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Is Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani fatigue impacting his pitching perception? appeared first on ClutchPoints. Add ClutchPoints as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani has created an unusual baseball conversation. The Dodgers keep stacking wins, and Ohtani pitching has become central to the NL Cy Young race. Yet the national focus has shifted toward Ohtani fatigue, workload management, and his inconsistent offensive stretch. That split has made the Dodgers news cycle harder to read.
The contrast has become sharper because Ohtani currently holds a 0.73 ERA across eight starts, giving the Dodgers another formidable arm at the top of their rotation. His latest start made that gap even harder to ignore. Against the San Diego Padres, he worked five scoreless innings, allowed three hits, walked two, and struck out four in a 4-0 win.
That outing kept his ERA below 1.00 and gave L.A. another reminder of his mound value. However, his rare two-way role keeps pulling the conversation away from pure pitching excellence and toward sustainability. The Dodgers have won 10 of their last 12 games, so the timing matters.
Dodgers Territory posted a clip on X, formerly Twitter, on Tuesday featuring Dodgers broadcaster Stephen Nelson. In the segment, Nelson discussed whether Ohtani receives enough recognition for his pitching while the national conversation continues to focus on everything surrounding his workload.
“I’m starting to sense a little bit of potential Shohei fatigue when I listen to the national conversation”
Is Shohei Ohtani not getting enough love from the pitching side?
"I'm starting to sense a little bit of potential Shohei fatigue when I listen to the national conversation," says @StephenNelson. pic.twitter.com/eRO7tOaodY
— Dodgers Territory (@LADTerritory) May 27, 2026
That point fits the current debate. National attention has centered on whether Ohtani should hit on pitching days, how the Dodgers manage his workload, and whether fatigue affects his bat. Those topics matter, but they also blur the most important part of the story.
Ohtani has overwhelmed hitters while building an early award case. Through 49 innings, he owns a 4-2 record, a 0.73 ERA, 54 strikeouts, 13 walks, and only 28 hits allowed. If the phenom continues to pitch at this level, that dominance has to drive the national conversation.
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