Baseball
Baseball star Ohtani’s ex-interpreter released on $25,000 bond, issues apology

Japanese baseball great Shohei Ohtani’s former interpreter was released on bond and apologized through a lawyer after appearing in court on a bank fraud charge accusing him of stealing $16 million from the Los Angeles Dodgers star to cover illegal gambling debts.
Ippei Mizuhara, 39, who surrendered to authorities earlier in the day, did not enter a plea during a 25-minute proceeding before a U.S. District Court magistrate judge in downtown Los Angeles. He was ordered to return for an arraignment on May 9.
But Mizuhara’s attorney, Michael Freedman, issued a statement later Friday saying his client “wishes to apologize to Mr. Ohtani, the Dodgers, Major League Baseball and his family.”
“He is continuing to cooperate with the legal process and is hopeful that he can reach an agreement with the government to resolve this case as quickly as possible so that he can take responsibility,” Freedman said. The comment suggested Mizuhara was negotiating a plea deal with prosecutors.
The hearing came a day after prosecutors charged Mizuhara and publicly exonerated Ohtani in a case that had threatened to embroil the Dodgers, the MLB and a power-hitting pitcher regarded as a national hero in his home country.
“For me personally, this marks a break from this, and I’d like to focus on baseball,” the Los Angeles Times quoted Ohtani as saying on Friday in his first public comments since his former interpreter was charged.
Mizuhara, dressed in a dark suit, said little during his hearing except to answer “yes” to a number of questions posed by the judge, Maria Audero. He was initially wearing ankle shackles, which were removed in court at his lawyer’s request.
GAMBLING ADDICTION TREATMENT ORDERED
Audero set bond at $25,000, saying he had no prior criminal record and with ties to the community was not considered a flight risk. But she ordered Mizuhara to undergo gambling addiction treatment and refrain from any contact with bookmakers or Ohtani.
Freedman described his client in court as eager to seek treatment for his gambling.
Under an agreement reached with prosecutors in advance, Mizuhara had turned himself over to law enforcement on Friday morning. He was freed from custody once processed for release following Friday’s hearing, Freedman said.
A 36-page federal criminal complaint and affidavit filed on Thursday in federal court alleges that Mizuhara engaged in bank fraud by embezzling $16 million from an account of Ohtani’s that Mizuhara had helped set up.
Mizuhara is accused of wiring the funds without Ohtani’s knowledge to an illegal sports gambling operation.
U.S. Attorney E. Martin Estrada stressed on Thursday there was no evidence suggesting Ohtani, who signed a record $700 million, 10-year contract with the Dodgers this season, was anything but a victim in the case.
The outcome spared Ohtani, his team and the league a potential scandal of epic proportions, recalling the controversy stirred 35 years ago when Pete Rose was accused of gambling on baseball games while he played for and managed the Cincinnati Reds. Rose, banned from baseball for life in 1989, later admitted having bet on baseball and the Reds but insisted he never wagered against his team.
Ohtani, 29, whose talents as a slugger and a pitcher have earned him comparisons to Babe Ruth, told reporters at a March 25 press conference that he was “shocked” by the situation and had never bet on baseball or knowingly paid a bookmaker.
He said then that he had been unaware of the allegations against his interpreter until they surfaced during the Dodgers’ season-opening series in Seoul, South Korea last month, around the time that the team fired Mizuhara.
According to the federal affidavit, Mizuhara began gambling with an illegal sports book in late 2021 and losing substantial sums.
To cover his debts, Mizuhara impersonated Ohtani over the phone to “trick and deceive” bank employees into authorizing wire transfers from Ohtani’s account, where the player’s baseball salary was deposited, the affidavit said.
The investigation grew out of an ongoing, wider probe by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service and Department of Homeland Security into illegal sports gambling throughout Southern California and the laundering of those proceeds through casinos in Las Vegas.
-Reuters
Baseball
Star-studded MFM Women Basketball Club storms Liberia

MFM women’s basketball club are in Monrovia, Liberia for the FIBA Africa Zone 3 qualifiers for Club Championship which begins on Monday. Seven teams are participating.
Nigeria and Cote d’Ivoire as well as hosts, Liberia are presenting two clubs each. The seventh club is from the Republic of Benin.
Nigeria’s other team is the Customs of Abuja.
In the MFM team are four players who qualified Nigeria for the U-18 World Championship in Serbia happening in 2025
Captain Wandoo Hembam Marvis led the U-18 team. The others are Haminatu Ayoka Ayodeji, Idumabo Beggi Pius and Abigail Isaac.
MFM team defeated Nigeria Customs to retain the title they won last year in Lagos.
The captain, Ukamaka Okoh was emphatic as she said that the club’s mission in Liberia is to pick one of the two tickets at stake and to appreciate the team financier and MFM General Overseer, Dr Daniel Olukoya for his unwavering support for them
Baseball
Why baseball is not popular in Nigeria – Gen. Ishola Williams (Rtd)

