All posts by Jim Allen

sports editor for a wire service in Tokyo

NPB news: Sept. 8, 2022

We had a big retirement announcement, an unsurprisingly establishment view on the responsibility of management, and five games on Friday.

Kosuke Fukudome to call it quits

Former Chicago Cub, Cleveland Indian and Chicago White Sox outfielder Kosuke Fukudome, 45, announced Thursday that this will be the last of his 24 major league seasons, five of which were spent in MLB.

“Do as much as you can, because there will come a day when it ends, and you don’t want to regret what you might have done.”

-Kosuke Fukudome on his advice to young players

I haven’t been able to get through the entire hour-long presser but here are some of the tidbits:

The family
  • How did your family respond?
  • “Nobody was crying their eyes out although there was a tear or two, but that’s how they roll. They all smiled and said, ‘Good job.’ After all, I was the one who put all the burden on them, so they were a little relieved I suppose.”
  • “I’m going to be able to spend a lot more time with my kids, and they told me different things they want to do, so it feels like I’m going into the life of an ordinary dad.”
  • What do you want to do most with your family?
  • “Me, nothing in particular (laughs). I’ll give it some thought going forward I suppose.”
Playing in MLB
  • “I experienced good things and bad things as well, and was able to physically experience baseball played a different way. So I have to say, it was a good thing.”
  • “There’ are differences, just like there’s a difference between Japan’s first teams and farm teams, and the (U.S.) minors and majors. There are things you can’t really understand just from hearing about them. Because of the qualitative gap between their majors and minors, I thanked my lucky stars I’d been brought up in Japan’s system.”
  • “So many players taught me in so many different ways, that it was a huge learning experience for me.”
  • “Hardships? I guess walking around in cities and not being able to speak a word to anyone. Still, it was fun.”

What I meant to say

On Wednesday, Orix manager Satoshi Nakajima said leadoff hitter Shuhei Fukuda’s costly base-running mistake was the coaching staff’s fault, kind of in keeping with how the new wave of NPB managers have been handling these things.

On Thursday, Orix apparently took a different stance and decided that the blame lie with Fukuda, who was banished to the minors. In a lot of organizations, when the boss tells everyone it’s his responsibility, you can bet that it’s just bullshit, and that he won’t take a hit for someone else’s goof.

Of course, it could have been a decision made by the front office, but either way, it’s the kind of old-school Orix stuff we haven’t seen much of since Nakajima took over in 2020.

OK, so let’s get to the games.

Giants 6, BayStars 5: At Tokyo Dome, Yomiuri came from four runs down to beat second-place DeNA.

DeNA center fielder Masayuki Kuwahara single-handedly ruined the Giants’ third inning with a pair of superb catches, and former Giants Taishi Ota doubled and opened the scoring in the fourth on Keita Sano RBI single.

Hikaru Ito’s three-run double gave DeNA starter Fernando Romero a healthy 4-0 lead, but Takumi Oshiro blasted a three-run homer in the bottom of the fourth. Giants reliever Yohei Kagiya (2-0) pitched out of two-out two-on pickle in the fifth, and Sho Nakata hit a three-run homer off reliever Shingo Hirata (4-3).

Continue reading NPB news: Sept. 8, 2022

NPB news: Sept. 7, 2022

There was a plentiful supply of whoop-ass in Japan Wednesday, when it was not a good night for most of the teams in the top half of their league’s rankings.

Earlier on Wednesday I woke up to some weird talk of people saying stupid things about MLB home run records, and realized Japan regularly partakes in its own record stupidity, and so I had to write about it. We also had the monthly awards, which went to form.

The guns of August

Munetaka Murakami won his third straight CL hitter of the month award, while Shota Imanaga, who went 5-0 while leading the league with 36 innings and a 1.25 ERA. It was his second award of the season after he won for May.

The PL hitter’s award went to Rakuten’s Hiroaki Shimauchi and was also well deserved after he led the PL with a .381 average, 17 runs, 37 hits, 64 total bases, 21 RBIs, and a .660 slugging average. It was the first monthly award for the 11th-year pro.

The pitcher was a kind of a surprise since it went to Orix’s Hiroya Miyagi, who had a 3-1 record rather than Kona Takahashi who went 3-0 with a good ERA. Miyagi threw his first career shutout and led the league with a 1.14 ERA.

Pitcher’s arsenal reports

Starting today, I’m going to begin sharing the fruits of one of my projects, collecting and analyzing pitch-by-pitch data. There’s precious little publicly available, but we can have some fun by seeing how pitchers’ arsenals and individual pitches shape up against other players: I’ll be talking about whether pitches are thrown ahead or behind in counts, how effective they are — not just in final results but also in contributing to better counts, how often their missed, called for strikes or put into play.

OK, so let’s get to the games, the starting pitchers for Thursday and more.

Giants 18, BayStars 3: At Tokyo Dome, Adam Walker hit a fourth-inning grand slam, Gregory Polanco added a three-run homer in the same nine-run inning, and added a two-run shot, his 21st, in a five-run seventh. Giants rookie Iori Yamasaki (5-4) allowed a run over seven innings, while DeNA starter Haruhiro Hamaguchi (7-5) allowed 11 runs on 10 hits and two walks over 3-2/3 innings. Ouch.

Continue reading NPB news: Sept. 7, 2022