Next year, with a season under his belt..look out...yamamoto, ohtani, glasnow and additions comings
Says:
It appears he has gotten real comfortable and started to settle down on his pitches. Butterflies are long gone.
@HIKOKUMINN55 Says:
Nihonnnosaikoutoutatutenn
Highest reached by a Japanese pitcher
@Longtime420 Says:
The fact padres got those hits constantly but it was alllll groundouts that’s you know YOSHI is special wizard
That whole game
And he torched the Yankees
@kakuset Says:
Worth every penny on what he did in postseason. And resign Walker Buehler 🙏🙏🙏.
@Erick_anthony433 Says:
He delivered in the biggest stage .
@kt-bq2ov Says:
口哨聲想起 一切就結束了
@oo-777-oo Says:
海外のコメント見たいのに、わざわざ英語でコメントする日本人マジでなんなんだよ、邪魔なんだよ
@dycedarg19 Says:
Let’s go Dodgers👏👏👏👏👏 Let’s go Dodgers🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
@TeamTimeRiders Says:
That 6 1/3 innings in the WS were worth 350 million. Money is immaterial in the face of a World Series trophy.
@taisa_video Says:
Perhaps Yamamoto will contribute more to American baseball than Otani. It will take a long time, quietly, under the radar.
Yamamoto is not as tall and physically gifted. But with skill and scientific care of his body, he throws pitches with the same speed as Glasnow's. Until now, small-bodied kids have had to aspire to be Mookie Betts. But from now on, many small-bodied children should follow Yamamoto's example and become pitchers. American youth teams, school coaches, and minor league coaches will change their minds. Yamamoto has shown that you don't need to be 200 cm tall to be a pitcher. So small-bodied kids have learned that they can be successful MLB pitchers. This same thing will happen in Chicago. Shota Imanaga is also short in stature. Yet he became the team's ace in his rookie year, and won 15 games.
@pseudotatsuya Says:
トミージョン手術にだけはならないで欲しい
@nisi8221 Says:
怪我だけ無いように願ってる!
そうすれば、もっと良い投球が観れるから。
@jackw3302 Says:
That splitter is sooo good. Congrats to Yamamoto, he's still so young and showed adversity this season.
Yoshi to cover 1st base vs Cole just to watch 1st base: historic !
@MMuraseofSandvich Says:
Yoshinobu Yamamoto was part of the whole "they spent that much money and still lost" nonsense from the beginning, just because he got blown out in Seoul. But the playoffs are about consistent command, and Yamamoto defeated some of the best pitchers in MLB, including Japanese baseball icon Yu Darvish. And all that money in his contract? I bet he's drawing record audiences in Japan, along with huge advertising deals with Japanese companies and ticket sales from fans traveling all the way from Japan.
The Dodgers aren't losing money with Yamamoto and Ohtani. Far from it.
@Koichi_NYC Says:
Yamamoto is a small guy, but he has proven that he can succeed in the Majors. Size doesn’t matter if you have skills.
@Meltyclaw Says:
1:00 It's jarring seeing this compared to when the Yankees had no one covering 1st. The difference in hustle is enormous.
@mmjjaaay Says:
スタジアムのファンが彼に力を与えたと思う ありがとうLA💙
@CHEVYCAMARO4GEN Says:
1 Hit in 6 innings 😮
@michaelsteinhauer6980 Says:
He did his job when called and those are facts money well spent for the dodgers and mostly low pitches every game
@metalyellow7863 Says:
Yamamoto「Practice, sleep, nutrition」
@小池隆介-i6h Says:
I'm a Japanese baseball fan.
Yoshinobu is one of the best Japanese pitcher ever as well as Darvish.
He literally dominated Japanese hitters when he played in Japan.
He will show his talent more in next season definitely!
@Z.Arc76 Says:
YY18‼️⚾️ Amazing
@규호qqwerak Says:
야마모토 없었으면 우승 못햇다
@user-luoby Says:
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@obey2dmax Says:
Next on the docket: Sasaki and Murakami. 😂
@lunaseafan1 Says:
I saw him pitch last year in Japan and dominate. Doesn’t surprise me that he has dominated in the MLB too.
@appl3.149 Says:
And he's a "rookie" this MLB season.
@jake_de48 Says:
Future Cy Young. He is a treasure and proud of Japan
@felipedelrazo8 Says:
Imagine being a rookie and killing in the WS
@alexsakon Says:
Gerrit Cole can learn about covering first base from Yoshi
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