General Ishola Williams (Rtd) is credited to be the man who introduced baseball to Nigeria in 1989 in Minna when he brought some instructors from the US. He was the first National Chairman of the Nigeria Baseball & Softball Association.
Ishola who has a knack for the development of baseball and other sports in Nigeria was at the just concluded Baseball5 Western Regional championship at the NIS Sports Complex Gymnasium of National Stadium. In this interview, he spoke exclusively with JOSEPH ODOEKWU about the troubles encountered by baseball and other sports in Nigeria. Excerpts
Sir, what were your reasons for the introduction of baseball in Nigeria?
There were three main reasons. The first was that I wanted to create an opportunity for young Nigerian athletes who were good enough in baseball to go to the United States and school and also play baseball there, just like it is in basketball and other sports that originated from the US.
The second reason was that it affords the athlete an opportunity to become professionals while being athletes in the US and some other parts of Asia, while the third reason was that I wanted Nigeria to compete favourably with South Africa in baseball which is the best team in Africa today and so that our players can benefit from all the opportunities that comes with baseball.
Were you able to achieve these goals?
Unfortunately these goals were not achieved and it is because of the obstacles in Nigeria
What are these obstacles, can you be elaborate sir?
The obstacles basically have to do with the Nigerian system and how it works. And till date, those obstacles that hindered the realization of those goals are still affecting other sports in Nigeria and that is very bad. And that is why till today Nigeria is dependent on foreign-based players to play for the country.
If you look at the basketball team that played for Nigeria at the Olympics, they are all based abroad and the same thing applies to even our football. In fact, if we take the government away from football today, football will die in Nigeria and yet football has been in Nigeria for nearly 100 years, but yet we are not ashamed. We think we are playing football and we want to win the World Cup?
What other obstacle is affecting baseball development in Nigeria?
Another obstacle affecting baseball development in Nigeria is equipment. When you look at baseball and softball in Nigeria the equipment are not made in Nigeria. So we have to buy them from abroad and they do not come cheap.
We need baseball playgrounds also, even though today we are lucky we have a baseball park in Ilorin which is of international standard, but are they maintaining it?
With all efforts we made to manufacture baseball materials in Nigeria, people are not ready to help. So there are so many obstacles impeding baseball and sports development in Nigeria. The obstacles are at the state, federal and even at the local government levels. There are directors of sports, ministers of sports that all they do is to squander the money, that’s all.
And they want us to win, they are joking. If there are no professional sports in Nigeria managed by the private sector or rich individuals, we are not going to get anywhere in sports
Has the standard of play in baseball met your expectations in Nigeria?
Of course it has not met my expectations and it will never meet with the rate at which we are going. And I do not blame those who succeeded me because it is not easy to overcome the challenges and obstacles that are in Nigeria.
Secondly, when you turn on your television or go to the pages of the newspapers, it is football you see mostly.
They manage to squeeze a page for other sports. Even if you look at the basketball that did well at this Olympics, the media gave them scanty coverage and as soon as this Olympics was over, you will not hear anything again about D’Tigress.
It is football! football!! fFootball!!! In fact, even in coverage of football in Nigeria, the main focus is on European leagues such as the English Premier League, La Liga and others all over the place.
Where is the room for other sports? And the truth is if you do not show other sports they cannot become popular. This requires common sense but I have found out that even the journalists go to where they will get paid, and I really cannot blame them because they have to earn a living. But they have also forgotten that they can grow with a sport.
Baseball
Baseball set to rival football as Nigeria’s national sport, says Ndidi Okereke-Onyiuike

BY JOSEPH ODOEKWU
Even though the Nigerian team did not make it to the final match of the Beseball5 Championship, one of the prime movers of the sport in the country, Dr. Ndidi Okereke-Onyiuike has remarked that the future of the sport is very bright in the country.
Okereke-Onyiuike who is a former director general of the Nigerian Stock Exchange and the first female stockbroker in the country said that baseball will be the second most preferred sport to football.
She was speaking at the NIS Gymnasium in the premises of the National Stadium, Lagos.
“We know that football is our most preferred sport in Nigeria, we don’t want it to die. But we want baseball to become Nigeria’s second most preferred sports”.
Continuing, she said: “I have lived in the United States of America and see how baseball is. It is a beautiful game and I know that if we nurture it very well here in Nigeria it will become Nigeria’s second most preferred”.
She added that she had been using her contacts to support baseball in Nigeria. She regretted that her effort and that of others have not yielded their desired result, even though baseball is now known.
“We know that the knowledge of baseball has improved in Nigeria, but its current awareness is not up to our expectations”.”But we shall continue to give our best to ensure that its awareness continues”.
She further charged the media to do their best in publicizing baseball.
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