Since Shohei Ohtani first arrived in the majors in 2018, the two-way star has been heralded as a modern-day Babe Ruth, baseball’s lone reference point for a dual threat of his magnitude.

No longer.

It took nearly a century, but Ruth’s tenure as the game’s sepia-toned benchmark is officially over.

There now is Ohtani. And everyone else.

You can throw out the season, decade or era. While that’s not necessarily a new development, Ohtani’s three-homer, 10-strikeout pitching performance Friday night in the Dodgers’ pennant-clinching 5-1 victory over the Brewers put the stamp on it.

Ohtani isn’t this generation’s Babe Ruth. He’s One of One, meaning what we’re witnessing now from this baseball unicorn not only has never happened before but is highly unlikely to ever be repeated (unless

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