Pairing: F1 grid x driver!Ohtani!Platonic!Reader ft. Shohei Ohtani
A/N: Made this after watching all 7 games of the world series. Ohtani and Yamamoto is killiing it out there.
You were supposed to be in Las Vegas.
Keyword: supposed to.
Formula 1 had media day, Vegas Strip show runs, and even a glitzy dinner planned. You were supposed to be there with your team — but when your brother Shohei Ohtani called you that morning, his voice soft but teasing, saying,
“The Dodgers are playing at home. I’m doing the ceremonial pitch. You’re coming, right?”
— there was absolutely no way you could say no.
You: “I have commitments.”
Shohei: “Family is a commitment.”
You: “You can’t guilt-trip me with Asian parenting logic, Sho.”
Shohei: “Worked last time.”
Touché.
Within two hours, you had texted your team principal (“family emergency— I promise it’s not bad”), rounded up half the grid, and were on a jet to L.A. Because somehow, every driver within a 50-mile radius had heard “Shohei Ohtani’s little sister” and decided this was a once-in-a-lifetime field trip.
⚾DODGER STADIUM, 5PM
Shohei met you at the entrance, tall, calm, baseball cap low. When he saw the horde of Formula 1 drivers trailing behind you like hyperactive ducklings, he blinked once.
“You brought the circus.”
“They insisted.”
“I said you could come.”
“They don’t listen to me.”
Charles waved from the back. “Bonjour, Shohei! We come in peace!”
Lando added, “Yeah, we just want to see if Y/N’s actually related to you. She doesn’t act like it.”
You glared at him. “I can throw you harder than I can throw a baseball.”
Shohei just smiled faintly, muttering something in Japanese that sounded suspiciously like ‘she hasn’t changed.’
🧢 THE WARM-UP
You stretched on the sidelines, catching balls Shohei tossed lazily. Every so often, he’d switch up the spin — and every time, you caught it with sharp reflexes honed from racing at 200 mph.
“Still got it,” he said.
“I learned from the best.”
“You stopped playing baseball after what, age ten?”
“Because someone broke my glove.”
“You left it in the rain!”
“It was raining for character development.”
The F1 boys were dying laughing. Carlos whispered, “So this is what she’s like at home.”
⚾ FLASHBACK: IWATE, JAPAN — YEARS AGO
You were eight, Shohei eighteen — already training in the States, but home for the holidays. The winter air was sharp, snow melting into slush on the makeshift field behind your family’s house.
Shohei crouched beside you, helping you adjust your grip on the baseball.
“Thumb here, fingers here,” he said patiently.
“Like this?” you asked, tongue poking out as you concentrated.
“Perfect. Now, try throwing it as far as you can.”
You threw. The ball went maybe ten feet and landed in the snow with a pitiful thud.
You frowned. “It’s broken.”
Shohei burst out laughing. “It’s not the ball that’s broken.”
You stomped your foot, tiny and stubborn. “Then teach me to throw like you!”
So he did. Every day that winter. In the snow, in the rain, even when your gloves froze stiff. By spring, you were actually decent. When he left for camp that year, he left his old glove behind — with your name scribbled on the inside.
You’d kept it all these years.
⚾ PRESENT DAY: THE “CEREMONIAL” PITCH (PART TWO)
When the announcer’s voice echoed:
“Please welcome Formula 1 driver and Shohei Ohtani’s sister — Y/N Ohtani!”
The stadium exploded.
Your F1 friends had somehow convinced security to give them seats in the front row — though “sitting” wasn’t the right word, since they were screaming like middle school fans at a concert.
Max had a camera out. “If she throws 100 mph, I’m showing this to Christian.”
Oscar: “She’s definitely going to do something stupid.”
Lando: “I hope she does something stupid.”
You smirked, walking up to the mound. Shohei, already in catcher’s gear, winked. “Remember what I taught you?”
You twirled the ball in your fingers. “Let’s find out.”
First pitch: 98 mph fastball.
Strike one.
The batter blinked. Shohei’s eyebrows raised behind the mask.
Second pitch: 86 mph changeup.
Strike two.
The crowd was half-screaming, half-confused.
Third pitch: a wicked 94 mph slider that curved like a dream.
Strike three.
Shohei stood up, laughing so hard he had to pull you into a one-armed hug.
