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Tim Keown, ESPN Senior WriterApr 17, 2024, 03:59 PM ET CloseSenior Writer for ESPN The Magazine Columnist for ESPN.com Author of five books (3 NYT best-sellers) MICHAEL CROTTA DIDN'T know anybody or much of anything when he arrived to play professional baseball in Sapporo, Japan, in February 2014. His lack of knowledge of a new culture, and a little nervousness at the prospect of assimilating into
The Department of Homeland Security confirmed to ESPN on Tuesday that it is working with the IRS to investigate Ohtani's ex-interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, but would not specify whether it was looking into Ohtani's theft allegation or if it had been contacted by Ohtani's representatives. "Homeland Security Investigations Los Angeles and IRS Criminal Investigation Los Angeles Field Office are conducti
Close Tisha Thompson is an investigative reporter for ESPN based in Washington, D.C. Her work appears on all platforms, both domestically and internationally. The sports world was rocked this week by news that Shohei Ohtani's longtime interpreter and friend, Ippei Mizuhara, had been fired by the Los Angeles Dodgers. But Mizuhara's termination was only the latest sharp turn in a zigzagging, 48-hour
Close Tisha Thompson is an investigative reporter for ESPN based in Washington, D.C. Her work appears on all platforms, both domestically and internationally. The Los Angeles Dodgers interpreter for Shohei Ohtani was fired Wednesday afternoon after questions surrounding at least $4.5 million in wire transfers sent from Ohtani's bank account to a bookmaking operation set off a series of events. Ipp
CloseRyan Hockensmith is a Penn State graduate who joined ESPN in 2001. He is a survivor of bacterial meningitis, which caused him to have multiple amputation surgeries on his feet. He is a proud advocate for those with disabilities and addiction issues. He covers everything from the NFL and UFC to pizza-chucking and analysis of Tom Cruise's running ability. THERE RESTS KEVIN DURANT. Taishi Ito al
If there's one thing that separates NBA superstars from every other pro basketball player, it's their abilities to create their own buckets. An elite group of players has the ability to take advantage of any sliver of space or the slightest opening to the rim -- scoring in ways that leave defenses completely helpless. The most deflating of these plays come on three types of spectacular moves, all
To find the 100 most famous athletes in the world, we started with 600 of the biggest names in sports, drawn from 68 countries. ESPN's Sports Analytics Group then ranked them based on a proprietary formula that took into account three fame factors: 1 Search Score Which measures how often a name is searched, using Cristiano Ronaldo's score of 100 as a baseline 3 Social Media Followers Since not all
The one baseball's been waiting forSo far, the two-way sensation is living up to Ruthian expectations. But how will he possibly keep this up? We trace his journey back to Japan in search of the surprising answer. A version of this story appears in ESPN The Magazine's April 23 NEXT issue. Subscribe today! Luis Valbuena bears witness. The Angels third baseman watches Shohei Ohtani finish the first i
A.J. Andrews A.J. Andrews Softball Age 24 See Athlete Outfielder, Akron Racers, 2016 Gold Glove recipient
Soccer | Portugal Salary/winnings: $53M Endorsements: $27M Facebook likes: 110.8M Twitter followers: 41.5M IT'S GOOD TO BE The Madeira-born Portuguese knows he is breathtakingly handsome, gifted and wonderful (even if he can't quite persuade us he's as good as Leo Messi). Yet it's nice for him to be reminded of his greatness by wandering round a museum that he's bankrolled on the island to be a sh
Even the New York Yankees, the storied generators of domestic dollars, share a common interest in foreign oil. The 27-time World Series champions are among six teams in the top 10 of the ESPN/SportingIntelligence Global Salary Survey whose business relationships have been buoyed by black gold. This group includes Paris Saint-Germain of France's Ligue 1, which finished in the survey's top spot. PSG
The Man in the VanHe throws 96. He's the Jays' No. 1 prospect. He signed for millions. And he lives in a VW camper. Meet Daniel Norris, the most interesting pitcher in baseball. THE FUTURE of the Toronto Blue Jays wakes up in a 1978 Volkswagen camper behind the dumpsters at a Wal-Mart and wonders if he has anything to eat. He rummages through a half-empty cooler until he finds a dozen eggs. "I'm n
Japanese right-hander Kazuhito Tadano is no stranger to eephus pitches. But this might be his most epic attempt yet. On Monday, with his Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters facing the Hanshin Tigers, Tadano tossed a most extreme arcing pitch toward batter Mauro Gomez. It landed safely in the catcher's hands, having gone right across the plate ... but the umpire had no idea what to do with it. Tadano, who
