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It’s a new week in our MLB Power Rankings — and we have a new No. 1 atop our list!

After the Phillies usurped the Dodgers two weeks ago, the red-hot Yankees have now taken over that spot. Since May 1, New York has won 25 of its 32 games.

While the top teams continue to dominate, the rest of the league continues to falter, as only 11 clubs have a record over .500 — seven in the American League and only four in the National League. Will the tide change as we get deeper into summer baseball?

Our expert panel has combined to rank every team in baseball based on a combination of what we’ve seen and what we already knew going into the 162-game marathon that is a full baseball season. We also asked ESPN MLB experts David Schoenfield, Bradford Doolittle, Jesse Rogers, Alden Gonzalez and Jorge Castillo to weigh in with an observation for all 30 teams.

Week 9 | Preseason rankings

Record: 44-19
Previous ranking: 2

The Yankees’ starting rotation took a hit when Clarke Schmidt landed on the injured list with a right lat strain last week. Clarke and his 2.52 ERA will be on the shelf for at least two months. That news puts a dent in the Yankees’ starting pitching depth, but they have a reinforcement by the name of Gerrit Cole on the way. Cole was sharp Tuesday in his first rehab start since being diagnosed with nerve irritation and edema in his right elbow in mid-March. He threw 45 pitches over 3⅓ scoreless innings for Double-A Somerset and will make at least another rehab start before returning to the Yankees. His rotation replacement, meanwhile, might start the All-Star Game. Luis Gil is 8-1 with a 1.82 ERA — the second-best mark in the majors — across 12 starts. — Castillo


Record: 44-19
Previous ranking: 1

The Phillies will see their depth tested with Brandon Marsh (hamstring) and Kody Clemens (back spasms) landing on the IL, joining Trea Turner (hamstring), who remains without a timetable for his return. The injuries to Marsh and Clemens aren’t serious, but the Phillies’ bench was already a little weak with Whit Merrifield, Cristian Pache and backup catcher Garrett Stubbs all providing little offense. Veteran outfielder David Dahl, an All-Star with the Rockies in 2019, got the call. He has battled a ton of injuries in his career and played four games in the majors last season and none in 2022. He went 3-for-5 with a home run in his first two games. — Schoenfield


Record: 39-21
Previous ranking: 4

The Orioles received a double dose of terrible news this week: Starters John Means and Tyler Wells were both lost for the season with UCL damage that requires Tommy John surgery. Both pitchers have undergone the procedure before. Means, a veteran lefty, started the season on the IL but had recorded a 2.61 ERA in four starts in May before undergoing the surgery Monday. Baltimore still has the rotation to contend this season. That Corbin Burnes acquisition looks better by the day, with the 2021 NL Cy Young Award winner posting a 2.26 ERA in 13 starts. Grayson Rodriguez, Cole Irvin, Kyle Bradish, Albert Suarez and Dean Kremer (once he returns from injury) round out a group that should help keep the Orioles in the division race. — Castillo


Record: 38-25
Previous ranking: 3

Shohei Ohtani is riding something of a minislump, slashing .212/.278/.394 over his past 17 games (though he did hit an impressive homer against Paul Skenes on Wednesday). It could be the typical lull any hitter, regardless of how gifted, goes through over the course of a season. Or it could be the bruised hamstring he has been playing through. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts compared it to the back ailment Ohtani went through earlier in the season. “When his back was bothering him a little bit, you saw some funkier swings, a little bit more chase,” Roberts told reporters. “Hamstring bothering him a little bit, you see a little bit of the same thing.” — Gonzalez


Record: 40-20
Previous ranking: 5

Steven Kwan returned last Friday after missing nearly a month and went 3-for-4 with two runs scored. He scored two more runs in Tuesday’s come-from-behind 8-5 win over the Royals, a game in which the Guardians trailed 5-0. Kwan had been off to a great start, hitting .353 before going on the IL. Meanwhile, David Fry, 28, continues to rake. He made the team as a third-catcher/utility guy, but after slashing .383/.513/.750 with seven home runs and 18 RBIs in May, he has hit his way into more or less regular status, starting at catcher, left field, first base and DH so far. He did hit .317 at Triple-A last season, but that was in just 29 games. Nobody saw anything like a 1.000 OPS coming. — Schoenfield


