Shohei Ohtani ended his home-run drought while Ice Cube provided commentary, but the Los Angeles Dodgers lost 6-2 to the San Francisco Giants. Ohtani's homer was a highlight amid the team's ongoing offensive struggles.
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Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images
Shohei Ohtani finally ended his home-run drought while Ice Cube was on commentary, but the Los Angeles Dodgers still fell flat in a 6-2 loss to the San Francisco Giants.
The moment gave Dodger Stadium a jolt, especially with Ice Cube tied into the broadcast and the night’s atmosphere. But Ohtani’s swing was not enough to cover up a broader offensive problem.
That is what made the home run feel both exciting and slightly frustrating. The Dodgers got the individual highlight they wanted, but not the team response they needed.
Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
As MLB showed, Shohei Ohtani picked a memorable broadcast moment to get back in the home-run column for the Dodgers.
“Shohei Ohtani homers with Ice Cube on the call!” the MLB tweeted.
The timing made the clip instantly shareable. Ice Cube being on commentary gave the homer a different energy, and Ohtani’s swing gave the Dodgers one of their few clean attacking moments of the night.
It also mattered because Ohtani had not homered since April 26. For a hitter of his standard, that kind of gap becomes a talking point quickly.
Shohei Ohtani ended his home-run drought by hitting a home run during the game.
The Los Angeles Dodgers lost the game 6-2 to the San Francisco Giants.
Ice Cube provided commentary during the Dodgers game when Shohei Ohtani hit his home run.


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Ohtani still gave the Dodgers a productive night at the plate. He finished 2-for-4 and had two of their three hits against Giants starter Adrian Houser.
That was the problem. Ohtani broke through, but the Dodgers lineup around him did not follow.
The wider picture was much uglier for Los Angeles because San Francisco controlled the game through power and missed the Dodgers chances. Eric Haase hit two home runs, while Harrison Bader also went deep against Yoshinobu Yamamoto.
Yamamoto struck out eight and did not walk anyone, but he allowed three solo homers and five runs. That gave the Giants enough separation while the Dodgers kept wasting chances.
Los Angeles loaded the bases in the first inning and again in the eighth, but failed to turn either moment into the kind of rally that could change the game.
The defeat also continued a worrying offensive trend. The Dodgers have now scored three runs or fewer in 10 of their last 13 games. That is why Ohtani’s homer was only a partial positive. It ended his personal drought, but it did not fix the lineup’s bigger issue.
The Dodgers needed that swing to become the start of something. Instead, it became the best highlight in another flat loss to a division rival.
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