“You’ve been lying to me. When did you start throwing that hard?”
“Karting helps with wrist control,” you grinned. “And anger issues.”
🧃 THE CHAOS AFTER
Back in the dugout, the F1 boys swarmed you.
Lando: “You just STRUCK OUT an MLB player!”
George: “Are you sure you’re not secretly part of Team USA?”
Charles: “You throw better than you drive!”
You: “Excuse me— WHAT?”
Meanwhile, Shohei just watched from the bench, hiding his amusement. “You’ve created monsters.”
You shrugged. “You invited them.”
⚾ BONUS ROUND: SHOHEI VS. Y/N
During the seventh-inning stretch, the Dodgers social media team had a “brilliant” idea:
“What if Shohei and Y/N do a sibling showdown? One pitch each, fastest wins!”
The crowd went feral.
Shohei threw first. 101 mph. Effortless. The crowd roared.
Then it was your turn.
You jogged up, rolled your shoulders, and smirked at your brother. “Bet dinner on this?”
He raised a brow. “You’re on.”
You wound up, put everything you had into it—
101 mph.
The radar blinked again. Tied.
The F1 boys lost their minds.
Shohei stared at you in disbelief. “You tied me?”
You grinned. “Guess it runs in the family.”
📱 POST-GAME
By the time you got back to Vegas, every sports account in existence had clipped your throw.
MLB networks. F1 TikTok edits. Even ESPN called it “the fastest ceremonial pitch in MLB history.”
When asked about it later, Shohei just smiled at reporters and said,
“She’s been throwing fast since she was eight. I’m just glad she didn’t throw at me this time.”
And when someone asked you about it?
You shrugged.
“He taught me how to throw. I just… applied it at higher speeds.”
🏁 ONE LAST FLASHBACK
Late that night, scrolling through your phone in the Vegas hotel, you found an old video your mom had sent.
Eight-year-old you, bundled in a beanie, throwing a snowball at Shohei.
He dodged it — barely — laughing, shouting,
“You call that a throw?”
The video ended with you grinning, hands on your hips, yelling back,
“Just wait till I’m older!”
You smiled to yourself, locked the screen, and whispered,
“Told you so, Sho.”
End.
A/N: might right a part 2 to this where the roles are switched and Shohei is now trying to drive.
Sports Channel Report: Shohei Ohtani’s Historic Triple-Homer, 10-Strikeout Game Sends Dodgers Back to the World Series
Shohei Ohtani Rewrites Baseball History
It was a night that will go down in baseball lore — the kind of performance that generations will talk about. On a crisp October evening in Los Angeles, Shohei Ohtani led the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 5-0 win over the Milwaukee Brewers, sweeping the National League Championship Series in four games and sending the defending champions back to the World Series.
The two-way superstar didn’t just dominate; he transcended the game itself. Ohtani hit three home runs, struck out 10 batters, and earned the win on the mound — an almost unthinkable feat in modern baseball. As the fireworks exploded over Dodger Stadium, fans knew they had just witnessed something beyond historic — the “Shohei Ohtani Game.”
Ohtani’s six shutout innings featured devastating command, and at the plate, he was even more unstoppable. He launched homers in the first, fourth, and seventh innings, each farther and more powerful than the last. His third blast, a 446-foot rocket into the night sky, had his teammates leaping over the dugout railing in disbelief.
A Night for the Ages
It wasn’t just dominance; it was perfection. According to MLB statistician Sarah Langs, Ohtani became the first player in MLB history to hit three home runs and strike out at least one batter in the same game — let alone ten. Per TNT Sports, he was also the first starting pitcher since 1900 to hit a leadoff home run in either the regular season or postseason, and the first to hit multiple home runs in a playoff game.
And perhaps the most mind-blowing part? Ohtani hadn’t pitched in 13 days. Yet, he walked out onto that mound and delivered one of the greatest all-around performances the sport has ever seen.
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After the game, Ohtani smiled humbly as he accepted the NLCS MVP trophy, speaking through his translator. “It was really fun on both sides of the ball today,” he said, holding the hardware that symbolized his night of perfection. “As a representative, I’m taking this trophy, but this is for the team. Let’s get four more wins.”
Fans across the globe — from Los Angeles to Tokyo — erupted in celebration. It wasn’t just a win; it was a moment that reminded everyone why baseball, at its best, feels magical.