Record: 36-26
Previous ranking: 6

The injury to starter Robert Gasser is concerning. The lefty was having a tremendous rookie season before elbow problems shelved him. He had given up just eight earned runs over five starts while compiling a 16-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio. The good news is Jakob Junis and Joe Ross are making their own ways back from injury, but Milwaukee could be in the hunt for a starter come July. Their cushion in the division will give the Brewers a chance to assess from within — Aaron Ashby could get another look — before any decisions need to be made. — Rogers


Record: 34-25
Previous ranking: 7

The rotation continues to carry the Braves. Max Fried has reeled off three straight great starts for wins: a complete-game win over the Cubs, eight shutout innings against the Nationals and then a career-high 13 strikeouts (in just seven innings) against the Red Sox. Reynaldo Lopez continues to roll along with a 1.73 ERA. Chris Sale did get hammered against the A’s on Saturday but had won seven starts in a row with a 1.17 ERA before that. Charlie Morton, 40, has been solid enough. The only problem has been the fifth and sixth spots, which have seen a rotating cast of characters. Bryce Elder, an All-Star last season, got sent back down to Triple-A for the second time this season, while Ray Kerr has gotten a couple of starts and Spencer Schwellenbach just made his MLB debut. — Schoenfield


Record: 36-26
Previous ranking: 8

On paper, the Royals’ bullpen has been thin all along. Still, with the starters routinely posting quality starts, they were able to get by riding a couple of hot arms to navigate the late innings. For most of the season, those arms have belonged to John Schreiber and James McArthur. Lately, though, those righties have been less dependable and the lack of depth in the bullpen has been exposed. During a 3-7 stretch beginning on May 25, only the White Sox posted a worst bullpen ERA. Kansas City managed one save and one hold during that span with four blown saves. As general manager J.J. Picollo sets out to improve the Royals’ roster between now and the trade deadline, the bullpen has moved ahead of the weak-hitting outfield on the list of priorities. — Doolittle


Record: 35-28
Previous ranking: 9

The Mariners have one of baseball’s best rotations, an easy strength to point to when trying to understand how they could continue to lead the AL West despite a punchless offense and thin bullpen. However, don’t overlook criminally underrated manager Scott Servais when fishing for explanations. The old analytical maxim is that winning one-run games is basically a 50-50 proposition. Well, since Servais took over as skipper in Seattle in 2016, the Mariners have gone 227-172 in one-run encounters. That supposedly unsustainable pattern has continued big-time in 2024 — they are 13-5 in one-run games this season. Perhaps this is not a reflection of Servais’ abilities at all. But if that’s the case, it’d be an awfully big coincidence. — Doolittle


Record: 33-28
Previous ranking: 12

Royce Lewis finally returned to the Twins’ lineup Tuesday after severely straining his quad three innings into Opening Day. And, right on cue, the third baseman homered and walked twice in three plate appearances in a loss to the Yankees. The solo shot was the Twins’ only run of the night. With that performance, Lewis was 3-for-3 with two home runs in two games this season — and then he hit another home run on Wednesday. There is no question he can hit. It’s about him staying healthy. If Lewis, Carlos Correa, Byron Buxton & Co. can avoid the IL, the Twins have more than enough firepower to chase down Cleveland in the AL Central race. — Castillo


Record: 32-33
Previous ranking: 10

The Padres’ rotation absorbed a major blow over the weekend when both Joe Musgrove and Yu Darvish landed on the IL. Darvish is dealing with a groin strain, a relatively minor injury that shouldn’t keep him out too long. Musgrove, however, suffered a recurrence of the elbow inflammation that forced him to miss close to three weeks this season. He could be out longer this time, though the extent of his injury is unknown. The good news: Rookie right-hander Adam Mazur came up from the minor leagues and held the Angels to one run in six innings in his debut. — Gonzalez


Record: 30-32
Previous ranking: 15

As the champion Rangers continue to slide back into mediocrity, the struggles of their injury-riddled offense have gone from concerning to alarming. Less than a month ago, Texas was on pace to score a respectable 827 runs this season. When the Rangers lost to Detroit at home on Tuesday, scoring a lone run for a second straight game, that run pace dipped to a season-low 706. Last year’s Rangers scored 881 runs. The regression has been widespread, continuing even as Corey Seager‘s bat has started to heat up over the past couple of weeks. The Rangers’ aggressive approach might be wearing thin. Last season, they swung at the first pitch 32.3% of the time, ranking eighth in MLB, and posted a .978 OPS when doing so. This season, through Tuesday, they’ve gone after a whopping 38.7% of first pitches, most in baseball, and have an .832 OPS when doing so. — Doolittle


Record: 31-31
Previous ranking: 11

Apologies for getting repetitive here, but Boston’s season can be summarized with one of two points just about every week: The rotation has been spectacular — especially considering the external expectations — and the injuries just won’t stop. The story this week is injuries again.

