–2012)
Ohtani chose Hanamaki Higashi High School in Hanamaki City, Iwate, over multiple stronger national programs that recruited him — a decision driven by his admiration for Yusei Kikuchi (three years his senior at Hanamaki Higashi, who would go on to a long NPB and MLB career), and crucially, by head coach Hiroshi Sasaki’s explicit promise to develop him as a two-way player. Most high school programs — and at the time, most NPB teams — demanded a choice between pitching and hitting. Hanamaki Higashi agreed to let him do both.
Velocity Progression
| Stage | Age | Max Recorded Velocity | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elementary school (Year 5) | 11 | 110 km/h (68 mph) | Youth league |
| Junior high | 13–15 | 130+ km/h (81+ mph) | Little Senior national competition |
| High school Year 1 (autumn) | 16 | 147 km/h (91 mph) | Iwate Prefectural tournament |
| High school Year 2 (spring) | 17 | 151 km/h (94 mph) | Koshien (Spring Senbatsu) — equal to HS Year 2 all-time record at the time |
| High school Year 3 (summer) | 17 | 160 km/h (99 mph) | Iwate Prefectural qualifier semifinal — first amateur in Japanese baseball history to reach 160 km/h |
The 160 km/h recording on July 2012, during the Iwate Prefectural qualifier semifinal against Ichinoseki Gakuin, was a watershed moment in Japanese baseball history. No amateur player had previously been recorded at that velocity — and at the time, only a handful of NPB professionals had reached it. The recording was made during a 7-inning start in which he struck out 13 batters and allowed only 3 hits, a performance that was largely overshadowed nationally by the velocity milestone itself.
High School Summary
- High school career home runs (batting): 56
- Koshien appearances: 2 (Summer 2011, Spring 2012)
- Spring 2012 (Koshien): Started against Osaka Toin (featuring future NPB/MLB pitcher Shintaro Fujinami). Hit a home run off Fujinami, pitched 8⅔ innings, 11 strikeouts, but allowed 9 runs in a 2–9 loss.
- Summer 2012: Team did not advance past regional qualifier (Ohtani pitched through sacral growth plate injury with pain medication)
- 2012 NPB Draft: Declared intent to go directly to MLB — then reversed after Nippon Ham Fighters drafted him first overall (single-team bid) with a two-way development presentation
The sacral growth plate injury (骨端線損傷) sustained in his second year is analytically significant: it forced him to play primarily as a hitter for much of his second high school year, contributing to his offensive development at a time when most pitching prospects focus exclusively on the mound. The subsequent recovery period, during which he focused on eating (reported to have consumed extraordinary caloric volume to accelerate skeletal healing and muscle growth) is credited by those who worked with him as the foundation of the physical frame that produces his adult power output.
4. NPB Career: Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters (2013–2017)
For a full analysis of Ohtani’s NPB statistics and their implications for his MLB translation, see our dedicated piece: [Link: Shohei Ohtani’s NPB Years — The Statistics and Mechanics Behind the Legend]. A summary is provided here for completeness.
NPB Pitching Statistics
| Year | Age | G | GS | W | L | IP | ERA | K/9 | BB/9 | WHIP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | 18 | 13 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 61.2 | 4.23 | 7.7 | 3.5 | 1.61 |
| 2014 | 19 | 24 | 24 | 11 | 4 | 155.1 | 2.61 | 9.0 | 2.6 | 1.14 |
| 2015 | 20 | 22 | 22 | 15 | 5 | 160.2 | 2.24 | 9.0 | 2.2 | 1.07 |
| 2016 | 21 | 21 | 21 | 10 | 4 | 140.0 | 1.86 | 10.3 | 2.4 | 1.02 |
| 2017 | 22 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 25.1 | 3.20 | 10.6 | 2.1 | 0.95 |
| NPB Total | — | 85 | 75 | 42 | 15 | 543.0 | 2.52 | 9.3 | 2.5 | 1.08 |
2017 season cut short by right ankle injury (os trigonum impingement surgery, October 2017).
