Sports
While Ohtani marches into MLB history, Nippon league’s shame lingers
Only recently have foreign players been allowed to break sacred baseball records
In 1985, American baseball player Randy Bass was one run away from Sadaharu Oh’s single season record.
On the last game of the season he came up against the team managed by Oh. He was intentionally walked 4 times, and Oh maintained the record.
The truth is, for decades, foreign players were not allowed to break the sacred record held by Oh.
What Shohei Ohtani is doing today, for the Los Angeles Dodgers, would never have been allowed in Japan by a foreigner.
While cultural attitudes have shifted and foreign players have now broken some major records, there are still roster limits on the number of foreign players who can be on the active roster for a single game. Only four can be on the roster at any one time, although the team can sign as many as they want.
In 2001, American player Rhodes tied the single-season home run record of 55, but opposing pitchers consistently walked him instead of pitching to him.
Alex Cabrera, another American player, would later tie the record in 2002, and the controversy surrounding Oh’s management became a topic of heated discussion in the Japanese media.
All three players were deliberately sabotaged. Something that would never happen in Major League Baseball.
MLB would have its own shame, of course, by not allowing black baseball players into the league until 1947.
Jackie Robinson was the first African American player in MLB’s modern era, debuting on April 15, 1947, for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Robinson experienced significant racism throughout his life, both before and during his baseball career.
He faced racial hostility from neighbors, discriminatory treatment in the military, and constant racial abuse, slurs, and physical attacks from opposing players and fans once he broke the colour barrier in the MLB.
Oh’s vaunted record would finally be allowed to fall in 2013, when Dutch baseball player Wladimir Balentien hit his 56th and 57th home runs to surpass Oh‘s previous mark of 55.
Balentien finished the season with 60 home runs, a record that remains in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) history.
Ohtani not only signed one of the biggest free-agent contracts in history — a 10-year, US $700 million deal with the Dodgers — recently he put on a historic show which stunned the sports world.
During Game 4 of the NLCS against Milwaukee Brewers, on the mound he fired 10 strikeouts over six complete innings, and slammed three home runs — one completely out of the park!
Dodgers teammate Freddie Freeman stared in disbelief with his hands atop his head as he watched the ball sail over the roof of the Right Field Pavilion and clear out of Dodger Stadium.
“Shohei, oh my God,” Freeman said on TBS after the game. “I’m still speechless.”
Ohtani became the seventh player to hit a home run out of Dodger Stadium, and just the second Dodgers player to do so, joining Mike Piazza (Sept. 21, 1997).
It also made the humble megastar the first pitcher in MLB history to hit a leadoff home run in either the regular season or the postseason, and the first home run by any Dodgers pitcher in postseason history.
The 5-1 pennant clinching victory would propel the Dodgers into the World Series, to face the Toronto Blue Jays.
There’s no question, he may be the greatest player who ever played the game.
Only Juan Soto signed to a bigger free agent contract, agreeing agreeing to a 15-year, $765 million deal with the New York Mets prior to the 2025 season.
Soto leads in career batting average and on-base percentage and has generated more runs, but he lacks Ohtani’s two-way dominance — the only player in modern baseball history to be a Cy Young-level pitcher while also being an elite hitter.
He is also a player whose otherworldly talents belie an impossibly down-to-earth persona.
The star two-way player played peacemaker this past season after he stopped his Dodgers teammates from hopping over the dugout railing and having a bench-clearing confrontation (again) with the San Diego Padres.
The drama occurred after Ohtani was hit by a pitch in what looked like a retaliatory move after Padres star Fernanto Tatis Jr. was drilled earlier in the inning, leading to the initial drama and both managers being ejected.
A quick thinking Ohtani immediately waved off the Dodger cavalry.
If that wasn’t enough, Shohei then went and spoke with the Padres dugout.
“He’s going over to the Padres dugout and he’s talking to them. And I guarantee you’re the Padres and you’re sitting there saying, ‘Oh, our bad, one of the Dodger television commentators said. “Those that watch this will talk about this for a long time when you try to explain how different Shohei Ohtani is.”
Meanwhile, what do foreign baseball players face in Japan?
- Housing and bureaucracy:It can be difficult to find housing, as some landlords are reluctant to rent to non-Japanese, and navigating bureaucracy can be complicated.
- Workplace culture:Some foreigners report experiencing intense competition at work, long hours, and strict workplace hierarchies.
- Cultural isolation:Some players report feeling like they are perpetually “othered,” or “gaijin” (foreigner), and may struggle with cultural differences and a sense of distance from both their home country and Japanese society. Players’ wives, also experience this sense of distance, and lacking interaction can suffer greatly from it. Engaging in social media, however, has helped in this regard.
- Prejudice and discrimination:Some individuals experience isolated incidents of prejudice, ignorance, or discrimination, such as being unfairly accused of wrongdoing.
- Intense training and schedules:Workloads and schedules can be demanding. For example, one player noted working in the mornings and then practicing from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m., with optional practice afterward. Full on game day practices are also mandatory. And if you are slated to play, you will play, regardless of any social events, including family funerals.
