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.

Blue Jays: Bowden Francis struck out a career-high 12 in a dominant performance, carrying a no-hitter into the ninth inning of a 3-1 victory over the Angels on Saturday. Francis (7-3) walked three and hit a batter in his third consecutive win. He threw a career-high 117 pitches, 84 for strikes. Francis was working on a no-hitter before Taylor Ward drove a 3-2 fastball deep to center for a leadoff homer in the ninth. It was Ward’s 17th homer of the season. The crowd of 34,011 then saluted Francis with a standing ovation when he was replaced by right-hander Chad Green, who earned his 14th save in 14 chances.

Pirates: Barry Bonds was inducted into the club’s Hall of Fame. He donned a gold jacket alongside fellow inductees Jim Leyland and Manny Sanguillen. He posed for pictures in front of the plaque that bears his name in a plaza just inside the left-center field gates at PNC Park. And Major League Baseball’s home run king insisted he didn’t think about that other Hall of Fame, the one that’s proved elusive nearly two decades after Bonds hit the last of his record 762 homers. “I don’t have to worry about those things no more in my life,” Bonds said. “(I want to) hang around my grandchildren and my children. Those hopes (of making the Hall of Fame), I don’t have them anymore. I hope to breathe tomorrow (and see) if I can make it to 61.”

Yankees: Eight years after his turbulent tenure with the Yankees ended, Alex Rodriguez heard cheers in his first appearance at Old-Timers’ Day before the Yankees’ 9-2 loss the Rockies 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.