Dodger pitcher Roki Sasaki’s walkout music, “BΓ‘ilalo Rocky,” is the Latin hit of the fall
So far this postseason, whenever Dodgers fans heard βBΓ‘ilalo Rockyβ ring through the loudspeakers, that meant two things were coming β pitcher Roki Sasaki was about to throw some vicious splitters in relief, and a Dodgers win was likely just a few outs away.
Sasakiβs walkout music has taken on a life of its own, in part because of the only-in-L.A. culture clash that has a sensational Japanese pitcher embracing a Latin club hit as he dominates the postseason. Itβs helped cement Sasakiβs appeal among the Latino Dodgers faithful, and given the song a huge global boost as the Dodgers prepare for the start of World Series today.
Hereβs a primer on how Sasaki found his hype track, and how itβs become the breakout hit of L.A. this fall.
So who wrote βBΓ‘ilalo Rocky?β
The version of the song Sasaki walks out to is by Dj Roderick and Dj Jose Gonzalez and vocalist Ariadne Arana (thereβs another popular version by Arana, the Dominican MC Yoan Retro and GMBeats Degranalo).
The song is a super-infectious and chantable dembow-house track, and its Spanish hook β βΒ‘BΓ‘ilalo, Rocky! / Ta, ta, ta, ta / SuΓ©ltale, suΓ©ltaleβ β is an invitation for a guy to dance and cut loose. But here, itβs directed at the young phenom Sasaki to bedevil hitters when he comes out in relief. The way Arana pronounces the hook makes it sound like sheβs singing right at the Dodgersβ Roki.
Thatβs a left-field choice for a 23-year-old pitcher from Japan in his first year in L.A.. How did Sasaki discover it?
Dodgers veteran second baseman Miguel Rojas turned him onto the song during spring training this year, where it became a dugout favorite. (The whole dugout is known to pound on the railing when the track comes on.) Sasaki started using it in April, before a four-month recovery from a right shoulder impingement.
The theme song βwas actually MiggyRoβs idea,β Sasaki said to press in Japanese last week. βIβm really happy the fans are enjoying it.β
Thereβs a delightful incongruity to the modest, laser-focused young Japanese pitcher walking out to a lascivious Latin club banger. But as Sasaki has rebounded from an injury-plagued midseason to become the Dodgersβ lights-out reliever in the postseason, βItβs been special,β Rojas told press last week. βI feel like it just fits him really well.β
For her part, Arana loves the songβs new life as a hit Dodger theme. βThe Dodgers are my team,β sheβs said.
Has Sasakiβs blessing boosted the track?
Definitely. The song was already popular in Latin music circles, and itβs become a go-to cover and source material for Latin artists like corridos tumbados singer Tito Doble P and Lomiiel. Even other athletes, like Spanish soccer superstar Lamine Yamal, have gotten in on the track as a meme. Itβs racked up tens of millions in Spotify and YouTube plays, where nearly every comment is now Sasaki-related.
But naturally, the only place to really hear it is under a cotton candy sky in Elysian Park.
Has it helped Sasakiβs pitching?
In September, Sasaki was pitching for triple-A Oklahoma City and seemed unlikely to win a roster spot back in L.A. anytime soon. Two months later, however, after clutch saves and eye-popping velocity against the Reds, Phillies and Brewers en route to the World Series, heβs having βOne of the great all-time appearances out of the βpen that I can remember,β as Dodgers manager Dave Roberts called it.
Sasakiβs not the only Dodger with an unexpected Latin walkout track β last yearβs World Series hero Freddie Freeman takes the plate to Dayvi and Victor Cardenasβ βBaila Conmigo (ft. Kelly Ruiz).β
But if the Dodgers take home the title thanks to clutch Sasaki saves, Rojas hopes for a full βBΓ‘ilalo Rokiβ edit. βI think he deserves a video and the lights go down and all that stuff,β Rojas told MLB.com. βI think thatβs the next step for him.β