 The Angels and the White Sox put on a damn show. Usually when I do these breakdowns of walk-off wins, I'm only breaking down the celebration and the final play. But everything in this game was interesting. The Angels have a 3-0 lead, and then they just start throwing the ball away. Ohtani with the pick-off move, because he was probably like, hey, that should have been a double play, and now he's on third. And then another walk there to Eaton, and a walk there to Brayu. And now the bases are lowered. There's two outs, and now we got a wild pitch. One run's gonna score. Two others advance into scoring position, and Ohtani's just throwing the ball away. Strikes this dude out, but that's a pass ball. And now another run's gonna score because they don't get the out at first. They come home for the trailing runner. Ohtani gets leveled. Now it's tied up at three. Ohtani gets the feet taken out from underneath him. He comes out of the game. Seemingly fine after that. Big story. Up comes the rookie. Walsh. And just slams a homer. This dude catches it, grabs it, bobbles it, regains control, celebrates with his friends, kept his head on straight there. Now Iglesias with the save attempt. They picked him up. They traded for him. Hit by pitch. He's gonna field the bunt here. He's gonna throw to first, and it's way too high, but Fletcher's gonna save him. Nice athletic slow-mo play. Everybody loves that. Iglesias ain't done no. Angels pitchers throwing the ball away. That's what happened this game. Look at that. Tries to get the lead runner at third. Throws it into left field. Nice snag with the glove, and then bam, an instant regret. Oh, so now the game is tied up again. And the Angels are hitting, and we got Fowler gets on base. That's the go ahead run. We like that. Trout gets out after him. And we got Rendon. He's gonna work the count full and take the walk. So now there's two on for the big bad dude, Jared Walsh. He tore it up at the end of last season, starting this year hot. Had the home run to give him the lead now. Takes that pitch, and the ump gives it to him, and the catcher's like, wait, hold up. We like really like that pitch. We wanted it. Now the pitcher, Foster, goes change up, change up, gets the strike there, and then change up. So now the count is three and one, and he threw three change ups in a row. And if you're the hitter, pretty good guess. In a three one count, a fastball count already. And he just threw three change ups in a row. Pretty good guess. You're gonna get a fastball here. He's ready for it outside fastball. Throws it over the wall in the left center. Robert can't get it. Look at this. Little bite that lower lip. Bam! I mean, this was like a robbable ball, seemingly, but, you know, off the bat, he knew it. He pimped the hell out of it. He's having a great start to his season, and he's enjoying his life. So what? Throws his helmet in celebration, and almost knocks out Otani. Otani takes personal offense to that, undoes his water bottle, seeks him out, and look at that missile right in the face. Here's another angle. Look at this. Otani, he pitched in this game. He hit a home run in this game, and he just has the water bottle squirt laser beam shot right to the dude's face. He does it all. The clothes are a glaceous, who almost blew the game. He seeks him out and says, thank you very much, man. He rubs his head, shakes it off. Gotta have a short memory. What a fantastic game, and if you want to hear all about this from a player's perspective, Lucas Giolito, stud for the White Sox, is on the Chris Rose rotation. He's one of the hosts, and I bet they're going to talk about this opening series because why wouldn't they? That's what he's doing. He's on the podcast talking about the games. So go check that out on the John Boy Media YouTube channel or any podcast app, Chris Rose rotation, Lucas Giolito. I hope Chris Rose asked him about Otani's water bottle spray to the face. Maybe he will, maybe he won't. Tune in.