Tanaka returns to Japan for safety

New York Yankees pitcher Masahiro Tanaka has returned to Japan the Nikkan Sports reported Thursday, because of the spread of the coronavirus but also out of concern for his personal safety.

“As has been reported, I returned to Japan at the end of March,” Tanaka said. “I have no symptoms now, but even so I could be infected by someone without knowing it. And my family could, too.”

According to an FBI report obtained by ABC News, the agency expects a surge of anti-Asian hate crime in the United States.

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” the report said according to ABC.

According to NHK, a center opened by a civil rights group in America on March 19, recorded 670 instances of harassment of Asian Americans in its first week.

Tanaka said he is going through a two-week self-quarantine period as instructed by the Japanese government.

Pandemic causes WBC Déjà vu

The year 2020 has been so bad that NPB is ready to reset the clock to 2009, the last year its union threatened to boycott the WBC — partly over its March scheduling.

On Wednesday, Nippon Professional Baseball questioned whether it would be able to have the Olympic break in its schedule AND play in a March World Baseball Classic. So it may be no surprise that like it did in 2006, 2009 and 2012, NPB and its union are now preparing to hold their breaths until they either turn blue or get their way.

A March WBC in 2021 runs smack into two Japanese sporting obsessions: the volume of practice, and the primacy of the Olympics.

In 2017, when NPB announced Atsunori Inaba would be the national team manager on a four-year deal, everything, and I mean everything was about winning a gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics.

When a reporter asked about the 2021 WBC and if that was not also an important goal, everyone on the dais treated his question as shot as if he had jumped on a table, broken wind and shouted hallelujah!

In Japan, the WBC is a poor substitute for the Olympics, and NPB and its players would probably rather spend their time in March building up for the season and preparing for the Olympics than playing in the WBC.

Of course, the coronavirus, which forced the postponements of the first round of qualifiers in March may have something to say about whether there is a 20-team WBC next March or no WBC at all.

But if there is a WBC it’s going to come as a tug of war between Japan’s priority on the Olympics — which is forcing two teams out of their ballparks and messing big time with the schedule — and MLB’s complete and total lack of interest in the summer games.