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Blue Jays’ New $60 Million Star Sends 3-Word Message On Dethroning Dodgers’ Ohtani

Forbes Published Jul 12, 2026 Reviewed Jul 13, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Kazuma Okamoto signed a four-year, $60 million contract with the Toronto Blue Jays before the 2026 season.
60 $ · Kazuma Okamoto4 years · Kazuma Okamoto Toronto Blue Jays, signing
Kazuma Okamoto hit his 22nd home run on Friday night, tying Shohei Ohtani for the most by a Japanese-born rookie in a season in the majors.
22 home runs · Kazuma Okamoto ESPN, reporting
The Blue Jays gained a three-run lead when Kazuma Okamoto hit a three-run home run.
3 runs · Kazuma Okamoto3 runs · Blue Jays ESPN, reporting
Shohei Ohtani hit 22 home runs in 2018 while playing for the Los Angeles Angels.
22 home runs · Shohei Ohtani ESPN, reporting
Shohei Ohtani hit his 300th career home run on Tuesday night against Colorado's Michael Lorenzen, becoming the first Japanese-born player in the majors to reach the milestone.
300 career home runs · Shohei Ohtani ESPN, reporting
The Toronto Blue Jays committed $75 million to bring Kazuma Okamoto from Japan.
75 $ · Toronto Blue Jays article, statement

Toronto Blue Jays slugger Kazuma Okamoto has quickly become the team's most productive hitter, exceeding expectations after signing a four-year, $60 million deal. The Japanese rookie recently matched Shohei Ohtani's long-standing record for most home runs by a Japanese-born player in a debut season, hitting his 22nd homer. Okamoto's impressive performance helps offset production lost by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Despite tying the record, Okamoto humbly dismissed comparisons to Ohtani, calling him "the unicorn" and stating his goal is to simply get closer to Ohtani's level. This significant achievement highlights Okamoto's impactful debut and suggests he's poised to break the record soon.

The Toronto Blue Jays knew they were making a significant investment when they signed Kazuma Okamoto to a four-year, $60 million contract before the 2026 season.

While the club expected the decorated Japanese slugger to strengthen the middle of its lineup, his emergence as the team’s most productive slugger so far this season and an all-time international rookie has been a pleasant surprise for fans.

As Okamoto helps offset some of the production lost by Vladimir Guerrero Jr this year, his recent moonshot placed him alongside a fellow Japanese superstar whose accomplishments continue to redefine expectations.

On Friday, during the team’s ongoing West Coast road trip, Okamoto matched Shohei Ohtani's long-standing rookie mark, set years ago with the Los Angeles Angeles.

“Toronto's Kazuma Okamoto hit his 22nd home run Friday night to tie Shohei Ohtani for the most by a Japanese-born rookie in a season in the majors,” ESPN reported. “Okamoto homered into the seats in left on a 95 mph sinker from San Diego Padres reliever Jhony Brito with one out in the fifth, a three-run shot that gave the Blue Jays a three-run lead.

But even after Okamoto removed Ohtani from the top spot in one of his first MLB records, the Blue Jays new star was quick to dismiss any comparison to the Los Angeles Dodgers’ two-way superstar with a three-word response.

“He’s the unicorn,” Okamoto said, Mitch Bannon" href="https://x.com/MitchBannon/status/2075810302218928489" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank">according to The Athletic’s Mitch Bannon.

Following Friday night's performance, Okamoto made it clear that matching Ohtani's accomplishment was meaningful but he acknowledged that he is far from his compatriot’s level.

“Shohei is an awesome player,” Okamoto added. “Being able to match that record, it's awesome. But I just want to do my best so I can get closer to his level."

The blast not only strengthened Toronto's position in the game but also tied one of the most recognizable records held by a Japanese-born player in Major League Baseball.

And while Ohtani sits alone on the top of plenty of other all-time MLB lists, his slugging mark from eight years ago was a welcomed reminder of his first-year dominance.

"Ohtani was with the Los Angeles Angels when he hit 22 homers in 2018,” ESPN added.
Ohtani, in his third season with the Los Angeles Dodgers, hit his 300th career homer Tuesday night against Colorado's Michael Lorenzen that made him the first Japanese-born player in the majors to reach the milestone."

While Ohtani has since become one of baseball's defining stars, Okamoto is carving out an impressive debut campaign of his own. Matching the rookie home run record is a reminder of why Toronto committed $75 million to bring him from Japan, and with plenty of games remaining, he'll soon have an opportunity to stand alone atop that list.

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