NPB Batting Statistics
| Year | Age | G (as hitter) | PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | OPS | HR | RBI | ISO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | 18 | 77 | — | .238 | .284 | .376 | .660 | 3 | 20 | .138 |
| 2014 | 19 | 87 | 212 | .274 | .338 | .446 | .784 | 10 | 31 | .172 |
| 2015 | 20 | 70 | 274 | .202 | .263 | .353 | .616 | 5 | 17 | .151 |
| 2016 | 21 | 104 | 382 | .322 | .416 | .588 | 1.004 | 22 | 67 | .266 |
| 2017 | 22 | 65 | 271 | .332 | .416 | .588 | 1.004 | 8 | 31 | .256 |
| NPB Total | — | 403 | — | .286 | .358 | .501 | .859 | 48 | 166 | .215 |
NPB Highlights
- 2014: First player in NPB history to record 10+ wins and 10+ home runs in the same season (11W, 10HR)
- 2015: NPB pitching triple crown (ERA 2.24, wins 15, winning percentage .750); fastball reached 162 km/h, setting new NPB record
- 2016: 10W, 22HR, NPB MVP; fastball reached 165 km/h on October 30, setting NPB all-time velocity record (still standing); Nippon Ham won the Japan Series
- 2016: Final start of the season was as “4th batter / pitcher” — first time an NPB player batted cleanup while starting as pitcher in 66 years
- Career: First player in NPB history to record 40 wins and 40 home runs as a career total
5. MLB Career: Los Angeles Angels (2018–2023)
MLB Pitching Statistics — Angels Era
| Year | Age | GS | W | L | IP | ERA | K/9 | BB/9 | WHIP | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 23 | 10 | 4 | 2 | 51.2 | 3.31 | 11.0 | 3.1 | 1.16 | UCL injury; TJS Sept 2018 |
| 2019 | 24 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | — | — | — | — | TJS recovery; DH only |
| 2020 | 25 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1.2 | 37.80 | 5.4 | 5.4 | 3.00 | Flexor strain; 60-game season |
| 2021 | 26 | 23 | 9 | 2 | 130.1 | 3.18 | 10.9 | 2.8 | 1.09 | AL MVP (unanimous) |
| 2022 | 27 | 28 | 15 | 9 | 166.0 | 2.33 | 11.0 | 2.7 | 1.01 | First player in MLB history: 10W + 10 SB same season |
| 2023 | 28 | 23 | 10 | 5 | 132.0 | 3.14 | 11.4 | 2.8 | 1.06 | AL MVP (unanimous); UCL tear Sept 2023; TJS |
MLB Batting Statistics — Angels Era
| Year | Age | G | PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | OPS | HR | RBI | SB | WAR (pos) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 23 | 104 | 367 | .285 | .361 | .564 | .925 | 22 | 61 | 10 | 2.9 |
| 2019 | 24 | 106 | 425 | .286 | .343 | .505 | .848 | 18 | 62 | 12 | 2.0 |
| 2020 | 25 | 44 | 175 | .190 | .291 | .366 | .657 | 7 | 24 | 7 | 0.4 |
| 2021 | 26 | 158 | 639 | .257 | .372 | .592 | .965 | 46 | 100 | 26 | 5.1 |
| 2022 | 27 | 157 | 666 | .273 | .356 | .519 | .875 | 34 | 95 | 11 | 4.3 |
| 2023 | 28 | 135 | 599 | .304 | .412 | .654 | 1.066 | 44 | 95 | 20 | 7.5 |
Angels Era Highlights
- 2018 AL Rookie of the Year — first rookie to start as pitcher and DH in the same season
- 2021 AL MVP (unanimous) — 9W, 46HR, 100RBI, 26SB; first player since Babe Ruth (1918) to pitch 130+ IP and hit 10+ HR in same season
- 2022 — first player in MLB history with 10+ wins and 10+ stolen bases same season; finished 2nd in AL MVP to Aaron Judge (62 HR)
- 2023 AL MVP (unanimous) — 10W, 44HR, first Asian-born AL home run champion; second consecutive unanimous MVP
- September 2023 — UCL tear; second Tommy John surgery
6. MLB Career: Los Angeles Dodgers (2024–present)
Ohtani signed a 10-year, $700 million contract with the Dodgers on December 9, 2023 — the largest contract in professional sports history. The contract structure is unusual: Ohtani deferred $680 million of the value to the 2034–2043 period, making the present-value cost to the Dodgers significantly lower than the nominal figure.
