Ohtani’s historic three-homer, 10-strikeout masterpiece in the Dodgers’ clinching win over the Brewers may have just changed baseball forever
Ohtani and the Dodgers won four straight against a Milwaukee team that finished with MLB’s best regular season record at 97-65 despite a $115 million payroll that’s less than a third of LA’s league-high $350 million total. The Dodgers flat-out dominated baseball’s best-run small-market club, proving that even the most shrewd management often can’t overcome the spending disparity against Goliaths like Los Angeles. Led by Shohei, the Dodgers are -230 favorites to win their second straight title, per FanDuel Sportsbook. If they win the World Series against the American League champion Toronto Blue Jays, they’d become the first MLB team to win back-to-back titles since the 1999-00 New York Yankees, which were at the height of their Evil Empire dynasty that won four titles in five years.
An LA championship could prompt opposing owners to scream that the Dodgers are just too damn good and that a salary cap is vital for competitive balance in baseball. And if owners are insistent on implementing a cap and the players are insistent that a cap is “anti-competition,” you’re potentially looking at a stalemate that may not be resolved for a long time.
So, it’s very possible that following the greatest individual single-game performance in MLB history, Ohtani’s brilliance proves that baseball’s current system, where the Dodgers spend twice as much as the average payroll, is broken and in need of a salary cap that would forever change the game.
Read More:
Naomi Osaka Created a Space For Community And Connection Among Black Tennis Players
The 15 Best Showtime Shows of All Time
The Producer Behind Kehlani’s “Folded” and SZA’s “Snooze” Believes Artists Shouldn’t Chase Success
Nikki Garcia on Broken Ankles, Blue Agave, and Building Something That’s Actually Hers
How Gordo Built the Sound of Drake’s ‘MAID OF HONOUR’

