Monkey D. Luffy traded the Grand Line for the pitcher’s mound as the One Piece protagonist threw the ceremonial first pitch during One Piece Night at Dodger Stadium, turning a regular-season Los Angeles Dodgers game into a full-blown celebration of anime fandom and sports culture.
The crossover event, held as the Dodgers faced the San Diego Padres, brought the Straw Hat Pirates’ world into one of Major League Baseball’s most recognizable venues. Luffy’s first pitch was not exactly a strike — MLB.com noted that the throw sailed past Kiké Hernández’s attempt to stop it — but the moment still drew cheers from fans who came to see the beloved anime character step into a baseball setting.
The night was more than a ceremonial pitch. Fans were treated to One Piece-themed activations, giveaways, and stadium visuals celebrating the long-running Japanese franchise. The Dodgers’ promotion page listed One Piece Night as part of its 2026 stadium-wide giveaway calendar, with the club reminding fans that giveaway items are limited to one per person with a valid ticket.
The event also tapped into collector culture. Toei Animation earlier announced a limited-edition One Piece Card Game card tied to the Dodgers collaboration, featuring original artwork of Luffy dressed as a baseball player in an L.A. Dodgers cap and jersey. The card was distributed to ticketed fans on a first-come, first-served basis at One Piece activation spaces inside Dodger Stadium.
For One Piece fans, the sight of Luffy on the mound was another sign of how far the franchise has moved beyond manga and television. Created by Eiichiro Oda, One Piece has grown into a global entertainment property spanning anime, films, video games, trading cards, merchandise, and live events. Toei Animation described the series as a mainstream pop culture force more than 25 years after its Japanese television debut in 1999.
The anime celebration came with a dramatic game as well. The Dodgers rallied from an early six-run deficit to beat the Padres, 12-7, with Dalton Rushing tying career highs with four hits and four RBIs, according to the Associated Press recap carried by CBS Sports.
One Piece Night delivered exactly what modern fan events are built for: a viral ceremonial pitch, exclusive collectibles, stadium-wide spectacle, and a crossover that brought anime fans and baseball fans into the same cheering crowd. Luffy may still be chasing the title of Pirate King, but for one night in Los Angeles, he also became Dodger Stadium’s most unusual guest pitcher.