MLB Pitching Statistics — Dodgers Era
| Year | Age | GS | W | L | IP | ERA | K | K/9 | WHIP | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 29 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | — | — | — | — | TJS recovery; DH only |
| 2025 | 30 | 14 | 1 | 1 | 47.0 | 2.87 | 57 | 10.9 | 0.98 | Returned to mound mid-season; NL MVP; World Series champion |
| 2026 * | 31 | 6 | 2 | 0 | ~37.0 | 0.50 | 18+ | ~9.5 | 0.72 | Through ~May 15; 22.2 IP active scoreless streak at one point |
MLB Batting Statistics — Dodgers Era
| Year | Age | G | PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | OPS | HR | RBI | SB | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 29 | 159 | 731 | .310 | .390 | .646 | 1.036 | 54 | 130 | 59 | NL MVP; 50-50 season (54 HR / 59 SB); World Series vs. Yankees (lost) |
| 2025 | 30 | 158 | — | .282 | .392 | .622 | 1.014 | 55 | 102 | 20 | NL MVP; NL SLG leader; NLCS MVP; World Series champion (vs. Blue Jays) |
| 2026 * | 31 | ~42 | ~180 | .240 | ~.370 | ~.430 | ~.800 | 7 | 17 | 5 SB | Offensive slump ongoing; pitching ERA 0.50 through ~May 15 |
*2026 stats as of approximately May 15, 2026. Sources: CBS Sports, Yahoo Sports, ESPN, Baseball Savant. Figures subject to update.
2024 Season: The 50-50 Season
Ohtani’s 2024 Dodgers debut — played entirely as a DH while recovering from his second Tommy John surgery — produced one of the most statistically remarkable batting seasons in MLB history. His 54 home runs and 59 stolen bases made him the first player in MLB history to hit 50+ HR and steal 50+ bases in the same season. He won his third MVP award unanimously, becoming the first player to win three unanimous MVPs. He batted .310/.390/.646 with a 1.036 OPS — 2nd-best of his career to that point.
2025 Season: World Series Champion
Ohtani returned to pitching in mid-2025 after completing recovery from his second UCL reconstruction. His 14-start pitching performance (2.87 ERA, 1.90 FIP, 47 IP) was elite by any measure; his 2025 NLCS MVP performance — three home runs, plus six scoreless innings and 10 strikeouts in Game 4 against Milwaukee — is widely cited as the greatest single-game individual performance in postseason history. The Dodgers defeated the Toronto Blue Jays in seven games to win the 2025 World Series. Ohtani won his fourth MVP award.
2026 Season: Two-Way Return and Offensive Slump (Through May 15)
The 2026 season marks Ohtani’s first full two-way campaign since joining the Dodgers. His pitching has been historically dominant: a 0.50 ERA through approximately six starts, 2-0 record, 0.72 WHIP, and a 22.2-inning scoreless streak that represents the longest active streak among MLB starters. His fastball has been reported at 99 mph in spring training and his overall stuff has drawn universal praise.
