When Los Angeles Dodgers‘ two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani stepped into the batter’s box on June 24 against the Colorado Rockies, he did what the three-time unanimous MVP does best, he hit a home run.
However, the opposite field shot wasn’t just an ordinary home run. It was a historic one, as it marked the 300th home run of Ohtani’s professional career. A milestone that bridges his time in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball with his reign in Major League Baseball.
That very baseball, caught by a lucky fan in the stands, changed hands today. At Lelands’ Summer Classic Auction, Ohtani’s milestone ball sold for more than $36,000, cementing its place not only in the hands of a passionate collector but in the narrative of Ohtani’s unprecedented career.
For Ohtani, the number 300 carries weight far beyond digits. It represents 48 home runs he crushed in Japan before ever setting foot in an MLB batter’s box, plus 252 more as one of the most feared sluggers in the game today. Each swing has been a chapter in a story that feels more like folklore than fact—a story of a kid from Ōshū, Japan, who defied convention to dominate both as a pitcher and hitter in the world’s toughest baseball league.
The auction itself was a showcase of sporting history. Ohtani’s home run ball headlined alongside a Shoeless Joe Jackson 1914 signed baseball—so rare it borders on myth, given Jackson’s illiteracy—and a PSA-graded Michael Jordan “Holy Grail” autographed card. There were also treasures from horse racing legend Angel Cordero Jr., Hall of Famers from Jackie Robinson to Roberto Clemente, and even cultural relics ranging from the late Ozzy Osbourne’s Black Sabbath memorabilia to Bill Gates’ early Microsoft business card.
But Ohtani’s ball commanded its own gravity. At just 31 years old, he’s rewriting how we think about the sport. Every milestone, whether a strikeout on the mound or a towering homer into the pavilion, carries added weight because no one else has ever done both at such a level. His 300th homer is not just another number—it’s a marker in a career that’s still very much ascending.
In baseball’s collectible world, moments matter. Babe Ruth’s called shot. Hank Aaron’s 715th. Barry Bonds’ 756th. Each ball, each bat, each ticket stub becomes a physical tether to greatness. Ohtani’s 300th home run ball tells the story of a player who is redefining the boundaries of the sport.
At some point next season, Ohtani is expected to surpass 300 career home runs in the Major Leagues, another milestone on his Hall of Fame resume, and another collector’s item that certainly also go to auction as well (unless it lands in the Dodgers’ bullpen).
Ohtani’s legend is still being written, but one thing is clear: the market—and the fans—already understand they’re witnessing something we may never see again.