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Dodgers win MLB season opener in Korea: Shohei Ohtani helps lead comeback after strange error hurts Padres

The 2024 MLB regular season kicked off Wednesday morning on the other side of the world. The Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres played Game 1 of the two-game Seoul Series at Gocheok Sky Dome in South Korea, and Shohei Ohtani's new team came from behind in the late innings to earn a 5-2 win (box score). Ohtani had two singles in his Dodgers debut.

San Diego scratched across two runs against Dodgers righty Tyler Glasnow and the Padres took a 2-1 lead into the eighth inning, but Gavin Lux grounder went through Jake Cronenworth's glove at first base -- literally through the glove, it tore through the web -- and that peculiar error opened the door for a four-run inning. Los Angeles caught a break and capitalized.

Ohtani singled twice, stole a base and drove in the Dodgers' fifth and final run, and he also made a base-running mistake. He did not retouch second base on his way back to first on Freddie Freeman's long fly out in the eighth inning, which ended the rally. It was a productive and eventful Dodgers debut for the $700 million man.

Padres shortstop Ha-Seong Kim grew up not far outside Seoul and he played seven seasons with the Kiwoom Heroes of the Korea Baseball Organization before making the jump to MLB. With the Heroes, Gocheok Sky Dome was his home ballpark, so Kim returned to his old stomping grounds Wednesday.

Wednesday's game was the first ever regular season MLB game played in Korea. Here now is what you need to know about the Dodgers' comeback win and the Seoul Series opener.    

L.A.'s new top of the lineup dominated

The Dodgers signed Shohei Ohtani to a record -- and heavily deferred -- 10-year, $700 million contract this past offseason and, on Wednesday, the top of their lineup featured three MVPs: Mookie Betts, Ohtani, and Freddie Freeman. That's an awful lot of star power. The 2024 Dodgers are the fourth team ever to hit three MVPs 1-2-3 in the batting order (via Elias Sports Bureau):

  • 2024 Dodgers: Mookie Betts, Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman (Opening Day)
  • 1983 Phillies: Joe Morgan, Pete Rose, Mike Schmidt (10 times)
  • 1978 Reds: Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, George Foster (May 13)
  • 1976 Reds: Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench (May 5)

It was a bit of a weird start to the season. In the top of the first, Yu Darvish took too long to deliver a pitch to Betts and was hit with a pitch clock violation that was ball four -- Padres pitchers were charged with four pitch clock violations in the game -- so the first batter of 2024 reached on a pitch-clock walk. Betts then appeared to successfully steal second base, but he was sent back to first because the home plate umpire interfered with the catcher's throw. An unusual top of the first, it was.

There were no loud home runs or extra-base hits Wednesday, but the vaunted top of the Dodgers lineup had a very productive game. Betts, Ohtani, and Freeman went a combined 4 for 11 with two walks and a hit-by-pitch. Betts and Ohtani each had two singles and drove in a run, and Freeman had both walks and the hit-by-pitch. Here is Ohtani's night:

The Dodgers are much more than the top of their lineup. Max Muncy had a single and two walks, Jason Heyward and Enrique Hernández drove in the Dodgers' first two runs with sac flies -- Hernàndez did not start the game, he pitch-hit for Heyward against the lefty Yuki Matsui in the sixth -- and James Outman reached base twice as the No. 7 hitter.

The Padres loaded the bases with no outs in the fourth inning and they did score a run on Luis Campusano's double play, but they scored just that one run. Against a team as good as the Dodgers, it was going to take a crooked number in that inning to win the game. Instead, San Diego got just the one run. You can't expect to keep this Los Angeles offense down all game.

The Dodgers got a little lucky

Sometimes you need a little luck, and in the eighth inning, Gavin Lux's potential double play ball went through Jake Cronenworth's glove at first base. It tore right through the webbing. Check it out:

Officially, that's scored an error, which is tough for Cronenworth. He did a nice job getting to the ball and was in position to make the play. The ball just went through his glove. Charge the error to the glove manufacturer, I suppose.

The Dodgers had runners at first and second with no outs when the ball went through Cronenworth's glove and trickled into shallow right field, allowing James Outman to score the tying run from second base. From there, the floodgates opened as Betts and Ohtani singled in runs. I'm not sure Lux's grounder would have been a double play, it would have been very close at first, but San Diego was unable to get even one out because Cronenworth's glove ripped.