Infielders Vaughn Grissom and Romy Gonzalez were placed on the IL with hamstring strains. Outfielder Wilyer Abreu, a top-three AL Rookie of the Year candidate, landed on the IL with a sprained right ankle after slipping on the dugout steps at Fenway Park. Veteran reliever Chris Martin was placed on the IL as he deals with anxiety. The Red Sox are already without Lucas Giolito, Trevor Story and Garrett Whitlock for the season. Outfielder/DH Masataka Yoshida and first baseman Triston Casas have been out since late April. Tyler O’Neill was on the IL with knee inflammation until Wednesday. It’s been ugly. — Castillo


Record: 31-31
Previous ranking: 18

The Tigers drafted Spencer Torkelson first overall out of Arizona State in 2020. He was looked upon in many circles as a can’t-miss hitter, primed to hold down the middle of the Tigers’ lineup for years to come. On Monday, almost four years to the day since selecting him, the Tigers sent Torkelson back down to the minor leagues. Torkelson, now 24, has slashed just .201/.266/.330 through 230 plate appearances this season. He amassed 31 home runs in 2023, but his .758 OPS suggests he didn’t necessarily set the world on fire then, either. Said Tigers manager A.J. Hinch: “We hope that we find some consistency with his swing, his setup, his approach, quality contact, just his overall offensive contribution.” — Gonzalez


Record: 29-33
Previous ranking: 17

Jordan Montgomery was struggling, Eduardo Rodriguez was still out, Merrill Kelly remained on the IL, and then the D-backs received even more bad news for their rotation: Zac Gallen, their ace, exited his start last Thursday with a right hamstring strain that had given him problems earlier this season and was placed on the 15-day IL the next day. The D-backs have relied on Ryne Nelson and Slade Cecconi to fill in for their rotation, but the pair has combined for a 5.51 ERA. Needless to say, they’ll have to step up. Two of the NL wild-card spots remain wide open, and the reigning NL champs can’t afford to lose much ground. — Gonzalez


Record: 31-31
Previous ranking: 14

The Cubs aren’t quite at the point of making dramatic changes, as their offense is slowly coming out of its May slumber. Ian Happ has emerged from a quiet month but the team could benefit from Cody Bellinger, Seiya Suzuki and Dansby Swanson all getting hot at the same time. Swanson, in particular, has been a ground ball/pull machine but a late home run Saturday night did propel Chicago to a much-needed win over the Reds. Swanson has had few of those moments this season, but the Cubs will need more of them — they’ve dropped their past six series before facing the lowly White Sox this week. — Rogers


Record: 28-35
Previous ranking: 16

Righty Hunter Brown seems to be hitting his stride and the timing couldn’t be better. The injury-battered Astros’ rotation now must navigate the rest of 2024 without Cristian Javier and Jose Urquidy after the club announced both veteran righties will undergo season-ending elbow surgery. As GM Dana Brown scrambles to staff the rotation, he at least can hope that Brown’s recent leap is real. Since the beginning of May, Brown has posted a 3.62 ERA while averaging 10 strikeouts per nine innings. For now, he slots alongside Framber Valdez and the less-dominant-than-usual Justin Verlander as Houston’s rotation big three. Ronel Blanco continues to hold his own but rookie Spencer Arrighetti has turned up with a sore calf, which could put the Astros in even more of a pitching bind. — Doolittle


Record: 29-31
Previous ranking: 21

Rookie Masyn Winn has been everything the Cardinals expected and then some. It’s not easy to be a rookie shortstop for a team with playoff aspirations but he has been their best all-around player, which is saying something on a team that employs Paul Goldschmidt and Nolan Arenado. Perhaps his best quality is simply his poise at such a young age. It also doesn’t hurt to have a rocket for an arm, a good eye at the plate and a little speed to boot. Right now, he would be the Cardinals’ All-Star among their position players. — Rogers


Record: 31-31
Previous ranking: 19

Tampa Bay doesn’t have a shortage of underperforming position players. But the case of Randy Arozarena is fascinating and might define the Rays’ 2024 season — whether they decide to stay the course for October or turn their attention to 2025 and get aggressive at the trade deadline. Arozarena is a 29-year-old proven performer in pressure situations (see: his postseason numbers and 2023 World Baseball Classic run) making $8.1 million this season and under team control through 2026. Contenders hungry for outfield help — and there are several — should want a player with his profile and résumé. But he’s also slashing .169/.285/.319 with a 83 wRC+. That might not matter if a team thinks it can get him back on track for when it matters most. — Castillo


