この3日間はバッタバタだったけどとても濃い楽しい時間だったな🤝
英語ほぼ喋れない俺のクソ下手な英語を頑張って聞いてくれてありがとう🙏
お互いアホな事ばっかり言ってるのが最高な時間だった🔥
Thank you @ryanhalvaks & Adam❤️
残りの日本旅行楽しんで🇯🇵Type shit
Waiting for MoistCr1TiKaL to make a video on this guy titled “Ring Camera Loser” where he just recounts what we’re seeing with our two eyes but with his quips thrown in and makes my monthly salary off it.
2026年4月18日(土)Club Zion
“3 ELMENTS TOUR”
Malones💿取扱バンドblindwolf🇺🇸のVo.Ryanがプライベート来日&急遽EOTDフィーチャリングでステージに上がります🔥是非遊びに来てください🤘
-act-
MINOR LEAGUE
T.C.L
DESSERT
-GUEST BAND-
BY-PASS
EACH OF THE DAYS
not sure what’s cooler watching Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani hit homers for their country
Or a literal full time electrician having the game of his life
This is the beauty of the WBC:
A 29-year-old bearded electrician from Ostrava, Czechia who has played baseball his whole life in a country where very few play the sport helps Czechia qualify for its first-ever WBC, strikes out Shohei Ohtani on a pitch he says came out of his hand wrong, and becomes one of the faces of the Classic.
Ondřej Satoria, who is retiring from the national team after this tournament, will leave Japan where he gets stopped for autographs and photos and receives standing ovations, and fly back to Ostrava where he’s a normal guy with a simple life.
And while no one back home is stopping him in the streets for autographs, imagine the stories he’ll have for his 2-year-old son when he grows up.
“The most important thing is that the baseball community from around the world now knows that Czechia plays baseball.”
- @OndrejSatoria in @michaelsclair’s book “We Sacrifice Everything to Baseball” 🇨🇿
Ondřej Satoria, a Czech electrical worker, received a standing ovation at the Tokyo Dome after throwing over 4 scoreless innings against Japan 🙌
This was the final WBC game of his career 🥹
(via @wbcbaseball)