Los Angeles scored their first run when Tyler Wade threw a Teoscar Hernández ground ball, leading to Jason Heyward's sac fly. Lux's grounder then went right through Cronenworth's glove. When the Padres made a mistake (Wade's error), got a bad break (Cronenworth's glove), or gave away free bases (nine walks), the Dodgers took advantage. 

Both starters bent but did not break

Because the Dodgers and Padres had a slightly shorter than usual spring training leading up to the Seoul Series, starting pitchers Yu Darvish and Tyler Glasnow were both on an 80-ish pitch limit Wednesday, and neither had was particularly crisp. They had only two 1-2-3 innings between them, both by Glasnow. Here are their pitching lines:


IPHRERBBKPitches

Darvish

3 2/3

2

1

0

3

3

72

Glasnow

5

2

2

2

4

3

77

For Glasnow, Wednesday was his Dodgers debut after coming over in an offseason trade with the Tampa Bay Rays. He spiked an awful lot of pitches in front of the plate, both fastballs and curveballs, so it seemed he was having some trouble with the mound. The Padres did put some good at-bats on him though, and the Dodgers worked Darvish hard as well.

Four Dodgers relievers -- Ryan Brasier, Daniel Hudson, Joe Kelly, Evan Phillips -- held the Padres to two hits in four innings, giving the offense a chance to get back into the game. Wandy Peralta, Jhony Brito, and Adrian Morejon combined to turn that 2-1 lead into a 5-2 deficit for the Padres in that eighth inning. San Diego asked a lot of its bullpen following Darvish's short start and they couldn't make the one-run lead stand up.

Park threw out the first pitch with a special glove

Chan-Ho Park, the first Korean-born player in MLB history, threw out Wednesday's ceremonial first pitch, and he did so with a special glove. Park fetched the glove he used during his MLB debut in April 1994 from a museum in his hometown for the occasion, according to the Orange County Register. Here's Park's first pitch with Ha-Seong Kim behind the plate:

Now 50, Park played 17 seasons with seven teams from 1994-2010. He debuted with the Dodgers (1994-2001) and also spent two years with the Padres (2005-06). With a 124-98 record, Park is the winningest Asian-born pitcher in MLB history. He has worked as a special advisor in San Diego's front office since 2017.

Up next

The Dodgers will look to complete the two-game Seoul Series sweep Thursday morning. That's another 6:05 a.m. ET start (7:05 p.m. in Seoul). Yoshinobu Yamamoto, the three-time reigning MVP in Japan's Pacific League, will make his first MLB start with the Dodgers after signing a 12-year, $325 million contract in the offseason. That is the largest pitching contract in history. The Padres will counter with San Diego native Joe Musgrove. The Padres were the home team Wednesday and the Dodgers will be the home team Thursday.

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Live updates
 

A scoreless first inning

Yu Darvish pitches around the leadoff pitch clock violation walk in the top half, and Tyler Glasnow retires the side 1-2-3 in the bottom half. 

 

Darvish works around the leadoff walk. Tyler Glasnow's Dodgers debut is coming up next.

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Ohtani's first Dodgers at-bat

Shohei Ohtani is making his Dodgers debut Wednesday after signing a massive -- and heavily deferred -- 10-year, $700 million contract over the winter. And, in his first at-bat with his new team, Ohtani ... rolled a fielder's choice ground ball to shortstop. Anticlimactic! Mookie Betts reached on a pitch clock violation walk and was forced out at second, but Ohtani beat out the throw to first to avoid the double play.

 

The first pitch of the new season is a Yu Darvish fastball outside to Mookie Betts. Happy baseball season, everyone.

 

Chan-Ho Park's first pitch

Park, the first Korean-born player in MLB history, threw out Wednesday's ceremonial first pitch. He wore a split Dodgers/Padres jersey and used the glove from his MLB debut in 1995. Ha-Seong Kim was behind the plate:

Park played 17 big league seasons from 1994-2010, including seven with the Dodgers (1994-2001) and two with the Padres (2005-06). With a 124-98 record, Park is the winningest Asian-born pitcher in MLB history.

 

Seoul Series still on after bomb threat

No explosive have been found at the Gocheok Sky Dome following a bomb threat against Shohei Ohtani, reports the Associated Press. Game 1 of the Seoul Series will be played as scheduled. Here are more details from the Associated Press:

About 150 police officers used sniffer dogs, X-ray detectors and other equipment to search through the stadium, but no suspicious objects were discovered, according to Seoul's Guro police station.