Makoto “Mac” Honda, an outfielder who played for the Chunichi Dragons, chose to play in the next scheduled game after his father’s death — an emotional moment in Japanese baseball history.
His story is a key part of the narrative in You Gotta Have Wa by Robert Whiting, a well-known book about Japanese baseball culture.
Contrary to the negatives, players report a high quality of life with low crime and good food. Japanese people are often polite and welcoming, especially toward tourists.
Some people are genuinely interested in learning about other cultures and may be very welcoming and inclusive of foreigners.
The presence of foreign players is also seen as beneficial for the development of sports in Japan, and many teams are embracing the modern world through foreign coaches and players.
In other words, it is changing.
To quote Seattle Mariners legend Ichiro Suzuki:
“The more that Japanese players go to the big leagues to play and succeed, the more that will serve to inspire young kids in Japan to want to become baseball players when they grow up.”
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Business
Taxpayers Federation calls on politicians to reject funding for new Ottawa Senators arena
The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is calling on the federal, Ontario and municipal governments to publicly reject subsidizing a new arena for the Ottawa Senators.
“Politicians need to stand up for taxpayers and tell the Ottawa Senators’ lobbyists NO,” said Noah Jarvis, CTF Ontario Director. “Prime Minister Mark Carney, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe all need to publicly reject giving taxpayers’ money to the owners of the Ottawa Senators.”
The Ottawa Citizen recently reported that “the Ottawa Senators have a team off the ice lobbying federal and provincial governments for funds to help pay the hefty price tag for a new arena.”
The Ottawa Senators said they don’t intend on asking the city of Ottawa for taxpayer dollars. However, the Ottawa Citizen reported that “it’s believed Senators’ owner Michael Andlauer would like a similar structure to the [Calgary] arena deal.” The Calgary arena deal included municipal subsidies.
As of December 2024, the Ottawa Senators were worth just under $1.2 billion, according to Forbes.
Meanwhile, both the federal and Ontario governments are deep in debt. The federal debt will reach $1.35 trillion by the end of the year. The Ontario government is $459 billion in debt. The city of Ottawa is proposing a 3.75 per cent property tax increase in 2026.
“Governments are up to their eyeballs in debt and taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to fund a brand-new fancy arena for a professional sports team,” said Franco Terrazzano, CTF Federal Director. “If the owners of the Ottawa Senators want to build a fancy new arena, then they should be forced to fund it with ticket sales not tax hikes.”
Sports
Egypt, Iran ‘completely reject’ World Cup ‘Pride Match’ plan
From LifeSiteNews
By Matt Lamb
Egyptian and Iranian officials are opposed to a plan to celebrate homosexuality and transgenderism during a FIFA World Cup soccer game scheduled for June 2026.
A planned “Pride Match” at next year’s FIFA World Cup in North America is facing pushback from Iran and Egypt.
The soccer federation recently released its matchups for the tournament, which will be hosted in Mexico, the United States, and Canada. But the Egypt and Iran match clashes with an LGBT group’s plan to celebrate homosexuality and transgenderism in conjunction with the game.
The “Pride Match” is not an official designation by FIFA, but rather the local host committee and LGBT activists.
“Seattle PrideFest has been organized in the city since 2007 by a non-profit which designated the June 26 game for celebration before FIFA made the World Cup draw Friday,” according to the Associated Press (AP). The soccer match coincides with Seattle PrideFest.
“Both Egypt and we have objected, because this is an unreasonable and illogical move that essentially signals support for a particular group, and we must definitely address this point,” Medhi Taj, with Iran’s Football Federation told state media, the AP reported.
Ado Rida, Taj’s counterpart in Egypt, noted that the predominantly Islamic country “completely rejects such activities, which directly contradict the cultural, religious and social values in the region, especially in Arab and Islamic societies.”
Seattle FIFA World CUP 2026, the local host committee, has no plans to intervene against the celebration, which will likely offend practicing Muslims who oppose homosexuality as sinful. Both Egypt and Iran punish homosexuality.
“The Pacific Northwest is home to one of the nation’s largest Iranian-American communities, a thriving Egyptian diaspora and rich communities representing all nations we’re hosting in Seattle,” Hana Tadesse told the AP. “We’re committed to ensuring all residents and visitors experience the warmth, respect and dignity that defines our region.”
Meanwhile, the New York Times suggests there might be conflict with FIFA rules that forbid the matches from being used to push a political agenda.
“The soccer body’s ethical codes, specifically Article 4, call for neutrality regarding political and social issues, and players who violate the code could face punishment that includes a ban on playing soccer for up to two years,” the news outlet reported. This could also, in theory, be used to punish players who protest the LGBT agenda.
“During World Cup 2022, FIFA warned players against wearing L.G.B.T.Q. OneLove rainbow armbands that were meant to bring attention to gay rights in Qatar, and it said they would be handed yellow warning cards on the pitch if they wore them,” the Times reported.
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