Team Effort Behind the Superstar
Even on a night dominated by Ohtani’s brilliance, his teammates made sure the spotlight was shared. Freddie Freeman, who went 2-for-4 in the game, was almost speechless afterward. “Sometimes you have to check him and make sure he’s not made of steel,” Freeman said on TNT Sports. “The biggest stage, and he goes out and does something like that. Absolutely incredible.”
Veteran ace Clayton Kershaw, who came out of the bullpen during the postseason run, couldn’t hide his admiration. “We all know about Shohei,” he said. “But until you play with him, you don’t understand just how different he is. It’s another level.”
The Dodgers’ lineup has been a juggernaut all postseason, with stars like Mookie Betts, Teoscar Hernández, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto providing balance. Yet, even among so many talented names, Ohtani stood above the rest — the driving force behind a team that has now won five National League pennants in the last nine seasons.
Dodgers Dominate the Postseason
This Dodgers team isn’t just winning — they’re dismantling opponents. With the sweep over Milwaukee, Los Angeles improved to 7-1 in the postseason, their only loss coming in the NLDS against Philadelphia. Since then, their pitching staff has allowed no more than one run per game, a testament to the rotation’s dominance.
Manager Dave Roberts, addressing a roaring Dodger Stadium crowd after the win, leaned into the moment. “Before the season, people said the Dodgers were ruining baseball,” he laughed. “Let’s get four more wins — and really ruin baseball.”
His words echoed the team’s confidence. The combination of Blake Snell, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, and Shohei Ohtani forms one of the most fearsome playoff rotations in modern MLB history. Add to that a lineup filled with MVPs and All-Stars, and you have a team that looks nearly unbeatable heading into the Fall Classic.
The Global Impact of Shohei Ohtani
Few athletes in history have united fans across continents the way Shohei Ohtani has. His rare ability to both pitch and hit at an elite level has redefined what’s possible in baseball. On Sports Channel, analysts called his performance “a once-in-a-century achievement,” noting that Ohtani has managed to blend power, precision, and poise in ways the sport has never seen before.
Social media platforms from Tokyo to Los Angeles exploded with admiration. Clips of his towering home runs and vicious strikeouts trended worldwide, drawing attention not just from baseball fans, but from casual sports watchers who recognized greatness when they saw it.
Even his postgame comment showed his humility and humor. “We won it as a team,” Ohtani said with a grin. “So I hope everybody in LA and Japan and all over the world can enjoy a really good sake tonight.”
The quote summed up what makes him beloved — not just his skill, but his joy and generosity of spirit.
What Comes Next
With their NLCS victory sealed, the Dodgers now wait for the winner of the American League Championship Series, where the Seattle Mariners lead the Toronto Blue Jays three games to two. Whoever emerges will have to face a Los Angeles team firing on all cylinders.
No MLB team has repeated as champions since the New York Yankees dynasty of 1998–2000. The Dodgers are the first team to even make it back to the World Series the year after winning it since the Philadelphia Phillies in 2008–09.
Veteran Clayton Kershaw, who is retiring after the season, reflected on what this run means to him. “Just to be a part of this team … it’s incredible,” he said. “Whether I get to pitch or not, I’m just glad to be part of it. We’re having so much fun — and we’re not done yet.”
Ohtani’s brilliance may define this postseason, but the Dodgers’ depth, leadership, and chemistry are what make them truly dangerous. On Sports Channel, the buzz is unanimous: this team isn’t just chasing another title — they’re chasing immortality.
A Night to Remember, A Legend in the Making
From the first pitch to the final out, the Dodgers’ Game 4 victory felt destined to be remembered forever. Shohei Ohtani’s once-in-a-lifetime performance didn’t just carry his team to another World Series — it reminded the world why baseball still has the power to awe and inspire.
For fans in Los Angeles, Japan, and around the globe, it’s officially “Sho-time” again. And as Sports Channel continues to follow every pitch, every swing, and every historic moment, one thing is certain — the legend of Shohei Ohtani is still being written, one record-breaking night at a time.
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Shohei Ohtani received the AL MVP so Tokyo Tower is Angels team colors. #shotime #ohtanimvp #tokyotower https://www.instagram.com/p/CWdT2l2h4I-/?utm_medium=tumblr