Police officers said they acted on a tip that there was a threat targeting the Japanese star but didn't elaborate.

The threat was emailed to the South Korean consulate in Vancouver and police believe it came from a person claiming to be a Japanese lawyer who has sent similar threats within the last year.

 

Ha-Seong Kim returns to Seoul

Kim, the Padres' Gold Glove winning shortstop, is returning home to Seoul and also the Gocheok Sky Dome. He grew up not far outside Seoul, and the Gocheok Sky Dome was his home stadium for seven years with the Kiwoon Heroes (formerly Nexen Heroes) before he joined San Diego in 2021. 

The Dodgers and Padres both played a pair of exhibition games against Korean clubs this past weekend, and Kim went deep twice against the LG Twins:

Expect Kim to receive a hero's welcome at his old stomping grounds Wednesday.

 

How to watch Dodgers vs. Padres

Date: Wednesday, March 20 | Time: 6:05 a.m. ET (3:05 a.m. PT)
Location: Gocheok Sky Dome (Seoul, South Korea)
TV channel: ESPN, SportsNet LA, Padres TV | Live streamfubo (try for free)
Probable pitchers: RHP Tyler Glasnow (Dodgers) vs. RHP Yu Darvish (Padres)
Odds: LAD -205 | SD +170 | O/U: 8.5

Getty Images
 

Game 1 lineups

The first lineups of the 2024 MLB regular season are in. Here's the lineup the visiting Dodgers will send out there Wednesday:

1. SS Mookie Betts, RHB
2. DH Shohei Ohtani, LHB
3. 1B Freddie Freeman, LHB
4. C Will Smith, RHB
5. 3B Max Muncy, LHB
6. LF Teoscar Hernández, RHB
7. CF James Outman, LHB
8. RF Jason Heyward, LHB
9. 2B Gavin Lux, LHB

SP Tyler Glasnow, RHP

Expect to see lefty relievers Wandy Peralta and Yuki Matsui deployed against Ohtani and Freeman and also Outman/Heyman/Lux in the late innings. The Dodgers could then counter with right-handed hitters Chris Taylor and Enrique Hernández. Here now is San Diego's starting nine:

1. 2B Xander Bogaerts, RHB
2. RF Fernando Tatis Jr., RHB
3. 1B Jake Cronenworth, LHB
4. DH Manny Machado, RHB
5. SS Ha-Seong Kim, RHB
6. LF Jurickson Profar, SHB
7. C Luis Campusano, RHB
8. 3B Tyler Wade, LHB
9. CF Jackson Merrill, LHB

SP Yu Darvish, RHP

Machado, a Gold Glove caliber third baseman, is recovering from October elbow surgery and is still not fully cleared to throw, so he is limited to DH duty to begin the season. Third base prospect Graham Pauley made the Opening Day roster and could make his MLB debut as a pinch-hitter for the defense-first Wade.

 

Ohtani making his Dodgers debut

What should we expect from Shohei Ohtani in his first regular-season game for the Dodgers? Well if his first spring training game was an indication, Ohtani might have a memorable moment in Seoul.

Ohtani, of course, is just serving as a designated hitter for the Dodgers this season (at least for now) but he still figures to be one of the most impactful players in baseball. We'll see if he can get his first official Dodgers hit -- and home run -- in his first game.

 

Not a fan of the overnight start?

Chances are a lot of fans are going to sleep through the first pitch, first home run and first game of the 2024 regular-season with the unique start time (it's 7:05 local time in Korea). While MLB has the right idea with this international push, says Matt Snyder, starting the season in the wee hours of the morning is a disservice to fans.

Why MLB playing season's first game in the early morning hours hurts fans, even as Korea games help growth
Matt Snyder
 

Regular-season baseball is here

Baseball is back, folks. It might not feel like the start of baseball season, but the first pitch of the 2024 MLB regular season will be thrown in Seoul in about 80 minutes. The Dodgers and Padres are playing in the two-game Seoul Series this week in South Korea. It's the first time MLB has opened its season abroad since 2019 when the Mariners faced the A's in Japan.

Looking for more about the Seoul Series? CBS Sports' Mike Axisa has you covered. Here's everything you need (minus coffee) for the early morning baseball.

Dodgers vs. Padres in Korea: Everything to know as 2024 MLB regular season kicks off with Seoul Series
Mike Axisa
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