CloseAndrew Marchand is a senior writer for ESPNNewYork. He also regularly contributes to SportsCenter, Baseball Tonight, ESPNews, ESPN New York 98.7 FM and ESPN Radio. He joined ESPN in 2007 after nine years at the New York Post. Follow Andrew on Twitter » CHICAGO -- The New York Yankees' hoarding of a foreign candy started in spring training. One minute there would be boxes of the colorful sweet
A high school baseball player in Washington State threw 194 pitches over 14 innings Tuesday before being removed in the 15th inning of his team's eventual 1-0 victory in its district tournament. Rochester High School starting pitcher Dylan Fosnacht struck out 17 and was pulled in the top of the 15th after the first two batters reached base. Dustin Wilson, who had been playing catcher, finished the
CloseAndrew Marchand is a senior writer for ESPNNewYork. He also regularly contributes to SportsCenter, Baseball Tonight, ESPNews, ESPN New York 98.7 FM and ESPN Radio. He joined ESPN in 2007 after nine years at the New York Post. Follow Andrew on Twitter » NEW YORK -- The Yankees spent much of 2013 scouting right-hander Masahiro Tanaka in Japan. After seeing him go 24-0 with a 1.27 ERA, they came
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CloseChris Jones is a feature writer for ESPN The Magazine. He is also a Writer at Large for Esquire. THESE ARE Tomohiro Anraku's last moments of invisibility. Outside Japan, at least, he has been that ultra-rarity -- the unseen sensation, a real-life Sidd Finch, his story so impossible that he's been spoken about only in whispers or exclamations. He is out there somewhere on this all-dirt field;
ESPN.com first published this story on Aug. 24, 2012. Get to the f---ing stadium. I got to pitch." Decades later, Dock Ellis remembered it like this: sitting in a taxi outside the San Diego airport, running late for work, tripping on acid. So yeah, maybe the words aren't verbatim. It was a Friday. That much is certain. June 12, 1970. Three years after psychedelic Pied Piper Timothy Leary invited A
LONDON -- A South Korean soccer player who held up a sign with a political message after a victory over Japan did not get a bronze Sunday when the Olympic medals were handed out in a ceremony to the rest of his team. Midfielder Park Jong-woo is under investigation by the IOC and soccer's governing body, FIFA, for displaying the sign with a slogan supporting South Korean sovereignty over disputed i
Marching in the Olympic opening ceremonies can be the greatest moment of an athlete's career. It can also be the longest line you've ever stood in, a line so long it makes the queue for Disneyland's Pirates of the Caribbean ride seem like the 15-items-and-under checkout at the grocery store. Especially when your country is low down in the alphabet, such as the United States. "They line you up in t
I've done judo for 15 years. Doing a round of judo is like brushing my hair.
Here's a bulletin for you: They don't make leadoff hitters like Tim Raines anymore. Maybe you'd already noticed that. Maybe you hadn't. But I've always thought that the coolest part of voting on the Hall of Fame is the way it helps connect the dots between baseball's past, present and future. You spend hours studying the great players of the past. And you get a benefit out of it that you might not
Disney would never have green-lighted this script. Twenty-first century audiences, raised on a steady diet of comic book fare, are too worldly, too jaded to buy into a storyline so egregiously Hollywood. After all, this was a tale of nevers. Never before had Japan beaten the U.S. in 25 attempts; never before had the U.S. failed to win a World Cup match in which it scored first; and never before ha
Joern Pollex/Getty ImagesHomare Sawa, who finished as the tournament's top goal scorer, celebrates winning the World Cup with Japan coach Norio Sasaki. "'I truly believed this was our tournament to win," said U.S. keeper Hope Solo, the hero against Brazil. "I felt that the entire time. At the same time I think there is something bigger pulling for Japan. They are the team of the tournament, and if
This story appears in the May 2, 2011, issue of ESPN The Magazine. To find out which athletic organizations shell out the most dough, we surveyed 272 teams in 14 major pro leagues, covering seven sports, spanning 10 countries, comprising 7,802 athletes making a combined $15.2 billion in salary. Our final numbers, below, were compiled by Nick Harris, editor of sportingintelligence.com. "Average Ann
New York Liberty guard Cappie Pondexter has apologized after causing an Internet uproar with comments on her Twitter account that were deemed insensitive toward victims of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami. On Saturday, Pondexter tweeted: "What if God was tired of the way they treated their own people in there own country! Idk guys he makes no mistakes." She later tweeted: "u just never knw! The
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