Six enormous Japanese lanterns took their place on the warning track, spotlights illuminating them inside the Tokyo Dome. LED lights, attached to special Tokyo Series wristbands for the 45,000 fans, lit up.
A special video essay, written by MLB Network’s Jon Morosi – an avowed lover of international baseball – illuminated the special shared bond between the United States and Japan, the game connecting these two nations across the Pacific Ocean.
Tokyo Series 2025: Dodgers vs. Cubs
• Ohtani rises to occasion, electrifies Tokyo Dome with 1st HR
• All the top moments from Tokyo Series Game 2
• Sasaki makes highly anticipated MLB debut
• Cubs hope Tokyo's 'playoff environment' a sign of things to come
• Sadaharu Oh has never seen this 'level of excitement'
• Ohtani ignites Dodgers past Cubs in Tokyo Series opener
• Top moments from Tokyo Series Game 1
• Imanaga bests Ohtani in 'made for TV' Tokyo matchup
• 'I'll remember everything': Shaw makes much-anticipated debut
• Pokémon front and center as Tokyo Series celebrates Japanese icons
• Tokyo school visit all about Japan's baseball future
Traditional Japanese musicians then began to play: It was time for the starting lineups to be announced. The players raced onto the field to the sound of enormous taiko drums, the sound of thunder heralding their entrance.
Vocal group Little Glee Monster then sang both the U.S. and Japanese national anthems.
Finally, former Cubs pitcher and 2013 Red Sox World Series champion Koji Uehara came to throw out the first pitch. Shota Imanaga crouched behind the plate, framing Uehara’s pitch back into the strike zone.
