Category Archives: Baseball

NPB games, news of Aug. 2, 2019

The top two teams in each league as of Aug. 1, met for the start of three-game series on Friday at the home park of the second-place team. With Kodai Senga pitching for the Hawks in Sapporo and Tomoyuki Sugano going for the Giants in Yokohama, it made for an entertaining start to the weekend.

Central League

BayStars 4, Giants 2

At Yokohama Stadium, DeNA’s Kentaro Taira took his 138 kph (85.7 mph) side-arm fastball, a screwball a slider and kept the ball in or below the bottom of the strike zone to outpitch Yomiuri ace Tomoyuki Sugano (8-5).

Taira said teammates Neftali Soto and Jose “El Chamo” Lopez both promised to get hits for him, and in a sixth inning set up by a series of fat pitches from Sugano, Soto tied it with a line double before Lopez had to work for a hit, going down to get a decent slider and lofting it into right center for a two-run double.

Carp 7, Tigers 0

At Mazda Stadium, Xavier Batista hit a grand slam with his 25th home run of the season, and Daichi Osera (8-6) threw a five-hitter as third-place Hiroshima beat Hanshin to move within three games of the Giants.

Dragons 5, Swallows 4

At Jingu Stadium, Yota Kyoda drove in the winning run with a squeeze as Chunichi beat Yakult’s current closer, Scott McGough (4-2) in a game that saw five home runs.

Wladimir Balentien hit his 22nd of the season for the Swallows, giving Japan’s single-season record holder 277 home runs in NPB, tying him for fifth all-time among foreign hitters alongside former Minnesota Twins farmhand Greg “Boomer” Wells.

Pacific League

Hawks 2, Fighters 0

At Sapporo Dome, Kodai Senga (10-4) walked five but allowed just two hits, while striking out eight to post his first shutout of the season as SoftBank held off Nippon Ham.

Fighters right-hander Toshihiro Sugiura, who has been bouncing back and forth between the minors and the big club, making starts every two weeks or so and looking bad doing so, had his best game of the year, striking out five over five scoreless innings.

Alfredo Despaigne broke the scoreless deadlock in the sixth off Mizuki Hori, who had been dropped out of his short starter role after surrendering 13 runs over his last two starts.

Senga improved to 7-0 in his career at Sapporo Dome.

Game highlights are HERE.

Eagles 5, Marines 2

At Rakuten Seimei Park, 1.69-meter right-hander Manabu Mima (7-3) allowed one unearned run over six innings, and Rakuten skipper Yosuke Hiraishi got a chance to use his closer for a save in the ninth against Lotte.

A Shogo Nakamura leadoff homer in the top of the ninth made it a three-run game, and Takashi Ogino’s two-out single created a save situation. Hiraishi trotted out Japan’s save leader just to prove he could, and lefty Yuki Matsui struck out Leonys Martin on seven pitches to earn his Japan-best 29th save.

Game highlights are HERE.

Buffaloes 9, Lions 8

At Kyocera Dome, Steven Moya drove in three runs as Orix beat Seibu–the second-straight night the Lions lost by a run after scoring eight-plus.

Lions manager Hatsuhiko Tsuji juggled his lineup, dropping No. 2 hitter Sosuke Genda to the No. 9 spot, and batting catcher Tomoya Mori third, from where he homered twice and drove in five runs.

Game highlights are HERE.

News

Former Tigers, Buffaloes infielder Kamada dies

Minoru Kamada, who played 1,482 games, mostly at second base for the Tigers and Kintetsu Buffaloes and is best known for introducing the infielder’s backward toss to Japan, has died at the age of 80.

Kamada first saw major leaguers flipping the ball to their double play partners when he visited major league spring camps in Florida with the Tigers in the early 1960s, but said it took him four years of practice to get the hang of it.

A story goes that he rarely tried it in games because he disliked the media so much and said that if he were to make one mistake doing it the Tigers beat writers would never let him forget it.

When he moved to the Buffaloes in 1967, legendary manager Osamu Mihara instructed him not to do it. One story goes that Mihara, a former infielder said it would cause problems with the team’s other infielders, who were not that skilled. In response to that, Kamada famously said, “That’s the other infielder’s problem, and has nothing to do with me.”

