Bomb threat against Shohei Ohtani at MLB opener in South Korea
SEOUL, South Korea — Police in South Korea were investigating a bomb threat on Wednesday against baseball star Shohei Ohtani, who is in Seoul for Major League Baseball’s first regular-season games in the country.
They were alerted by the South Korean Consulate in Vancouver, which received an email written in English threatening to bomb the 18,000-seat Gocheok Sky Dome in the South Korean capital, where Ohtani’s Los Angeles Dodgers are playing the San Diego Padres.
The Dodgers’ trip to Asia has drawn legions of fans, with Ohtani the headline act.
After searching with sniffer dogs, X-ray detectors and other equipment, police said no sign of a bomb had been found and that they were providing additional security at the season opener on Wednesday, which is reportedly sold out.
Police said the threat bore similarities to previous ones that originated in Japan, and that they were tracking down the sender of the email.

The threat seemingly did little to deter fans, who traveled from other parts of South Korea, the United States and elsewhere for the two-game “Seoul Series” between the Dodgers and Padres to open the season.
“I have no worries as our country has very strict security,” Kim Myeong-seo, a 33-year-old Dodgers fan from Daegu, South Korea, told Reuters. “It was very difficult to get a ticket … I’m just so excited and want to go in as soon as possible.”
Ohtani, 29, joined the Dodgers in December after signing a 10-year, $700-million contract that was the biggest in baseball history.
The two-time American League Most Valuable Player, who has been compared to Babe Ruth, is so popular that South Korean fans have embraced him despite their country’s historic rivalry with his home country of Japan, greeting him and the Dodgers like rock stars when they arrived at Incheon International Airport outside Seoul last week.
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