Cover Photo: Fox News
Shohei Ohtani isn’t just rewriting the record books—he’s redefining what’s possible on a baseball field.
In an era of hyper-specialization, load management, and bullpen games, Ohtani is doing something most thought was extinct: dominating as both a starting pitcher and an MVP-caliber hitter. And he’s not just getting by—he’s thriving on both sides of the ball, season after season.
So that raises the question every fan and analyst is asking:
Is Shohei Ohtani the greatest player of all time?
Let’s compare him to baseball’s elite—legends like Babe Ruth, Barry Bonds, Willie Mays, and more—and see how he stacks up.
Shohei Ohtani By the Numbers
As a hitter (2021–2025):
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.281 AVG | .948 OPS | 183 HR | 479 RBI | 83 SB
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2021 AL MVP, 2023 AL MVP, 2025 NL MVP frontrunner
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Leads MLB in HR, OPS, and WAR in multiple seasons
As a pitcher (2021–2023):
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34–16 | 3.01 ERA | 542 K in 428 IP
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2x All-Star as a starting pitcher
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Missed 2024–25 seasons on the mound due to injury but expected to return in 2026
Ohtani’s WAR numbers are unprecedented when combining both roles—he’s averaging 8–10 WAR per season across two positions. No one in modern baseball even comes close.
Babe Ruth Comparison: The Original Two-Way Icon
Babe Ruth remains Ohtani’s most natural comp. Ruth was a dominant pitcher early in his career before becoming arguably the greatest slugger of all time. But Ruth’s pitching days were short-lived—he stopped throwing full-time by 1920.
Career Pitching (1914–1919):
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94–46 | 2.28 ERA | 488 K
Career Hitting:
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.342 AVG | 714 HR | 1.164 OPS
Bottom line: Ruth transitioned from pitching to hitting. Ohtani is excelling at both—simultaneously. In terms of two-way impact, Ohtani already outpaces the Bambino.
Barry Bonds Comparison: The Most Dominant Hitter Ever
Bonds holds records for most home runs (762), most single-season HRs (73), and walks (688 in a season!). Steroid controversy aside, he remains the most feared hitter in baseball history.
Career:
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.298 AVG | 762 HR | 162 OPS+ | 162.8 WAR
Bottom line: Bonds was a one-dimensional player—but that one dimension was historic. Ohtani’s combined value across pitching and hitting makes this a true debate.
Willie Mays & Hank Aaron: Five-Tool GOATs
Willie Mays:
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660 HR | 338 SB | 12 Gold Gloves | 24 All-Star Games
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Ultimate five-tool player, WAR: 156.1
Hank Aaron:
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755 HR | 3,771 hits | Most RBI in history (2,297)
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WAR: 143.1
Bottom line: Mays and Aaron dominated for decades and did it with grace, speed, and consistency. Ohtani’s value is more condensed—but just as impactful.
Mike Trout Comparison
Mike Trout was the undisputed best player of the 2010s. But even in his prime, Trout never matched Ohtani’s multi-dimensional dominance.
Trout’s career WAR (through age 33): ~85
Ohtani’s combined WAR (2021–2025): ~42 in 5 seasons
Bottom line: Ohtani is doing in five seasons what Trout took nearly a decade to accumulate.
The Context Factor: Ohtani’s Era is Harder
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Ohtani is dominating during a time of elite velocity, hyper-analytics, and brutal travel schedules.
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He faces the world’s best talent—not just segregated leagues.
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He’s performing in front of the whole world, every night, with no margin for error.
That matters.
Final Verdict: Is Ohtani the GOAT?
If he retired today, he might already be a first-ballot Hall of Famer.
But if he continues at this pace—and returns to the mound in 2026? It’s over.
Shohei Ohtani will go down as the most complete, most unique, and most valuable player in baseball history.
The GOAT conversation is no longer just about Ruth, Bonds, or Mays. It’s about Ohtani.
Do you think Shohei Ohtani is the greatest ever? Who’s your GOAT? Drop your take in the comments.
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