Tokyo, Japan – When Shohei Ohtani won his third consecutive MLB MVP award – something unprecedented in modern baseball history – the world was awash with congratulations, numbers, and glowing headlines. But in the small town of Oshu, where Ohtani was born and raised, two people sat quietly in front of the screen, their eyes welling up as their son’s name was announced. They didn’t talk about glory or money. They just said, “You’ve gone far, Shohei, but to us, you’re still the boy who ran barefoot on the field, believing that all dreams begin with the raindrops falling on the soil of his hometown.”
Ohtani’s father, Toru, a former amateur player, taught his son how to hold a bat with two hands when Shohei was just 3 years old. His mother, Kayoko, a badminton player who represented Japan, always stood in the corner of the court when her son practiced throwing the ball, ready to catch each falling ball. They were the first to see the “miracle” in the small, quiet boy whose eyes always burned with passion when he touched the ball.
“We didn’t have much,” Toru shared in an interview with NHK. “We only had the belief that if he worked hard, he would overcome everything. Today, when I saw Shohei standing on that stage, I remembered the early mornings when he woke up before dawn, holding a stick in the cold mist. No one saw, no one praised, but that was my son – the child who never stopped.”
After the awards ceremony, Shohei Ohtani received a handwritten letter from his parents – written in Japanese, with trembling lines:
“Shohei, you have shown the world the power of perseverance. But to us, the most precious thing is that you still keep your heart. Whether you are in Los Angeles or Tokyo, whether people call you MVP or a legend, to us – you will always be the boy who bows to thank the coach after every practice. We love you not because you are good, but because you have never forgotten who you are.”
Those words made Japanese social media explode. Thousands of fans re-shared the image of Ohtani shedding tears while reading the letter, along with the hashtag #ProudOfShohei – “Proud of Shohei.” He did not say much, just bowed deeply and said softly: “Everything I have… started from their love.”
At 31, Ohtani is not only a sports icon, but also a living testament to the power of family love. He once said that every time he stands at the pinnacle of glory, he remembers the small house in Oshu – where his mother cooked rice with vegetables grown in the backyard, where his father bent over to teach his son to throw a ball despite his shaking hands.
And perhaps, among the millions of flashbulbs in America, that image is what Ohtani holds deepest in his heart – a simple message from his parents, who gave the world a “miracle of throwing a ball”:
“You didn’t just make history, Shohei… you made the whole world believe in dreams.”
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