Three fans. Three home runs. One night for the ages.

The night Shohei Ohtani turned Dodger Stadium into a cathedral of legend, three lifelong Dodgers fans became unlikely witnesses to history — each of them catching one of Ohtani’s three home runs in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series.

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Ohtani’s performance was the kind that redefines imagination . On the mound, six shutout innings and ten strikeouts. At the plate, three thunderous home runs — each ball launched farther, faster, and somehow more impossible than the last.

The first missile left Ohtani’s bat at 117 miles per hour, soaring 446 feet into the right-field pavilion.

The man who caught it — Randy Johnson (no, not that Randy Johnson

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