OSHU CITY, Japan — Signs around Shohei Ohtani's hometown in northern Japan proclaim him ''The Pride of Oshu City.''
They might need to add ''World Series Champion'' soon.
Hundreds of fans filed into a public viewing center in Ohtani's hometown on Tuesday morning — the country is 13 hours ahead of New York — to watch the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Yankees 4-2 to take a 3-0 lead in the best-of-seven World Series. Those fans will surely be tuned in again Wednesday morning when Ohtani and the Dodgers have a chance to clinch the championship.
''I'm extremely happy because the Dodgers — with Ohtani — have won three in a row and are one win away from the World Series title,'' Shoichi Segawa said.
Ohtani was hitless in the game, but fans got what they came for over a long morning of watching baseball: a Dodgers victory.
They lined up outside the Oshu City Cultural Center, a 500-seat auditorium, on a perfect fall morning to watch their local hero in a live telecast.
Many came dressed in Dodger Blue — caps or jerseys — and were supplied with various noisemakers, including thunder sticks. The hall was adorned with posters announcing Ohtani as ''The Pride of Oshu City.''
Ohtani, playing two days after dislocating his left shoulder in Game 2, drew a walk on his first at-bat. That drew wild cheers from the 250 fans attending, who chanted "Go, Go. Shohei." Then came even more cheers when the Dodgers took a 2-0 lead on Freddie Freeman's home run.