Shohei Ohtani is heading to the Dodgers.
On Saturday, Ohtani announced via his Instagram account that he was heading to Los Angeles for the next chapter of his professional baseball career.
Not long after, details of Ohtani's deal started to emerge—the two-way superstar is now set to make $700 million over the next 10 years with the Dodgers, shattering previous record contracts across the sports world.
While much of Ohtani's pay is reportedly set to be deferred—a move that will help Los Angeles ease the pain of the luxury tax—Ohtani's deal is still basically impossible to compute in the minds of mortals.
Across social media, reporters and fans alike put Ohtani's deal into different contexts that only made the numbers more shocking.
Take a look at some of the best eye-opening examples of just how much Ohtani is set to make over the next decade.
Shohei Ohtani's contract is 10 years, $700M.
— Luke Arcaini (@ArcainiLuke) December 9, 2023
$70,000,000 per season
$432,098 per game
$48,010 per inning pic.twitter.com/JVaoYQbXjK
Shohei Ohtani ($700m) beat Mike Trout's record-setting contract ($426m) by Alex Rodriguez's second record-setting contract ($275m)
— Foolish Baseball (@FoolishBB) December 9, 2023
Looked this up ... the highest-paid MLB players are Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander at $43.33 million per. That means the top of the market in baseball just jumped 87% with Shohei Ohtani getting $70 million.
— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) December 9, 2023
It'd be like someone paying a QB $102.9 million per this offseason.
Babe Ruth became the highest paid player in 1922.
— Darren Rovell (@darrenrovell) December 9, 2023
His inflation adjusted salary ($52,000) is worth $950,000 today.
Shohei Ohtani will make $950,000 EVERY 20 INNINGS.
The Dodgers are set to spend more on Ohtani this season than several clubs are on their entire rosters 😳 pic.twitter.com/qItPHNlW1y
— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) December 9, 2023
Shoehei Ohtani's 10 year deal with the Dodgers is worth more money than LeBron James is projected to make in his entire career 🤯
— The Sporting News (@sportingnews) December 9, 2023
h/t: @SamQuinnCBS pic.twitter.com/2nwSCA3FiC