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Shohei Ohtani showed why six no-hit innings still were not enough for him

Photo by Yuichi Masuda/Getty Images
Photo by Yuichi Masuda/Getty Images
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Shohei Ohtani gave the Los Angeles Dodgers a start that most pitchers would take without complaint.

He threw six no-hit innings, walked four, hit one batter, helped the Dodgers beat the Colorado Rockies 4-1 and moved to a 0.83 ERA through nine starts. That is still a brilliant line.

But Ohtani’s own reaction made the real lesson clear. He was not focused on the no-hit bid. He was focused on the pitch count and the walks that stopped him going deeper.

Shohei Ohtani knew the no-hit line did not tell the full story

Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on after the second inning of the game against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park.
Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images

Ohtani was pulled after 99 pitches, and his explanation was sharper than any outside analysis could have been.

“I think I could’ve pitched deeper into the game, if I gave up hits,” Ohtani said. “Just the walks lead to shorter outings.”

That quote matters because it stripped away the easy reaction to six no-hit innings. This was not a pitcher searching for praise after a dominant night.

It was a pitcher identifying the one issue that made dominance harder to sustain. The walks did not damage the scoreboard, but they did raise the workload.

The Dodgers saw dominance and inefficiency in the same start

That is why Ohtani’s view should carry weight. He did not need to be better in terms of stuff, presence or results.

He needed to be more efficient. That is the difference between six excellent innings and the kind of deeper start he clearly wanted.

The wider picture remains outstanding. This was not a warning sign about his level, because the result and the pitching line both point in the other direction.

It was a reminder of his standard. Ohtani can dominate an opponent, protect a no-hit line and still leave knowing exactly where the outing fell short.