NPB game, news of Aug. 1

Pacific League

Hawks 11, Lions 10

At MetLife Dome, SoftBank salvaged their second-straight series finale, avoiding a sweep at the hands of Seibu thanks to a pair of two-run Alfredo Despaigne home runs. Despaigne went 4-for-5 with three runs.

A night after the Lions and Hawks played just the third game at MetLife Dome this season in which neither team scored more than two runs, the two teams played the season’s second in game in which both teams scored at least 10. The Hawks won that one, too, 12-11 over the Eagles on May 3 in Fukuoka.

Lions rookie Ryusei Sato, Seibu’s seventh draft pick last autumn out of university started at third base, and went 3-for-5 with two doubles and four RBIs. Ernesto Mejia went 2-for-3 with a two-run double and a sac fly for the Lions.

Game highlights are HERE.

Eagles 3, Fighters 1

At Sapporo Dome, Eigoro Mogi tripled and scored the game’s first run and singled in the tie-breaking run as Rakuten got past Nippon Ham’s best starting pitcher Kohei Arihara (11-5).

Mogi scored on a Hideto Asamura single. Asamura’s 23rd home run provided a ninth-inning insurance run. Arihara allowed two runs on five hits and a walk over seven innings, while striking out seven.

Yoshinao Kamata started for Rakuten and allowed a run over three innings in his second-straight abbreviated start. Wataru Karashima (7-5) scattered three hits and three walks over three scoreless innings and pitched out of a pair of one-out, bases-loaded pickles to get the win for the Eagles. Frank Herrmann led a trio of scoreless innings out of the visitors’ bullpen with Yuki Matsui earning his Japan-high 28th save.

Eagles manager Yosuke Hiraishi took a page out of Nippon Ham Fighters manager Hideki Kuriyama’s book by using two starters instead of one. Kamata is coming off elbow and shoulder surgery last year, while Karashima was given a lighter outing to give him a break.

Game highlights are HERE.

Marines 7, Buffaloes 6, 12 innings

At Zozo Marine Stadium, Leonys Martin homered for the third time in six Japan games and drew a bases-loaded walk in the 12th to lift Lotte over Orix. Martin, who went 3-for-6 with two runs scored, also has two assists from right field for the Marines.

Masataka Yoshida scored three runs for the Buffaloes, while Yuma Mune and Stefen Romero each drove in two. Brandon Laird went 0-for-2 and came out of the game in the third inning at the instruction of umpire Koichi Nagai after they debated the location of the 3-2 pitch Laird had looked at.

Mike Bolsinger started and allowed two runs over five innings for the Marines.

Game highlights are HERE.

Central League

Swallows 4, BayStars 2

At Yokohama Stadium, Yakult lefty Hiroki Yamada (4-0) beat DeNA, going six innings for the first time in three years. He’s now won four-straight starts for the second time in his career and the first time since 2012.

Yamada’s last six-inning start came with the SoftBank Hawks on June 7, 2016 against the BayStars in Fukuoka.

Swallows rookie Munetaka Murakami hit his 21st home run, tying the game 1-1 in the second.

Carp 8, Giants 2

At Tokyo Dome, Yusuke Nomura (5-3) overcame two shaky innings to post his second straight win, allowing a run over six innings as Hiroshima came from behind to beat league-leading Yomiuri and pull within four games of the Giants.

Ryuhei Matsuyama was about two steps two slow to rob two Giants of first-inning RBI doubles. The rotund slugger made a leaping grab in the left-center gap to rob Hayato Sakamoto, but came a step short of keeping Yoshihiro Maru’s fly from dropping at the foul line.

If Matsuyama had anything to make up for, he did so in the fourth, when he tied the game with the fourth home run of his injury-hit season.

Alejandro Mejia went 3-for-3, his second double igniting Hiroshima’s four-run seventh, when Giants starter Cristopher Mercedes (6-6) from the game.

Game highlights are HERE.

Tigers 3, Dragons 2

At Koshien Stadium, Shintaro Fujinami made his belated first-team debut. The lanky right-hander, whose career has been plagued by an inability to throw strikes, walked six and hit two in his 4-1/3 innings on the mound, but allowed just one run in Hanshin’s win over Chunichi.

“Well, nobody’s perfect,” Tigers manger Akihiro Yano said. “The bottom line was he allowed just one run. He got a great ovation from the crowd, and I’m sure that meant a lot to him. I expect he’ll take heart from that, and work things out.”

Game highlights are HERE.