Record: 30-33
Previous ranking: 13

Blake Snell made three starts, posted an 11.57 ERA, spent about a month on the IL with an adductor strain, came back, posted a 7.50 ERA in three more starts, and now he’s on the IL again with basically the same injury, which he suffered against the Yankees on Sunday. Two days later, the Giants suffered their sixth consecutive loss — a rut that immediately followed a dominant 12-game stretch that had vaulted them back into the wild-card race. “That was a terrible game by us,” manager Bob Melvin told reporters after Tuesday’s 8-5 loss to the division-rival Diamondbacks. “… It’s a bad game in a bad stretch.” — Gonzalez


Record: 29-33
Previous ranking: 22

Is the ship finally righting itself in Cincinnati? There are plenty of good signs that point to that, including a series win in Chicago last week followed by another one in Colorado. And don’t forget the sweep of the Dodgers at home recently. This all comes after the Reds went 9-18 in May, but you have to start somewhere — and the Reds are actually playing good baseball for the first time this season. In fact, their biggest weakness on the season has been a strength over the last week as they led the NL in OPS, a stat that hasn’t been kind to them until now. — Rogers


Record: 29-32
Previous ranking: 20

Alek Manoah‘s nightmare two-year stretch took another turn for the worse when he left his start last Wednesday with elbow trouble. The right-hander was placed on the IL with a UCL sprain after undergoing an MRI and is slated to seek a second opinion on the elbow, with no word on the results yet. Manoah, 26, had rebounded from a dreadful 2023 season in which he pitched to a 5.87 ERA in 19 starts and was demoted to the minors after finishing third in AL Cy Young Award voting in 2022. Manoah has a 3.70 ERA in five starts this season following a stint in the minors. Whether he makes a sixth start remains to be seen. — Castillo


Record: 29-32
Previous ranking: 23

With all the attention Skenes has received, it’s time to turn back to another rookie pitcher: Jared Jones. Spinning six shutout innings against the mighty Dodgers is no easy task — but that’s exactly what Jones did Tuesday, lowering his ERA to 3.25. He gave up three hits and three walks in that game while doing the unthinkable: striking out Shohei Ohtani twice while getting him to hit into a double-play grounder in another at-bat. It was a season-defining performance for the 22-year-old. — Rogers


Record: 27-34
Previous ranking: 24

Trevor Williams, who is 5-0 with a 2.22 ERA, was placed on the IL with a right flexor strain and prospect DJ Herz was called up to take his place in the rotation. Herz, 23, allowed four runs and seven hits in four innings in his MLB debut against the Mets on Tuesday. He was drafted by the Cubs out of high school and came to the Nationals at last year’s trade deadline in the Jeimer Candelario trade. He topped out with a 95.6 mph fastball against the Mets and while he held batters to a .176 average in Triple-A, he also walked 29 batters in 36 innings while averaging just four innings a start. — Schoenfield


Record: 27-35
Previous ranking: 25

Needless to say, May was an ugly month for the Mets as they finished 9-19 with a minus-42 run differential. June didn’t start out well either, with a 10-5 loss to Arizona on Saturday and then a 5-4 loss on Sunday as Jake Diekman served up a two-run homer in the ninth to Ketel Marte. That was the sixth loss for the Mets in a game they had led entering the ninth inning (all since May 1) — yes, most in the majors. They had just two such losses last season. After a hot start, Reed Garrett has allowed runs in five of his past seven outings. Adam Ottavino allowed runs in seven of his 14 outings since May 1. Rookie Dedniel Nunez has impressed, however, with 19 K’s in his first 11⅔ innings and has already been thrust into higher-leverage usage. — Schoenfield


Record: 25-38
Previous ranking: 27

The ice-cold Athletics need all the good news they can get and they might have found something in journeyman slugger Miguel Andujar. The one-time Yankees phenom has had a baffling big league career. Andujar has enjoyed extended stretches when he has looked like one of the better righty power hitters around. He’s also had long stretches plagued by injuries and struggles that have kept him shuttling from team to team and between the minors and the majors even as he draws closer to his 30th birthday. So far, Oakland is enjoying the happy part of the Andujar pendulum, getting a .341/.333/.537 slash line and 12 RBIs in his first 10 games with the team. As his OBP being lower than his average attests, the free-swinging Andujar hasn’t exactly turned over a new leaf in the plate discipline realm but, for now, he is producing. — Doolittle


