A nearly four-minute audio recording allegedly captured Shohei Ohtani's former interpreter ... Get top local stories in San Diego delivered to you every morning. Sign up for NBC San Diego's ...
The San Diego Padres have ... of the front office." Shohei Ohtani has a clause in his contract that would allow him to leave if Andrew Friedman isn't there. Padres fan favorite outfielder ...
It's never easy facing top hitters on the mound and San Diego Padres ace Michael King's 2025 season could see several such matchups against the LA Dodgers and their fearsome hitting trio of Shohei Oht
San Diego Padres starting pitcher Michael King believes that beating the LA Dodgers in 2025 has become even more difficult after their recent additions of Blake Snell, Roki Sasaki and Tanner Scott to
The San Diego Padres could end up being dark horse candidates to acquire Vladimir Guerrero Jr. from the Toronto Blue Jays.
With ownership turmoil and no offseason additions, the Padres must figure out how to contend without the Japanese phenom they coveted.
Ohtani became the first player in league history to tally 50 home runs and stolen bases in the same season, inventing MLB's 50/50 club. He accomplished that while recovering from UCL surgery, which prevented Ohtani from contributing on the mound last season, when he served as LA's designated hitter in 159 games played.
An active lawsuit between late Padres owner Peter Seidler's wife and brothers might have caused San Diego to lose out on signing free agent Roki Sasaki.
The Los Angeles Dodgers MVP Shohei Ohtani accepted the award fully in english and gave a touching tribute to the city.
Roki Sasaki will be playing the 2025 MLB season with the Los Angeles Dodgers and will be the highest paid international prospect, as well as helping superstar Shohei Ohtani.
In San Diego, news that one-man Powerball ticket Roki Sasaki has decided to join the Dodgers was more than a gut punch. It was a steel-toed boot to the shin, a Clydesdale stomp to the foot, a right hook to the jaw. This hurt in all kinds of ways, big and bigger than big.
Some consistent Bay Area winners have fallen on hard times. How close are the 49ers, Warriors, Giants and Stanford women’s basketball to regaining their championship form?