His offense, however, has entered an extended cold stretch. Through approximately 42 games as a hitter, he is slashing .240/.370/.430 — well below his established performance level. The Dodgers have responded by occasionally resting him from the hitting lineup on days he pitches. He went 0-for-17 across five games in early May before a 2-for-4 performance with a double against Houston on May 14 ended the cold stretch. The analytical question of whether the two-way workload is suppressing his offensive output in 2026 — or whether this is simply a statistical fluctuation within a normal variance range — is the central discussion around his season through mid-May.
His 2026 Statcast batting metrics (avg exit velocity 92.9 mph, barrel rate 16.8%, hard-hit rate 46.3%) are below his 2024–25 peak levels but still above MLB average — suggesting a contact quality decline rather than a mechanical breakdown.
7. International Stage
WBC 2023 (Japan)
Ohtani served as one of the co-captains of Samurai Japan for the 2023 WBC alongside Seiya Suzuki. He participated as a hitter only during pool play and preliminary rounds — the Dodgers and Angels limited his pitching in pre-season — before pitching the final inning of the championship game against the United States on March 21, 2023. His final batter was Mike Trout, his Angels teammate, whom he struck out on a sweeper to end the game. Japan won 3-2. Ohtani was named WBC MVP.
2023 WBC batting line: .435/.600/.739 (10-for-23), 1 HR, 8 RBI, 4 BB
WBC 2026
Ohtani participated in WBC 2026 as a hitter only (per Dodgers’ workload management plan for his first full two-way season). Japan advanced to the quarterfinals. His tournament line is not yet final as of mid-May 2026.
Tokyo Olympics 2020 (2021)
Ohtani represented Japan as both pitcher and hitter. Japan won the gold medal. His tournament pitching line: 1 start, 5 IP, 1 ER, 7 K.
8. Historical Records and Milestones
| Record | Details | Date |
|---|---|---|
| First amateur to reach 160 km/h | Iwate Prefectural qualifier vs. Ichinoseki Gakuin | July 2012 |
| NPB all-time velocity record | 165 km/h (102 mph) — still standing | October 30, 2016 |
| First NPB player: 10W + 10HR same season | 11W, 10HR in 2014 | 2014 season |
| First NPB player: 40W + 40HR career | 42W, 48HR career totals | September 2017 |
| AL Rookie of the Year | First two-way Rookie of the Year in MLB history | November 2018 |
| First player since Ruth: 130+ IP + 10+ HR | 130.1 IP, 46 HR (2021) | 2021 season |
| AL MVP (1st unanimous) | 2021 season | November 2021 |
| First MLB: 10W + 10 SB same season | 15W, 11 SB (2022) | 2022 season |
| First Asian-born AL home run champion | 44 HR (2023) | October 2023 |
| AL MVP (2nd unanimous) | 2023 season | November 2023 |
| Largest contract in professional sports history | 10yr / $700M with Dodgers | December 2023 |
| First 50-50 season in MLB history | 54 HR / 59 SB (2024) | 2024 season |
| NL MVP (3rd unanimous) | 2024 season | November 2024 |
| World Series champion | LA Dodgers vs. Toronto Blue Jays | November 2025 |
| NL MVP (4th total, 2nd NL) | 2025 season | November 2025 |
| Most MVP awards in MLB history | 4 total (tied with Barry Bonds) | November 2025 |
Continue exploring:
- [Link: Shohei Ohtani’s NPB Years — The Statistics and Mechanics Behind the Legend]
- [Link: The Engineering of Ohtani’s Arsenal — A Biomechanical Analysis]
- [Link: NPB Pitch Mix vs. MLB — A Statcast Translation Study]
- [Link: The Complete Guide to Japanese Baseball] (Pillar Page)
Stats last updated: approximately May 15, 2026. MLB figures sourced from Baseball Savant, CBS Sports, ESPN, Yahoo Sports, FanGraphs, and Baseball Reference. NPB figures sourced from official NPB records and Baseball Reference NPB pages. This page will be updated as the 2026 season progresses. Correspondence: [email protected]


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