Record: 24-38
Previous ranking: 26

The listless Angels might get oft-injured Anthony Rendon back soon, as the third baseman is nearing a return to baseball duties. He could be joined at that stage of injury rehab by Mike Trout, who began running on a treadmill in late May. The news on both of L.A.’s cornerstones has come in trickles, the lack of urgency perhaps because the Angels have sunk so fast in the standings that it hardly seems to matter. While they haven’t always been elite, they have never been truly dreadful. But this season might change that. The franchise record for losses is 95 (1968 and 1980). This year’s Angels have been on pace to lose more than 100 since the last week of April. — Doolittle


Record: 21-40
Previous ranking: 28

The Rockies get a lot of grief on these Power Rankings — and basically every other outlet that covers baseball — but let’s give them their due. Their May was … well, decent, at least. They went 14-13 that month, a better record than the Cubs, Rangers, Diamondbacks and Braves. Ezequiel Tovar, their cornerstone shortstop, carried an .863 OPS. Cal Quantrill and Austin Gomber, two of their starters, pitched to a 1.23 ERA in 58⅓ innings. It was a good month. Sure, it was followed by five consecutive losses at the start of June, but let’s focus on the positives here. The opportunities to do so have been few and far between. — Gonzalez


Record: 21-41
Previous ranking: 29

When the Marlins signed Avisail Garcia to a four-year, $53 million contract before the 2022 season, it was a rare dip into free agency for the Bruce Sherman ownership group (and remains the biggest free agent deal under Sherman). Garcia was coming off a decent 2021 season, but he had been inconsistent throughout his career and it was a risky signing. After hitting .217/.260/.322 in two-plus seasons, the Marlins finally designated Garcia for assignment on Tuesday, still owing him close to $25 million.

You also have to wonder how long the team will stick with veteran shortstop Tim Anderson, who has been awful at the plate. At this point, the Marlins have to start thinking about fixing the hole at short for 2025. Maybe it’s time to just play Vidal Brujan there to see what he can do on a regular basis (although the Marlins probably, and correctly, view him more as a utility player). The bright spot: At least they finished with a winning record (14-13) in May after that disastrous April. — Schoenfield


Record: 15-47
Previous ranking: 30

Let’s look at some positives in Chicago:

  1. Erick Fedde has been good since coming back from South Korea.

  2. The team might have found its future catcher in Korey Lee, acquired from Houston last July.

  3. Paul DeJong is a decent trade candidate if a contender has an injury up the middle. He leads the team in home runs.

  4. Michael Kopech could bring a decent return if he has a few solid weeks in the back end of the bullpen.

  5. Luis Robert Jr. returned after missing time with an injury and promptly hit a 448-foot home run Tuesday.

We’ll ignore all the bad going on with the White Sox this week. — Rogers

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Departing Buckeyes expect Sayin to be next QB1

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Departing Buckeyes expect Sayin to be next QB1

COLUMBUS, Ohio — At the NFL scouting combine last month in Indianapolis, Ohio State‘s draft hopefuls talked about Julian Sayin as the likely choice to be the team’s next starting quarterback.

“Julian’s that guy, to be honest with you,” cornerback Denzel Burke told reporters.

“Now it’s his time,” added quarterback Will Howard, the man Sayin and two others will try to replace for the defending national champions.

But Sayin isn’t viewing the starting job as his quite yet. The redshirt freshman is focused on spring practice, which kicked off Monday, and operating in a quarterback room that has been reduced by Howard’s exit and the transfers of Devin Brown (Cal) and Air Noland (South Carolina). Junior Lincoln Kienholz and freshman Tavien St. Clair, a midyear enrollee, were the other two quarterbacks practicing Wednesday.

“You have to block out the noise,” said Sayin, who transferred to Ohio State from Alabama after Nick Saban retired in January 2024. “I’m just focusing on spring practice and just getting better.”

Quarterbacks coach Billy Fessler said Ohio State is “a long way away” from even discussing the closeness of the competition. Fessler, promoted to quarterbacks coach after serving as an offensive analyst last season, is evaluating how the three quarterbacks handle more practice reps, and areas such as consistency and toughness.

He’s confident any of the three can handle being Ohio State’s starting quarterback and the magnitude the job brings, even though none have the experience Howard brought in when he transferred from Kansas State.

