Shohei Ohtani Bought Dave Roberts a 'Car' Before Breaking His Dodgers Record

Shohei Ohtani Bought Dave Roberts a ‘Car’ Before Breaking His Dodgers Record

Shohei Ohtani, the $700 million man, bought his manager Dave Roberts a new car before Saturday's game, which saw the two-way star break Roberts's record for the most career home runs by a Japanese-born Dodgers player.

Only, it wasn't a car in the sense that Roberts thought, as Ohtani had actually gifted the Dodgers skipper a toy Porsche in an amusing prank before the game against the Atlanta Braves, which resulted in an 11—2 victory for Los Angeles.

After the game, Roberts made an appearance at Ohtani's press conference, showing off the mini Porsche to reporters as he shared a laugh with the Dodgers star.

Ohtani was then asked about the toy Porsche.

"He said he wanted a car and I'm glad that he was happy he got a car," Ohtani said.

The Dodgers star, after breaking Hideki Matsui's record for the most career home runs by a Japanese-born major leaguer in April, joked with Roberts, who was born in Naha, Okinawa, Japan, that he was coming for his record next.

True to his word, Ohtani eclipsed Roberts's mark — seven home runs in 302 games with Los Angeles from 2002 to '04 — with a solo home run in the bottom of the third inning.

The homer was part of another productive day for Ohtani, who went 3-for-5 with two RBI and two runs scored — and one perfectly executed prank.

Roberts, asked about the toy car before the game, had this to say.

"He did buy me a car," Roberts said. "I guess I didn't specify what type of car. So I can't say he never gave me anything."

Ohtani ranks second in MLB in OPS through 34 games played in 2024.

Dave Roberts Makes His Decision, Opinion on Mookie Betts' Position Change Clear

Dave Roberts Makes His Decision, Opinion on Mookie Betts’ Position Change Clear

On March 8, Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts indicated that Mookie Betts's move to shortstop in spring training was "permanent, for now."

Now, it doesn't seem out of the realm of possibility that Betts's move will be "permanent, forever."

Roberts heaped praise on Betts for his play at shortstop so far after the Dodgers' 8-0 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks Wednesday.

“Right now, where (Betts) is at, I certainly think he’s playing an above average shortstop,” Roberts said. “I’d grade him out a solid B+. It’s hard to imagine me even saying that... given that he started not playing the position. So it’s really, really impressive and only going to get better.”

Even by Betts's lofty standards, his start to 2024 has been special. Last year's runner-up in the NL MVP voting is slashing .377/.481/.623 with six home runs and 25 RBIs. He leads the majors in batting average, on-base percentage, runs, hits, walks and total bases.

“I’m trying to wrap my head around any comparable—as far as on the hitting side, the (defensive) side. I haven’t seen it. You’re talking about a complete position change," Roberts said. "To play it at a high level at that position, I just haven’t seen it.”

Baseball Reference has Betts at third in defensive WAR, behind only Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte and St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn.