Category Archives: Commentary

Tokyo: Bring out your dead

This week, Tokyo Olympics took another step toward actually happening when the International Olympic Committee arranged to provide enough vaccine doses for every member of every national Olympic committee’s team.

The program will make it safer for athletes and staff to take part this summer, addressing the largest issue that stands in the way of Tokyo hosting the Olympics while a pandemic rages through the city. The one and only reason the Olympics were postponed 15 months ago was a threatened boycott by U.S. sports federations over safety concerns.

Without U.S. swimming and athletics, the TV money that forces the Olympics to take place in the summer months when Tokyo becomes a sauna, the IOC had no choice put to demand a postponement while allowing then prime minister Shinzo Abe to announce it was his idea — for the sake of the world.

But left to its own devices, Japan would not give away a summer Olympics the way it had the Tokyo 1940 games. Japan abandoned that project in 1949 because it was busy fighting a war on and establishing puppet states on the Asian continent. The government felt the resources spent promoting Olympic ideals would be better used subjugating eastern China and Manchuria.

But the money spent on the 2020 Olympics is already gone, and the graft already distributed. There is nothing left to hold them, and there is no question that regardless of how many bodies might have piled up in the streets of Tokyo last summer, Japan would have gone forward with the Olympics had the IOC not backed out.

We know that, because that is what we are seeing now with a vaccination effort a cynic might say is designed to allow Japan to have its Olympics whether its people want it or not, or whether its people survive it or not.

By promising to vaccinate everyone whose health might be put at risk through competing in Tokyo, the IOC hopes to prevent another potential boycott in a country, which is currently deemed to unsafe for IOC president Thomas Bach to visit as planned this month, can press forward.

The IOC has suggested the vaccination of Olympic athletes and coaches should not run counter to local government policy, but that is just eye-wash. Japan’s policy is to only vaccinate Olympians if it doesn’t interfere with vaccinating front-line health workers and the elderly.

Japan is behind schedule now and is not planning to vaccinate all its residents over 65 until the end of July — after the Olympics open. The doses it expects — enough to vaccinate roughly 2,500 Olympic and Paralympic athletes and coaches will arrive this month.

Not everyone in sports is happy with the optics of athletes and coaches receiving preferential treatment, but Japan and the IOC has prepared for that: “These doses will not interfere with Japan’s substandard incompetent vaccination program, because they are in addition to the ones Japan had done a bad job in procuring for individuals with higher priority.”

It’s like telling the poor that the additional billion dollars we’re giving to your wealthiest compatriots doesn’t affect you, because it is not coming from the money already earmarked for social welfare, but was given to us by the IOC.

It’s complete and utter bullshit, and so a perfect symbol for the Tokyo Olympics.

Perhaps if Japan asks nicely, the IOC will subsidize a program to allow Tokyo’s government to secretly clear the dead from the streets surrounding the Olympic village so as not to spoil the image of Tokyo 2020.

You may scoff, but what we’ve seen from Japan and the IOC so far suggests it’s possible.

This could be the scene around the Tokyo 2020 Olympic village.

Tanaka Episode 4

I wasn’t planning to write much about Masahiro Tanaka’s fourth start, in some ways his worst so far, although he did manage to go a season-high seven innings in his second loss of the season to the Nippon Ham Fighters. Tanaka, who is from western Japan but went to high school in Tomakomai, an hour or so from Sapporo, lost his first game at Sapporo Dome since he was a rookie in 2007.

He couldn’t locate the splitter at all and although he threw a lot of really good sliders as he usually does, one of the ones he missed got hammered, and his changeup was also problematic.

A week after his fastball command was really poor, he was throwing hard, but everybody was able to square it up. So either it wasn’t spinning as much or without his split the Fighters hitters were sitting on it the way they had in his April 17, when the ones he threw dead center got hit over the wall.

He mixed in some two-seam fastballs, which for a while had been a bread-and-butter pitch with the Yankees, but one he’s admitted he’s never had a great feel for. It did make the broadcast crew go nuts since the two-seamer has had kind of a cult status since Japan’s hitters struggled against it at the 2017 World Baseball Classic.

Anyway, the reason I gave in and did a Tanaka post was I saw this on Youtube, and translated the bulk of his comments below.

“The Fighters beat me last time, so I came out wanting to get them back, but they got me again. I gave up early runs and put my team in a bad situation.”

“I want to thank you for so many comments.
Among those was a request about the pitch that was the turning point and hitters who impressed me.”

“Today, it was the first run, in the first inning.”

“There’s no mistaking (Kensuke Kondo) is a really good hitter. In the first inning, I had to throw good pitches to get him out. But he doubled off me when my control was poor and I left a pitch in the heart of the zone.”

“(In the third) there were no outs runners on second and third and then I loaded the bases with a walk. I got an out and then two. I was thinking that if If I can get out of that and hold them scoreless, things might turn around. My first pitch to (Shingo) Usami got more of the plate than I wanted it to, and he hit it for an RBI single.”

“Having gotten two outs, that was really a wasted opportunity for me. Had we gotten out of it, the game could have gone differently, but it turned out the way it did.”

“Then my teammate hit a home run and the lead was cut to 3-1. And then then Kondo hit a home run in the next half inning. Was that a bad way to allow runs? Well in order to win, there are points when you have to prevent them from scoring. Today, that’s when they hit me. So that was the reason my pitching lost us the game. After a game like this, it’s really hard to talk to anyone.”

“I changed my approach a bit, used my two-seamer, changed the axis of the spin. I think the best thing today was my in-game adjustment.”

“Until today, I’d only thrown six innings, but today I threw seven and was around 100 pitches. Of course, I felt I could have gone eight. I need to build up my strength, and go deeper. Of course, allowing fewer runs is important, but so is beinga able to throw more innings, and hand it over to my teammates in good fashion or even go the distance. That’s what I want.”

“Today was unfortunate. I can’t just leave it with them getting the best of me. Next time I pitch against the Fighters, I want to get them back. My next opponent will be a different team, but starting tomorrow I want to prepare my best so that I can do well in that game.”