Rarely seen rule helps Shohei Ohtani hit Little League home run

Shohei Ohtani wasn’t exactly sure what happened with the ball he hit down the right field line on Saturday night at Angel Stadium.With confusion abounding, the Dodgers’ two-way star had only one focus.“I just kept running,” he said in an on-field postgame interview through an interpreter.Good thing, too.In the top of the eighth inning of the Dodgers’ 15-2 drubbing of the Angels, Ohtani hit a Little League home run — a triple that he then scored on via an error — with the help of a rarely seen application of one of MLB’s universal ballpark ground rules.On the play, Ohtani’s 89.7 mph line drive landed deep in the right field corner, took one big hop just inside the foul line, then bounced over the low wall in foul ground at Angel Stadium.Only, the ball never actually left the field of play. Instead, it hit the protective netting that extends nearly down to the right-field foul pole (a new addition at Angel Stadium this year) and ricocheted back onto the field as Ohtani chugged around the bases.By the time right fielder Jo Adell retrieved it — after initially raising his arms, evidently thinking the ball should have been dead — Ohtani was already pulling into third base.Things only got worse from there for the Angels.Adell fired a relay throw that got past two cut-off men on the edge of the infield.

With no one else in position to back it up, the ball trickled toward the mound as Ohtani raced home to score without a throw.“Just a Little League home run,” manager Dave Roberts said afterward.“It was good to see him hustle.”“I turned around and [saw] Shohei was coming home, and I’m like, ‘what happened?’” added Alex Call, one of two runners on base who initially scored on the play, “I didn’t find out until later.

But I guess, yeah, the ball’s in play there.”As soon as Ohtani slid across the plate, the Angels nonetheless began appealing to the umpires about the impact of the protective netting.Manager Kurt Suzuki even cha...

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Publisher: New York Post

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