Category Archives: News

Best Nine Voting Results

Results of NPB’s Best Nine Award Voting:

Central League

Pacific League

Pitcher:

Tomoyuki Sugano, Giants 243

Daichi Osera, Carp 39

Pitcher:

Yusei Kikuchi, Lions 135

Shinsaburo Tawata, Lions 65

Takayuki Kishi, Eagles 44

Naoyuki Uwasawa, Fighters 3

Daiki Enokida, Lions 1

Catcher:

Tsubasa Aizawa, Carp 248

Ryotaro Umeno, Tigers 27

Seiji Kobayashi, Giants 4

Yuhei Nakamura, Swallows 3

Catcher:

Tomoya Mori, Lions 179

Takuya Kai, Hawks 54

Tatsuhiro Tamura, Marines 15

Ryo Ishikawa, Fighters 1

Motohiro Shima, Eagles 1

First Base:
Dayan Viciedo, Dragons 174
Kazuma Okamoto, Giants 95
Jose Lopez, BayStars 5
Ryohei Matsuyama, Carp, 3
Tomotaka Sakaguchi, Swallows 3
Takahiro Arai, Carp 1
Neftali Soto, BayStars 1

First Base:
Hotaka Yamakawa, Lions 243
Sho Nakata, Fighters 3
Akira Nakamura, Hawks 2
Seiya Inoue, Marines 1

Second Base:
Tetsuto Yamada, Swallows 263
Ryosuke Kikuchi, Carp 19

Second Base:
Hideto Asamura, Lions 251

Third Base:
Toshiro Miyazaki, BayStars 250
Kazuma Okamoto, Giants 23
Casey McGehee, Giants 8
Ryoma Nishikawa, Carp 1

Third Base:
Nobuhiro Matsuda, Hawks 162
Takeya Nakamura, Lions 67
Shota Sotozaki, Lions 8
Daichi Suzuki, Marines 7
Toshiaki Imae, Eagles 6
Brandon Laird, Fighters 1

Shortstop:
Hayato Sakamoto, Giants 264
Kosuke Tanaka, Carp 18

Shortstop:
Sosuke Genda, Lions 248
Kenta Imamiya, Hawks 2
Takuya Nakashima, Fighters 1

Outfielders:
Yoshihiro Maru, Carp 271
Seiya Suzuki, Carp 213
Neftali Soto, BayStars 108
Wladimir Balentien, Swallows 76
Yoshitomo Tsutsugo, BayStars 62
Norichika Aoki, Swallows 56
Ryosuke Hirata, Dragons 45
Kazuma Okamoto, Giants 8
Takayoshi Noma, Carp 4
Zoilo Almonte, Dragons 2
Ryuhei Matsuyama, Carp 1

Outfielders:
Yuki Yanagita, Hawks 251
Shogo Akiyama, Lions 250
Masataka Yoshida, Buffaloes 174
Haruki Nishikawa, Fighters, 36
Kensuke Kondo, Fighters 25
Seiji Uebayashi, Hawks 5
Shota Sotozaki, Lions 4
Hiroaki Shimauchi, Eagles 3
Kazuki Tanaka, Eagles 1

   

   

Designated Hitter:
Kensuke Kondo, Fighters 122
Alfredo Despaigne, Hawks 104
Tomoya Mori, Lions 13
Sho Nakata, Fighters 3
Takumi Kuiryama, Lions 2
Stefen Romero, Buffaloes 2
Masataka Yoshida, Buffaloes 2
Takeya Nakamura, Lions 1
Seiya Inoue, Marines 1
Katsuya Kakunaka, Marines 1

Koji Akiyama’s great American expectations

Former Hawks skipper Koji Akiyama.
Former Hawks manager Koji Akiyama is in no hurry to get back into uniform–except for old-timers games.

 

Former Lions and Hawks star Koji Akiyama said Saturday that the seeds of his success in Nippon Professional Baseball were sown in the United States, where he and several Seibu Lions teammates were sent 30-plus years ago to learn what the could in the Single-A ball.

“It completely changed my view, broadened my horizons,” Akiyama said at an event of Japan’s “Meikyukai” Golden Players Club at Tokyo Dome. “I played in San Jose and seeing American baseball, even just the atmosphere at the ballpark made me want to play in a major league park. It made me want to be better.”

Akiyama could have gone. When Japan’s free agent system was inaugurated in 1994, players needed 10 years of service time, and he qualified in the autumn of 1994. But when it came time to file, after his Lions had lost the Japan Series for the second straight season, no Japanese had played in the majors since Masanori Murakami in 30 years. But the majors were still embroiled in the strike that had cancelled the World Series and sent the American media to Japan to see the Lions play the Yomiuri Giants in the Japan Series.



Akiyama, a fleet, power-hitting center fielder, would have been a good fit for the majors, but he was born 10 years too early. During his prime years–all with Seibu from 1985 to 1994, Akiyama hit 348 home runs, more than any other NPB player during that span, while stealing 247 bases, the second most in Japan.

“I would have loved to have gone,” he said. “But you have to go in your twenties. By the time I thought I might that time had already gone.”

“The game over there was thrilling. Everything. Seeing games in major league ballparks for myself made me realize the game was so much bigger than I thought it was.”

After Hideo Nomo defied Japan’s baseball establishment by leaving for the States under his own power, the flow of Japanese talent began. But Akiyama said stars moving to the majors has resulted not in a talent drain but a talent boost.

“Young players now see that (Japanese guys playing in the majors) and they try harder than ever. It’s a great thing,” he said.