“A lot of that was done in the recruitment process,” Fessler said. “I’m confident all three of them could be the guy. Those guys already check that box. So now it’s just a matter of who goes out and wins the job. And again, we are so far away from that point.”

Sayin, ESPN’s No. 9 recruit in the 2024 class, has been praised for a lightning-quick release. He appeared in four games last season, completing 5 of 12 passes for 84 yards and a touchdown.

“We continue to work to build that arm strength, to strengthen his core, to work rotationally, because he is such a rotational thrower, to be able to maximize his movements, both between his lower half and his upper hats, so you can get that ball out with velocity and be successful,” Fessler said. “So he definitely has a quick release, but there’s so much more to playing the position.”

Sayin added about 10 pounds during the offseason and checks in at 203 for spring practice. He’s working to master both on-field skills and the intangible elements, where Howard thrived, saying, “There’s a lot that comes to being a quarterback here besides what you do on the field.”

Kienholz, a three-star recruit, saw the field in 2023, mostly in a Cotton Bowl loss to Missouri, where he completed 6 of 17 pass attempts. He also added weight in the winter, going from around 185 pounds to 207.

“The past few years, I’ve had older guys in front of me and just getting to learn from them on how to be a leader and how to take control,” he said. “Now I’m the oldest guy in the room, so I feel that now, and I kind of feel more confident.”

Buckeyes coach Ryan Day has challenged the quarterbacks to be the hardest workers on the team, and to sustain that ethic.

“I know every single one of them saw that quote by Coach Day, which is pretty awesome,” Fessler said. “It’s so real. It’s who we have to be — the toughest guys in the building, and the hardest-working guys in the building.”

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Defense Department pulls Jackie Robinson story

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Defense Department pulls Jackie Robinson story

The Department of Defense deleted a story on its website that highlighted Jackie Robinson’s military service, with the original URL redirecting to one that added the letters “dei” in front of “sports-heroes.”

The scrubbing of the page followed a Feb. 27 memo from the Pentagon that called for a “digital content refresh” that would “remove and archive DoD news articles, photos, and videos promoting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI).”

The Department of Defense did not respond to requests for comment by ESPN.

“We are aware and looking into it,” an MLB spokesperson said.

Robinson, who served as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army during World War II, broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947 when he debuted for the Brooklyn Dodgers. One of the most integral figures in American sports history, Robinson won the National League MVP and Rookie of the Year awards during a 10-year career that led to a first-ballot induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

The deleted story was part of the Department of Defense’s “Sports Heroes Who Served” series. Other stories, including one on Robinson’s teammate Pee-Wee Reese that references his acceptance of Robinson amid racial tensions in his first season, remain on the site.

Robinson was drafted into military service in 1942 and eventually joined the 761st Tank Battalion, also known as the Black Panthers. He was court-martialed in July 1944 after he refused an order by a driver to move to the back of an Army bus he had boarded. Robinson was acquitted and coached Army athletics teams until his honorable discharge in November 1944.

Robinson, who died in 1972, remains an ever-present figure in MLB, with his No. 42 permanently retired in 1997. On April 15 every year, the league celebrates Jackie Robinson Day, honoring the date of his debut with the Dodgers by having every player in the majors wear his jersey number. Last year, Rachel Robinson, Jackie’s widow, who is 102 years old, attended the April 15 game between the New York Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates at Citi Field.

Martin Luther King Jr. said Robinson’s trailblazing efforts in baseball made his own success possible, and Robinson joined King on the front lines of the Civil Rights Movement.

“The life of Jackie Robinson represents America at its best,” Leonard Coleman, the former National League president and chairman of the Jackie Robinson Foundation, told ESPN. “Removing an icon and Presidential Medal of Freedom and Congressional Gold Medal recipient from government websites represents America at its worst.”

The removal of Robinson’s story reflects other efforts by the Pentagon to follow a series of executive orders by President Donald Trump to purge DEI from the federal government. A story on Ira Hayes, a Native American who was one of the Marines to raise the American flag at Iwo Jima, was removed with a URL relabeled with “dei,” according to The Washington Post. Other stories about Navajo code talkers, who were lauded for their bravery covertly relaying messages in World War I and World War II, were likewise deleted, according to Axios.

The Department of Defense also removed a website that celebrated Charles Calvin Rogers, a Black general who received the Medal of Honor, but it later reestablished the site, according to the Post.

