All posts by Jim Allen

sports editor for a wire service in Tokyo

NPB news: Oct. 14, 2023

The new playoffs are here and surprise, surprise, I was at a ballpark, where I got to see Carter Stewart Jr. and Roki Sasaki square off. It wasn’t quite a fair fight, but Sasaki, who has been slowly recovering his fitness since he developed a fever on Sept. 24, was as good as he’s ever been.

There was another game in Hiroshima, an 11-inning nail-biter, and we have two elimination games Sunday. Man this is fun.

Saturday’s games

Carp 3, Deniers 2, 11 innings: At New Hiroshima Citizens Stadium, Toshiro Miyazaki hit a two-run homer for the Yokohammers after five scoreless innings between Hiroshima’s Hiroki Tokoda and DeNA’s Katsuki Azuma. Ryosuke Kikuchi reached on a one-out single in the home half and scored on a Ryoma Nishikawa sac fly, and then tied it in the eighth with a squeeze bunt after Azuma walked Matt Davidson to lead off the inning.

J.B. Wendelken, who has said Hiroshima’s mound is a tricky one for him, surrendered an 11th-inning leadoff double to Shota Dobayashi before Shogo Akiyama won it with a two-out single.

Nik Turley also surrendered a leadoff double in the top of the inning, but stranded the go-ahead run to earn the win. The Carp will send Masato Morishita to what Wendelken calls their “double mound” Sunday, against Shota Imanaga, who could be pitching in his final game for DeNA.

Continue reading NPB news: Oct. 14, 2023

NPB news: Getting hot and bothered

There was no baseball in Japan Friday, but the night before the postseason begins with the Central and Pacific league’s Foreplay series’ first stage, we have our starting-pitching matchups for Saturday’s games in Hiroshima and Chiba, and ladies and gentlemen, that makes this Roki Eve.

In another connection with Chiba, longtime former Marines third baseman Toshiaki Imae has been tabbed to manage the Rakuten Eagles after the club opted to promote Kazuhisa Ishii to “Senior Director” rather than extending his contract after the Eagles finished fourth for the second straight year.

Calling Japan’s playoffs what they are

When the PL acted to make its late-season games meaningful by introducing a two-stage playoff format in 2004, the CL owners howled with laughter at their temerity, that having playoffs implied the old way, championed by the CL since its founding in 1950, could be anything less than ideal.

But for the next three years, PL teams in the playoff hunt drew big crowds in September and October, while CL teams played out the string. The CL pennant winners then sat on their hands waiting for a battle-hardened PL champion to emerge and vanquish them in the Japan Series.

So in 2007, the CL decided it would have a postseason tournament, too, and would put its stamp on it with new rules and a new name. And unlike pupils caught laughing amongst themselves in class and asked by the teacher if they would like to share the joke with the rest of the class, the CL owners, who thought the PL playoffs were hilarious, came up with something worth laughing at. Seeking something catchy the CL smart asses decided that the Japan Series’ qualifying tournament was a “Climax Series,” suggesting they might not know whether they are coming or going.

Saturday’s pitchers

On Saturday, Sasaki, who has had two three-inning stints since coming back from an oblique strain and has since been deactivated for COVID, will go against Carter Stewart Jr., who has mastered the splitter he learned in the minors and is now mixing with an excellent fastball and curve. If his command is consistent, which it has not been, he is absolutely filthy.

Continue reading NPB news: Getting hot and bothered