To date this postseason, at any time when Dodgers followers heard “Báilalo Rocky” ring by way of the loudspeakers, that meant two issues had been coming — pitcher Roki Sasaki was about to throw some vicious splitters in aid, and a Dodgers win was doubtless only a few outs away.
Sasaki’s walkout music has taken on a lifetime of its personal, partially due to the only-in-L.A. tradition conflict that has a sensational Japanese pitcher embracing a Latin membership hit as he dominates the postseason. It’s helped cement Sasaki’s attraction among the many Latino Dodgers trustworthy, and given the track an enormous world increase because the Dodgers put together for the beginning of World Sequence immediately.
Right here’s a primer on how Sasaki discovered his hype monitor, and the way it’s turn into the breakout hit of L.A. this fall.
So who wrote “Báilalo Rocky?”
The model of the track Sasaki walks out to is by Dj Roderick and Dj Jose Gonzalez and vocalist Ariadne Arana (there’s one other widespread model by Arana, the Dominican MC Yoan Retro and GMBeats Degranalo).
The track is a super-infectious and chantable dembow-house monitor, and its Spanish hook — “¡Báilalo, Rocky! / Ta, ta, ta, ta / Suéltale, suéltale” — is an invite for a man to bop and minimize unfastened. However right here, it’s directed on the younger phenom Sasaki to bedevil hitters when he comes out in aid. The way in which Arana pronounces the hook makes it sound like she’s singing proper on the Dodgers’ Roki.
That’s a left-field selection for a 23-year-old pitcher from Japan in his first yr in L.A.. How did Sasaki uncover it?
Dodgers veteran second baseman Miguel Rojas turned him onto the track throughout spring coaching this yr, the place it grew to become a dugout favourite. (The entire dugout is understood to pound on the railing when the monitor comes on.) Sasaki began utilizing it in April, earlier than a four-month restoration from a proper shoulder impingement.
The theme track “was actually MiggyRo’s idea,” Sasaki mentioned to press in Japanese final week. “I’m really happy the fans are enjoying it.”
There’s a pleasant incongruity to the modest, laser-focused younger Japanese pitcher strolling out to a lascivious Latin membership banger. However as Sasaki has rebounded from an injury-plagued midseason to turn into the Dodgers’ lights-out reliever within the postseason, ”It’s been particular,” Rojas instructed press final week. “I feel like it just fits him really well.”
For her half, Arana loves the track’s new life as successful Dodger theme. “The Dodgers are my team,” she’s mentioned.
Has Sasaki’s blessing boosted the monitor?
Undoubtedly. The track was already widespread in Latin music circles, and it’s turn into a go-to cowl and supply materials for Latin artists like corridos tumbados singer Tito Doble P and Lomiiel. Even different athletes, like Spanish soccer famous person Lamine Yamal, have gotten in on the monitor as a meme. It’s racked up tens of tens of millions in Spotify and YouTube performs, the place practically each remark is now Sasaki-related.
However naturally, the one place to actually hear it’s beneath a cotton sweet sky in Elysian Park.
Has it helped Sasaki’s pitching?
In September, Sasaki was pitching for triple-A Oklahoma Metropolis and appeared unlikely to win a roster spot again in L.A. anytime quickly. Two months later, nevertheless, after clutch saves and eye-popping velocity in opposition to the Reds, Phillies and Brewers en path to the World Sequence, he’s having “One of many nice all-time appearances out of the ‘pen that I can remember,” as Dodgers manager Dave Roberts called it.
Sasaki’s not the one Dodger with an surprising Latin walkout monitor — final yr’s World Sequence hero Freddie Freeman takes the plate to Dayvi and Victor Cardenas’ “Baila Conmigo (ft. Kelly Ruiz).”
But when the Dodgers take dwelling the title because of clutch Sasaki saves, Rojas hopes for a full “Báilalo Roki” edit. “I think he deserves a video and the lights go down and all that stuff,” Rojas instructed MLB.com. “I think that’s the next step for him.”

