Shohei Ohtani meets 100-year-old survivor of Nagasaki bombing before Dodgers-Rockies game
Shohei Ohtani prolonged his on-base streak to 50 video games in Saturday’s 4-3 defeat to the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. He made the achievement suspenseful by not reaching base till the ninth inning with a two-out single off Rockies reliever Victor Vodnik.
However, the Japanese celebrity was additionally half of a particular second before Saturday’s game. Following his pregame exercise, Ohtani discovered the story of a lady watching him close by from a wheelchair.
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Momoyo Nakamoto Kelley is a 100-year-old Japanese native who survived the bombing of Nagasaki in 1945. Currently a Salt Lake City resident, she traveled to Denver to see Ohtani, whom she referred to as “the pride of Japan” in remarks to Chunichi Sports. Kelley mentioned she watches Dodgers video games every single day to see the four-time MVP play.
Kelley was delivered to the game by her grandson, Patrick Faust. The two traveled from close by Fort Collins, the place she was visiting household. Faust was impressed to make the assembly with Ohtani occur by his grandmother reaching a milestone age. The Dodgers star signed a baseball and posed for a photograph together with his centenarian fan.
“Just the idea that 100 is such a big number,” Patrick mentioned, via MLB.com. “I don’t think there are many people [still alive from] when the atom bomb was dropped. She’s had a terrible experience, a big one. So we wanted to [do something] special. She watches all the Dodgers games and all the Rockies games.”
After surviving the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki when she was 19, Kelley and her husband — whom she met on an Air Force base — emigrated to the United States within the early Nineteen Fifties.
Kelley met a number of different gamers and coaches with Japanese connections, together with Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki and Tomoyuki Sugano of the Rockies.
“Honestly, you don’t get these kinds of opportunities often,” Sugano told MLB.com by means of interpreter Yuto Sakurai. “So I’m really happy I got to meet her and was given this type of opportunity. She said she’s really passionate and really likes watching baseball and is a fan of my former team [the Yomiuri Giants].”
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Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who was born in Okinawa, and broadcaster Stephen Nelson, whose mother is Japanese, both also met Kelley and were touched by the experience.
“It’s humbling,” Nelson advised MLB.com’s Manny Randhawa. “Just Being ‘Yonsei’ [a great-grandchild of a Japanese immigrant]you’re standing on a lot of shoulders.”
“For her to experience what she went through and endure that, and come here to make a better life for herself and future generations,” he added. “We can’t even fathom that, right?”
Ohtani now has third-longest on-base streak in Dodgers historical past
In the baseball game that adopted, Ohtani went on to succeed in base safely for the fiftieth consecutive game. He tied Willie Keeler for the third-longest on-base streak in Dodgers history. Only Shawn Green (53) and Duke Snider (58) at the moment are forward of him.
The longest on-base streak in MLB historical past is 84 video games, set by the Boston Red Sox‘s Ted Williams.
Ohtani led off Saturday’s game by reaching on an error (which did not depend for the streak), grounding out to first base, flying out to left discipline and reaching on an interference error on Rockies catcher Hunter Goodman in his 4 earlier plate appearances.
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The loss to the Rockies was the Dodgers’ first this season towards a National League opponent. Their earlier 4 defeats have been two versus the Cleveland Guardians and one apiece to the Toronto Blue Jays (final season’s World Series opponent) and the Texas Rangers.
