
Yesterday, clips of Sasaki working out at Petco Park wearing Padres apparel surfaced. No one puts too much stock into this, as Sasaki was scheduled to meet with the Dodgers yesterday in person. He had also previously spent time in Toronto with the Blue Jays’ brass.
Shohei Ohtani, in particular, has grown the sport of baseball in Japan to new heights even further than it was previously (which was already sizable). As a result, kids all over the country are donning Dodgers jerseys and anxiously waiting for games to be shown. MLB’s decision to play regular season games in South Korea, Japan, and Mexico is no accident, either.
This is where the argument comes full circle. The casual fan — whether correct or incorrect — views the Dodgers as a juggernaut with infinite resources and somewhat of an unfair advantage over the rest of the sport. LA shouldn’t be lambasted for being run exceptionally well on top of being flush with cash and a vision to grow the franchise’s wealth.
In the aftermath of postseason play, numerous Dodgers — including Mookie Betts — remarked that San Diego was the best team they had played (along with possessing the best fan base). From an objective standpoint, it felt like the winner of that initial series was going to be the heavy favorite to win it all.
The two teams don’t like one another. You’ve even got the crossover of players (Machado, Yu Darvish) who once played for the Dodgers and left under ruffled circumstances. Machado and Darvish famously failed in LA’s attempt to win a World Series a few years ago. Neither were re-signed, and each ended up ironically in San Diego.
As for Sasaki, the starlet prodigy everyone is clamoring for, it would be very fascinating to see him in San Diego. He’d be able to pitch alongside his idol in Darvish. Even more, he’d join a young, fun team that — you guessed it — the casual fan would get behind. Knowing how badly the Dodgers want Sasaki, it would intensify the rivalry even more should he opt for the Padres.
Envisioning a scenario in postseason play where Ohtani was in the batter’s box facing the flamethrowing Sasaki would be something everyone would thoroughly pay to watch occur.