Category Archives: News

Getting to work

A day after arriving at the Rakuten Eagles spring camp in Kin, Okinawa Prefecture, and admitting to some nerves in his old crimson getup, Masahiro Tanaka threw his first NPB bullpen in eight years on Sunday.

Throwing to third-year player Hikaru Ota, whose 67 games last year were the most of the Eagles’ catching staff, Tanaka said it was his job to take the lead, Full-count reported.

“Even me, I didn’t feel I had done enough to establish that communication (with my catcher) when I was young, so it’s on me to go to him and establish an atmosphere where he can easily ask me things,” said Tanaka, who admitted it was a little different throwing NPB’s ball.

“I was a little off with this (NPB) ball, but nothing major.”

Curmudgeon corner

If it’s Sunday, it’s time for Isao Harimoto’s Curmudgeon Corner, his sports section on TBS Network’s Sunday Morning. This morning, he was joined by fellow traveler and former Yomiuri Giants teammate Tsuneo Horiuchi.

Both Horiuchi and Harimoto said Tanaka’s return is a chance to boost Japan’s game, implying that there is something to be learned from playing abroad.

Horiuchi said, however, that it was proper for Tanaka to return to Japan and for Giants ace Tomoyuki Sugano to stay here for 2021. To be honest, I can only assume he meant individual Japanese players should stay home to improve the quality of the domestic game. But if Tanaka hadn’t gone abroad, he wouldn’t be the pitcher he now is, so that’s a problematic argument.

Moving on to other things about camp, the segment’s announcer showed some of the novel training methods being tried out this spring, starting with Giants farm team manager Shinnosuke Abe having batters do some lifting barbells on the sideline after BP.

“The essence of baseball is hitting a ball with a bat. You want to be careful about building up the wrong muscles, because they can impede your swing,” Harimoto said in what was for him an unusually well-phrased observation. “Horiuchi-san will tell you it’s the same for pitchers.”

New math

Horiuchi agreed, but added that novel training was a kind of fun thing for coaches, and that thinking outside the box is probably a good thing, upon which the focus switched to the Seibu Lions’ camp, where players executed a standard footwork drill while solving a series of simple arithmetic problems a coach shouted at them.

“Complete waste of time that would be better spent building up their physical condition,” Harimoto said. “If they want to learn arithmetic, they should do it in the offseason.”

Tanaka in camp

The Rakuten Eagles were vague last week about when Masahiro Tanaka would report to camp in Okinawa, but on the seventh day after his press conference in Tokyo, the Eagles’ world appeared to be complete.

“I get nervous just putting on the team’s gear,” Tanaka said according to Full-count.

Tanaka invited his teammates, few of whom were there in his 2013 MVP season before he left to play for the Yankees, to ask for any kind of advice.

“If there is anything I can tell you, I will be happy to answer, so feel free to ask, ” he said. “I’m sure you won’t feel free to ask, that’s why I’m making a point of it.”

Tanaka’s arrival not only excited his nervous teammates but also drew interest from around the league, including from SoftBank Hawks coach Ryosuke Hiraishi, a batting coach with the 2013 Eagles.

“He has no flaws,” Hiraishi said. “He was a tremendous teammate, but he’s going to be a fierce rival and we’re going to have our work cut out for us devising plans to attack him,” Sanspo reported.

In addition to Tanaka, the PL got another boost on Saturday, when former Diamondback and Mariners reliever Yoshihisa Hirano signed with his first pro club, the Orix Buffaloes, Kyodo News (Japanese) reported.

This is probably not news that CL teams with aspirations of winning a Japan Series wanted to hear, and comes on the day when Yomiuri Giants owner Toshikazu Yamaguchi once more hit the DH panic button, Sankei Sports reported. After the Giants were swept out of the Japan Series for the second straight year, manager Tatsunori Hara said the CL could not compete without the DH.

Suddenly the Giants owner has taken up the crusade to “do the obvious” and get the league a DH to “give the fans the best possible baseball.” Forgive me, but if this is something that was obvious, how come the Giants never talked about it until after a second postseason of painful procedures to remove bats from their orifices.

In other news:

Ryoya Kurihara, who had a breakout season for the Hawks has been practicing at a new position, third base, where the first baseman/right fielder took balls alongside captain Nobuhiro Matsuda, Full-count reported. Without slugging Cuban left fielder Yurisbel Gracial on hand, Kurihara has a chance to become the understudy at third, and who knows, the hot corner heir apparent since Matsuda is 37 and ostensibly can’t play forever.

The Lotte Marines continue to handle fire-balling teenager Roki Sasaki with care.

Pitching coach Masato Yoshii said Saturday according to Sankei Sports that Sasaki would be on a special training program Sunday for one day only. He did one light throwing session on the first day of camp after which Yoshii proclaimed the right-hander would not be ready to pitch in the Marines’ first intrasquad game. Then he threw another bullpen and everything appeared to be OK.

Last year, Sasaki did not appear in a single game on either the farm or first team and much of the talk about his conditioning was the time it was taking him to recover after throwing live BP or bullpens.

Also at Lotte camp, former slugger Nobuhiko Matsunaka declared, according to Nikkan Sports that Speedster Koshiro Wada is “taking more swings than anyone in camp and hitting more balls to the opposite side” – which fits into the Japanese profile that fast left-handed hitters are duty-bound to hit the ball on the ground to the left side of the infield.

In Carp camp, 2020 CL rookie of the year Morishita threw a 106-pitch bullpen, in which he tried out his version of the Kenta Maeda slider he learned from the Twins pitcher over the winter. According to Daily Sports, Morishita reported that his mastery of the pitch is currently at 0 percent.

Also in Carp camp, Kevin Cron hit 15 balls over the fence in BP, with the team’s owner in the stands, getting all excited about it, Sankei Sports reports. It may seem like nothing, but Hajime Matsuda has a lot of sway with his team. In the past when he’s had an inkling about how something should be done, he made sure the coaches knew about it and took action.

A year after the Hanshin Tigers setting up a third base competition between Jefry Marte and Yusuke Oyama, Marte has apparently put into a battle with Jerry Sands for the first base job, Nikkan Sports reports.

Right-handed reliever Hirokazu Sawamura, the last Japanese player left in the major league free agent market is now in the States to confer with agent John Boggs as talks progress, according to Kyodo News (English).