On Feb. 20, Trump announced plans to build statues of Robinson, boxing icon Muhammad Ali and NBA star Kobe Bryant in the National Garden of American Heroes, a sculpture park he proposed during his first administration.

ESPN’s Jeff Passan and William Weinbaum contributed to this report.

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On Dodgers’ Japan trip, Shohei Ohtani is everywhere and nowhere

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On Dodgers' Japan trip, Shohei Ohtani is everywhere and nowhere

TOKYO — I have seen an image of Shohei Ohtani, wearing jeans and a white T-shirt, gazing out from a vending machine while standing in a field of green tea leaves, a bottle of Ito En iced tea in his left hand, and I have seen it roughly 4 million times. I have seen Ohtani — two Ohtanis, presumably both the same legendarily indulgent sleeper — sitting on a Sleeptech mattress pad. One Ohtani wears a short-sleeved shirt and holds a baseball bat like a right-handed hitter, the other wears a long-sleeved shirt but holds no bat. Both Ohtanis, whose eyes seem to follow me from the wall of the Tokyo Dome, wear the same expression, which is the same expression found in the field of tea, which can only be described as the look of a man who is dreaming of getting back in the batting cage.

Electronic-billboard Ohtani has looked down upon me from three different directions above the famous Shibuya Crossing, the busiest pedestrian intersection in the world, representing New Balance, DIP (a human resources and recruitment firm that stands for Dreams, Ideas, Passion) and a men’s fragrance called Kosé. He’s 100 feet tall on the side of a building in Shinjuku, wearing the same look next to a couple of Seiko watches. There are many Ohtanis, and so many of them bear the exact same look that it seems plausible that it is one stock image reconstituted to serve an endless number of purposes.

Convenience store Ohtani is draped on a banner across the front of nearly every FamilyMart store, promoting the MLB World Tour: Tokyo Series while holding up onigiri (a Japanese rice ball) and probably wondering how long this is going to take.

I have seen television Ohtani, wearing an apron, prepare and eat a bowl of ramen — chopping his own onion — on a commercial selling something food related that has blurred into all the others. Relaxed yet precise, it is some of his best work. I have seen him standing on a beach kicking a soccer ball for the green tea people, smiling like he’s unaware he’s being filmed. I have seen him morph from Dodger Ohtani to samurai Ohtani on a spot for Fortnite, and it’s hard to tell which one is more imposing. Television Ohtani is an unspoken presence on an ad for T-shirts featuring an artist’s image of his dog, Decoy. (Someone out there, it would seem, is intent on pushing the bounds of fame.)

Television Ohtani is not to be confused with taxi TV Ohtani, who seems to run on an endless backseat loop. On the first day the teams worked out in Tokyo, a massive screen in front of the Tokyo Dome played a mashup of commercials starring Ohtani interspersed with some promotional spots for the series, and a long line of people stood next to it, pointing their phones at the screen.

“Shohei’s impact in Japan is impossible to overstate,” Dodgers president Andrew Friedman says. “We thought we understood it, but until you see it and live it, you can’t fully grasp it.”

Ohtani carries himself like he’s aware that every eye in every room is hyperfocused on him, and him alone. Here, in his home country, is where that truth exceeds the bounds of exaggeration. He has existed here for seven years as nothing more than a figure on a screen — many, many screens — and yet his presence is never more than a street corner away. Baseball fans plan their summer days around Dodgers games, most of which start in the late morning. It feels like more fame than any one human seems capable of containing.

“Every time I go to Japan,” Friedman says, “I think, ‘Well, Shohei, I didn’t miss you at all. I see you everywhere.'”

Ohtani’s mother, Kayoko, handles his business dealings in Japan, and she is clearly killing it. The word is he is judicious with his choices for endorsement deals, but it’s hard to imagine he’s turning much down.

All of it emphasizes Ohtani’s value, not just to himself but to baseball in general and the Dodgers in particular. For six days, Tokyo was one massive ATM. MLB set up a 30,000-square-foot store at the Tokyo Dome to sell Dodgers and Cubs merchandise, everything from logo-printed cookies to Ohtani towels, and it was 10 deep just to get close enough to check the size on an Ohtani jersey. (You could have parked your car in front of the Cubs gear.) Topps put together a remarkably cool four-story baseball card exhibit in Shibuya, right around the corner from the three looming Ohtanis. It included two donations from Ohtani: the base he stole to complete his 50/50 season last year, and a bat he used during the World Series. His deal with Topps netted roughly $7 million for the company last season alone, a company source said, even though card collecting is relatively new in Japan. Stamp rallies, however, are tried-and-true crowd-pleasers, so Topps made sure to include one in the exhibit.

