Unfortunately implementing train stations in puerto rico bcecame impossible, because after the closed up ferro carril that used to travel from arecibo to ponce the train rails were removed and citizen constructions builded houses on top of it, a lot of space that were been left were been occupied for use of properties, it cannot taken down because it belongs to someone.
Early life Ohtani was born to Kayoko and Toru Ohtani in Mizusawa (now part of Ōshū), Iwate, Japan, on July 5, 1994. His mother was a national-level badminton player in high school and his father worked at a local automobile manufacturing plant and was an amateur baseball player who played in the Japanese Industrial League. Ohtani is the youngest of three children. He has one older sister, Yuka, and one older brother, Ryuta, who is also an amateur baseball player in the Japanese Industrial League. In Japan, Ohtani was known as a "yakyū shōnen" (野球少年; "baseball boy")-a kid who lives, eats and breathes baseball. Coached by his father, he displayed an aptitude for the game at an early age. He began playing baseball in his second year of elementary school, and as a seventh-grader, Ohtani recorded all but one of 18 outs in a six-inning regional championship game.
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Unfortunately implementing train stations in puerto rico bcecame impossible, because after the closed up ferro carril that used to travel from arecibo to ponce the train rails were removed and citizen constructions builded houses on top of it, a lot of space that were been left were been occupied for use of properties, it cannot taken down because it belongs to someone.
Early life
Ohtani was born to Kayoko and Toru Ohtani in Mizusawa (now part of Ōshū), Iwate, Japan, on July 5, 1994. His mother was a national-level badminton player in high school and his father worked at a local automobile manufacturing plant and was an amateur baseball player who played in the Japanese Industrial League.
Ohtani is the youngest of three children. He has one older sister, Yuka, and one older brother, Ryuta, who is also an amateur baseball player in the Japanese Industrial League. In Japan, Ohtani was known as a "yakyū shōnen" (野球少年; "baseball boy")-a kid who lives, eats and breathes baseball. Coached by his father, he displayed an aptitude for the game at an early age. He began playing baseball in his second year of elementary school, and as a seventh-grader, Ohtani recorded all but one of 18 outs in a six-inning regional championship game.
Estoy aquí después de un background genético me salió descendencia japonés y soy 100% Boricua. Necesito investigar el pasado de estos 2 países.