In 2024, Shohei Ohtani did more than just live up to the hype in his first season with the Los Angeles Dodgers in producing a historic individual campaign that was capped off with team success as the Dodgers won the World Series over the New York Yankees.
In Paris, Japanese athletes triumphed at the Summer Olympics, backing up a record medal haul at the Tokyo Games in 2021 with its best-ever performance on foreign soil.
Outside of Ohtani and the Olympics, Naoya Inoue, Onosato and Yuka Saso were among the stars to shine for Japan in a banner tear for the nation’s athletes.

Americans Simone Biles (left) and Jordan Chiles (right), who would later lose her bronze medal after an appeal, bow toward Olympic floor exercise gold medalist Rebeca Andrade of Brazil on Aug. 5. The Games marked a triumphant return to form for Biles, but it was Andrade who got the better of her in a close battle on the floor.
| USA TODAY / via Reuters

Uta Abe is consoled by her coach after a shock loss against Diyora Keldiyorova in her women’s judo 52-kg bout at the the Paris Olympics on July 28. Abe, the defending Olympic champion, was heavily favored in the event. The news wasn’t all bad for the Abe family, however, as Uta’s brother Hifumi defended his title in the men’s 66 kg.
| USA today / via Reuters

Yuka Saso lines up a putt on the 10th green during the final round of the U.S. Women’s Open in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on June 2. Saso earned her second major with the win and her first while representing Japan. Saso also won the U.S. Women’s Open in 2021 while representing the Philippines.
| USA Today / via Reuters