Japan Airlines has an Ohtani-themed plane, his face in triplicate on both sides of the fuselage, and travel agencies throughout Japan operate tours for fans to travel to Los Angeles to watch Ohtani play. Concession stands and signage at Dodger Stadium look vastly different than they did two seasons ago. And Ohtani’s estimated $65 million in annual endorsement income in 2024 — the most of any baseball player, and about $58 million more than the second-place player, Bryce Harper — made it much more palatable for him to defer nearly all of his $700 million contract, which is partly responsible for Friedman’s ability to spend whatever he wants (more than $300 million this season) on whomever he wants.

Ohtani’s fame is such that it can be imprisoning. He has a running feud with Fuji TV in Japan after it flew a drone over the house he bought in Los Angeles and aired the footage. He refused an interview with the network after the Dodgers won the World Series. But rarely has his fame been so stark and unforgiving as it was when the Dodgers’ plane arrived at Haneda Airport on March 13. Roughly 1,000 Japanese fans crowded outside customs to get a glimpse of Ohtani, but the airport had installed white walls that served as a tunnel to separate the players from the public, leaving Ohtani’s fans to settle with breathing the same air.

“It’s too bad, but it’s a security issue,” says Atsushi Ihara, an executive and former director of Nippon Professional Baseball. “If Ohtani walked out of his hotel and down the street, it would end up a police matter.”

The scene in and around the Tokyo Dome for the four exhibition games and the two regular-season games is probably best described as controlled, civil mayhem. Four hours before the first pitch on Opening Day, the crowds were so thick in the shopping areas outside the ballpark that it was difficult to move, which was fine with most people since they were happy to stand in clumps and raise their phones to take videos of the latest Ohtani commercial playing on the massive screens all around them.

(Inside the Dodgers’ clubhouse, a space with all the charm of a middle school locker room, the most prominent feature was a smoking capsule that resembled a phone booth and included a bull’s-eye on the wall showing smokers where to aim for maximum ventilation. No Dodgers appeared to be interested in using it.)

Before every pitch to Ohtani, it felt as if the entire building held its breath before releasing it in one massive exhale. The result was immaterial — foul ball, swing and a miss, take — the response was the same. And when Ohtani hit a homer in his second plate appearance in Tokyo, sending the ball halfway up the bleachers in right against the Tokyo Giants, a group of moms with their tiny daughters, all wearing Ohtani jerseys, danced in the concourse behind the lower deck.

After the game, Giants manager Shinnosuke Abe was asked if he had a chance to speak with Ohtani. “Yes,” he said. “I saw him in the batting cage.” He paused for a moment, as if deciding whether to plow forward. “Some people might not like this,” he said, “but I asked if I could get a picture with him.”

There were five Japanese players in the Tokyo Series, but it was sometimes hard to tell. Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto turns up on the occasional train station advertisement for an energy drink that sources on the ground say was initially targeted toward Japan’s middle-aged salarymen and their rigorous schedules. Yamamoto’s task, along with sidekick Ichiro Suzuki, is apparently to recruit the younger Japanese consumer to experience the joys of concentrated caffeine.

But really, there is Ohtani, always Ohtani and seemingly only Ohtani. “It’s hard to imagine him being more famous than he is in America,” Dodgers rookie reliever Jack Dreyer says, “but that’s certainly the case.” In Ohtani’s home prefecture of Iwate, in the far northeastern section of Honshu, I passed a gas station with a row of tire racks covered by tarps emblazoned with Ohtani’s photo. A sign nearby declared, “More than 300,000 tires sold.” It was unclear whether the seller was Ohtani or the station.

“What he is achieving and what he’s already achieved is something out of a comic book,” Ihara says. “Like a comic book superhero, you would think that nobody could do such things in real life. He’s showing us that there’s no limits for us as human beings, and that’s the inspiration that he is continuously providing for us.”

Ohtani played four games in Tokyo, two that counted and two that didn’t, a distinction that didn’t seem to matter. He was here, in the flesh, playing baseball in Japan for the first time in eight seasons, and he provided enough memories — his booming homer in the fifth inning Wednesday is the first that comes to mind — to remind everyone why they came. And then he headed back to his new life, back to being an image on a screen or a vending machine or above a convenience store, back to being nowhere and everywhere, somehow both at once.

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