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No one is a bigger fan of Shohei Ohtani than his parents, Kayoko and Toru Ohtani.
Since welcoming their son on July 5, 1994, the couple have supported the talented pitcher throughout his baseball career. When he was a child, Shohei’s father, Toru, even coached him in the sport.
Though they still live thousands of miles away in Oshu, Japan, the proud parents have shown up in support of their son at some of his games, including his MLB debut in 2018.
From Toru’s baseball career to how they raised their star athlete son, here’s everything to know about Shohei Ohtani’s parents, Kayoko and Toru Ohtani.
Toru played baseball at the amateur level
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Shohei may have inherited the baseball gene from his father, who played at the industrial league level. While he never went professional, Toru was an outfielder for a corporate-sponsored baseball team, per the Japanese publication Mainichi.
However, after a shoulder injury at 25, per Sports Illustrated, Toru went to work full-time at a Mitsubishi factory.
Kayoko was a badminton player
Both of Shohei’s parents were athletes. Kayoko was an amateur badminton player, playing on the same level as Toru did in baseball. However, Shohei joked that she may have been the stronger athlete.
“I can’t beat her in badminton to this day,” he said in an interview with the MLB in December 2017. “She’s tall and she’s been playing badminton for a long time.”
When Shohei was little, Kayoko would take him to the badminton courts to play with the equipment while she practiced — and he showed promise early on.
“I would let Shohei play with the equipment,” she told Nippon, a Japanese publication, in March 2022. “Maybe it’s because the motions in badminton are similar to baseball, but he could swing the racquet like a champ without me having to show him.”
They have three children
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Before they welcomed Shohei in 1994, Kayoko and Toru had two other children: son Ryuta and daughter Yuka.
Toru told Mainichi that when Ryuta was young, he was so busy with his job at the car assembly, working day and night shifts while also raising two little children, that he didn’t give his elder son as much attention as he would have liked.
Ryuta now also plays baseball and coaches for a corporate baseball team, but when he was in high school, his team did not progress as far as he wanted to, leaving him disappointed.
Toru said he saw how upset his son was and was determined to spend more time dedicated to baseball and help his youngest child, Shohei, improve his game.
“If only I had worked together with him more … I’ve got to give to Shohei what I couldn’t give to his older brother,” Toru told Mainichi what he remembered thinking at that time.
Toru coached Shohei
Toru took coaching Shohei upon himself from the time his son was in elementary school through junior high school — but that didn’t mean he played favorites.
“Up until I reached high school, we probably spent more time together on the field than anywhere else,” Shohei told Nippon. “There was no special treatment. In practice and games, I didn’t think of him as my dad. He was first and foremost my coach.”
Shohei added that having his dad as his coach only humbled him and taught him that he needed to continue to work hard, otherwise his teammates would call him out.
“I was still young, but I knew my relationship with my dad wouldn’t guarantee me playing time,” he said. “I had to earn a spot like everyone else or my teammates would cry foul. It taught me never to expect anything, but to work for it.”
Toru kept a notebook with advice for Shohei
One way Toru kept Shohei grounded and focused on his sport was through a journal the two shared where Toru would write down advice for his son. The father-son duo would exchange the notebook with each other, jotting down notes they had about his games and performances and exchanging ideas.
“It covered both good and bad points,” Toru told Nippon. “Typical entries were things like, ‘Great control up to the third inning’ or ‘Chased too many high pitches.’ We did it for several years, until Shohei was in the fifth grade or so. We ended up filling two or three notebooks in all.”
Toru said his goal was to make Shohei more “mindful” of his plays and understand his choices on the field better. The father-of-three also wrote three major lessons he wanted Shohei to learn in the notebook, including being loud and energetic, giving it his all in his practice and always running it all out.
“I wanted Shōhei to carry these three basic concepts with him in every level of the game,” Toru said.
The advice stuck with the star hitter, who told the outlet that he still bears the three principles in mind when he plays.
“His advice was basic, but has stuck with me,” Shohei said. “They’re things I’ve heard at every stage. Like hustling. It’s important to do, but the attitude with which you approach it is also meaningful.”
They’ve supported Shohei at his games
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Even though they may live a continent and ocean away, the distance has not stopped Shohei’s parents from visiting and supporting their son during his biggest games.
The proud parents came out to Shohei’s opening game with the Los Angeles Angels in March 2018 against the Oakland Athletics.
Toru shared an open letter about how proud he is of Shohei
In an open letter that was published by Japanese outlet Sponichi (and later translated into English) in September 2024, Toru wrote about how proud he was the first time he got to watch his son play at Dodger Stadium a month earlier.
“I was also amazed by how packed Dodger Stadium was. I’ve never heard such loud cheers. There are also Dodgers fans everywhere in Los Angeles,” he wrote. “Seeing how many fans have accepted you here really filled me with gratitude.”
At the end of the letter, Toru even mentioned the possibility of his son playing in the World Series.
“Starting this October, I am looking forward to watching you play in your first postseason,” he wrote. “And finally, I hope that you make it to the World Series and win it all.”
