Dodgers: Shohei Ohtani became baseball’s fastest 40-40 man as the Japanese superstar blasted a two-out grand slam in the ninth inning for his 40th homer after earlier stealing his 40th base in a 7-3 win over the Rays late Friday. Ohtani achieved the feat in just 129 games, the quickest in major league history and sixth ever to reach 40 homers and 40 stolen bases in a season. He’s also the first Dodgers player to do so. “It’s really more about the winning,” Ohtani said through an interpreter. “Obviously the record is part of the process but I think the most important thing is about winning the game.” He broke the previous mark by Alfonso Soriano in Game 148 for the Nationals in 2006. “It’s just storybook — 40-40 on the same night,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I don’t know if that’s ever been done and then he wins it with a grand slam. He’s definitely known for the dramatics and this was something I’ll remember for a long time.” Ohtani’s 389-foot shot snapped a 3-3 tie. Rays center fielder Jose Siri gave chase and the ball bounced back onto the field. He then threw it into the stands, so Ohtani didn’t end up with the keepsake, according to Ohtani’s interpreter Will Ireton. Ohtani took a curtain call as the crowd of 45,556 stood and cheered. In the fourth, Ohtani reached on an infield single leading off against Tyler Alexander and stole second during Freddie Freeman’s at-bat.

Yankees: Eight years after his turbulent tenure with the Yankees ended, Alex Rodriguez heard cheers in his first appearance at Old-Timers’ Day on Saturday and was in awe of Aaron Judge. A year after captain Derek Jeter debuted at the event, Rodriguez was introduced as part of a ceremony honoring the 2009 Yankees, who won the team’s most recent championship. Rodriguez played his last game on Aug. 12, 2016, and was cut the following day as the Yankees promoted Judge. Judge homered in his first at-bat and is on the verge of becoming the fourth player with three 50-home run seasons and the first to achieve the feat in three of his first nine seasons. “Aaron is such a unicorn,” Rodriguez said “I love the game of baseball so much and I’ve never seen a player quite like him that looks like an NFL tight end, you know 6-7, 282 pounds, under 10 percent body fat. The guy is a specimen.”

Mariners: Leo Rivas lined a game-ending single that scored Dylan Moore in the bottom of the 10th inning to give new manager Dan Wilson a victory in his first game as the Mariners rallied late for a 6-5 win over the Giants late Friday. Seattle scored four times in the eighth to pull even at 5-5, then saw Rivas come through in the 10th. Pinch-runner Moore stole third with one out and Rivas lined a 2-2 pitch from Erik Miller (3-5) into center field to set off a celebration as Seattle won for just the second time in the 10 games.