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Yoshinobu Yamamoto looks as advertised in scoreless Dodgers spring training debut

The Los Angeles Dodgers gave Yoshinobu Yamamoto $325 million without him ever throwing a pitch in MLB. On Wednesday, Yamamoto got his first chance to show Dodgers fans why, and his stuff did not disappoint.

The right-hander faced the defending World Series champion Texas Rangers in his spring training debut and held them scoreless in two innings with three strikeouts and one hit allowed, facing the minimum. The Rangers won the matchup 6-4.

Yamamoto dominated in Japan with an arsenal featuring a four-seam fastball thrown 48% of the time, a splitter at 26%, a curveball at 16% and a slider and cutter to round out the arsenal, via Sports Info Solutions.

Those three primary pitches were on full display Wednesday against the Rangers. First, Yamamoto struck out Marcus Semien — who finished third in AL MVP voting last year — on a 96 mph fastball. That's around Yamamoto's usual velocity last season, which is definitely a good sign when we haven't even reached March.

Yamamoto gave up a hard hit to postseason star Evan Carter two pitches later, but then got a double-play on a grounder from top prospect Wyatt Langford to end the inning.

The first batter of the second inning was Nathaniel Lowe, who won a Silver Slugger at first base in 2022. He's as much a major-league hitter as you can be, and Yamamoto tortured him with three pitches. He started with a fastball on the inside corner, surprised Lowe with a curveball for a called strike two and then got a supremely ugly swing on a splitter in the dirt for the punch-out.

The curveball looked even better from behind home plate:

Yamamoto ended his outing with a first-pitch fly-out from Jonah Heim and then another ugly strikeout on the splitter, this time by Leody Taveras.

In total, Yamamoto threw 19 pitches.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto has high expectations after $325 million signing

The Dodgers invested big in Yamamoto, based on universally glowing scouting reports and a stretch of dominance nearly unrivaled in the Japanese league. Yamamoto won three straight MVP awards, three straight Sawamura Awards (the Japanese Cy Young, given to one pitcher each season), three straight pitching Triple Crowns and a championship with the Orix Buffaloes in his last three seasons.

Yamamoto's age, at only 25 years old, also played a huge part in his payday, as pitchers with his stuff and development rarely become available so young.

This Dodgers' offseason will be most remembered for giving more than $1 billion combined to Yamamoto and Shohei Ohtani, though Yamamoto insisted after he signed that he would've signed with the Dodgers even if they'd missed out on Ohtani.

Ohtani won't be pitching this season, but he at least tried to give Yamamoto a helping hand Wednesday, reminding Yamamoto that the inning was over after three outs.

With every other Dodgers starting pitcher either very young or injured, Yamamoto and fellow offseason acquisition Tyler Glasnow are expected to get the first two starts for the team in their opening series against the San Diego Padres next month in South Korea. We'll see how the rest of his spring goes, but Yamamoto showed Wednesday that his stuff might already be good to go.