Category Archives: Baseball

NPB games, news of Aug. 14, 2019

Half of Wednesday’s six NPB games were one-side butt-kickings, and another became so in the late innings as the league leaders improved their position.

Do it your self, Japanese style

Today, we introduce one of the pennant stretch words one begins hearing in the second half “Jiryoku’V’shometsu.” This dire situation –自力V消滅 in Japanese — is the status of a team that cannot win the pennant without help from other teams. On Wednesday, the Hiroshima Carp and Rakuten Eagles, both received this dire prognosis of their pennant chances.

They can now win all their remaining games and still not win the pennant unless the Yomiuri Giants in the Carp’s Central League or the SoftBank Hawks in the Eagles’ Pacific League lose at least once to another team between now and the end of the season.

A lot is made in Japanese baseball of the idea of being able to steam to a goal under your own power and this is essential to the almost religious seriousness that accompanies NPB magic numbers, which we’ll get to at another time.

I’m still not certain why anybody cares about being able to reach a goal without help when every team in your league still has 50 games to play is important.

Pacific League

Marines 9, Fighters 4

At Tokyo Dome, Takashi Ogino homered on a 3-2 fastball that Kosei Yoshida (1-2) threw down the middle of the strike zone like he was aiming for a bulls-eye, and Lotte never trailed against Nippon Ham.

The 18-year-old legend from last summer’s summer national high school championships was making his third start and his first against PL teams. He threw mostly fastballs in the first inning and when he missed in the zone with them the Marines crushed them. A walk and a Daichi Suzuki two-run homer got the Marines off to a 3-0 jump start.

Ogino hit another home run in the second inning, while Leonys Martin hit his seventh in 18 career NPB games.

Marines rookie Kazuya Ojima (1-3) allowed a run over six innings

Game highlights are HERE.

Lions 8, Buffaloes 7

At MetLife Dome, Seibu came from behind twice, the second time on a two-run, eighth-inning Hotaka Yamakawa homer, his 34th, to beat Orix. A night after five batters were hit by pitches and three were ejected, only one batter, Yamakawa, was plunked.

Game highlights are HERE.

Hawks 12, Eagles 3

At Rakuten Seimei Park, Shota Takeda (4-3) allowed three runs, two earned, over eight innings to win as a starter for the first time since April 11, while leadoff man Shuhei Fukuda and Yurisbel Gracial combined for seven hits, four runs and four RBIs in SoftBank’s win over Rakuten.

New Eagle Ren Wada tied it 3-3 in the bottom of the first with a two-run home run, but Rakuten starter Takahiro Norimoto (2-3) allowed six runs, five earned, over four innings to take the loss.

Game highlights are HERE.

Central League

Giants 7, Carp 1

At Mazda Stadium, Tomoyuki Sugano (9-5), without a win since July 2, allowed a run over eight innings, and Yomiuri broke out of its scoring funk with him on the mound with six late runs in a win over Hiroshima.

Hayato Sakamoto doubled twice and walked, scored twice and drove in the Giants’ tie-breaking run in the seventh inning.

Swallows 15, BayStars 2

At Jingu Stadium, 39-year-old Masanori Ishikawa (6-5) allowed one hit and one walk over eight innings, while Yakult hammered Haruhiro Hamaguchi (6-4) for seven runs in the first inning.

Tetsuto Yamada opened the scoring with his 30th home run, while Wladimir Balentien hit his 25th and 19-year-old rookie Munetaka Murakami hit his 26th and took over the CL RBI lead.

Ishikawa had a no-hitter going until one out in the eighth when BayStars rookie Yukiya Ito hit his fourth homer in seven career games.

Tigers 6, Dragons 3

At Nagoya Dome, Hanshin rattled off six-straight hits after Daisuke Yamai (3-5) retired the first two batters in the fifth to overturn a 3-0 deficit in a win over Chunichi.

Tigers rookie Seiya Kinami sparked the fifth-inning rally with a pinch-hit single and homered in his next at-bat.

NPB games, news of Aug. 13, 2019

Things got ugly in Tokorozawa on Tuesday, when five batters were hit by pitches the benches cleared three times, two pitchers were ejected for hitting batters while under a warning, and one coach was tossed for charging the mound.

Only one pitch really looked dangerous, when Kaima Hirai left a mark on Shuhei Fukuda with a 152-kph fastball to the ribs in the ninth. After the benches cleared for the last time, Lions manager Hatsuhiko Tsuji put his arms around Buffaloes skipper Norifumi Nishimura’s shoulders and must have said something positive, since Nishimura was laughing when he got back to the visitors dugout.

The whole thing reminded me of a clip from Saturday Night Live, when a clip of a “thrilling chase sequence” by comedians Bob and Ray was aired. You can see it in the final 1-1/2 minutes of the following Youtube video.

Pacific League

Lions 11, Buffaloes 4

At MetLife Dome, Shuta Tonosaki set a career high in home runs with his 19th, a first-inning, three-run shot that set Seibu on the road to a bizarre, one-sided victory over Orix.

The game became an encore of the feisty on-field confrontation that flared nine days earlier in Osaka. On Tuesday, Buffaloes outfield and base running coach Manabu Satake was tossed for charging the mound after Orix catcher Kenya Wakatsuki was struck by a pitch in the fourth inning.

On Aug. 4, an Orix hitter was hit in the bottom of the first inning and Lions first base coach Tomoaki Sato started jawing with the Buffaloes bench after Lions catcher Masatoshi Okada was hit in the second — a scenario that repeated itself on Tuesday.

Things were clearly on edge in Saitama Prefecture when Shunta Goto was hit in the third inning. And hen several Orix coaches came out to see to him, the Lions were expecting something, because the Seibu bench and bullpen both emptied.

After Satake was ejected the umpires issued a warning, and with the Lions leading 5-2 in the bottom of the fourth, it looks like Wakatsuki decided to get some payback. He called for three pitches well inside against Lions catcher Tomoya Mori. The third one hit him, and Buffaloes pitcher Daiki Tajima was ejected.

All told, the Lions officially hit four Buffaloes batters. Shuhei Fukuda might just have had a close call in the first inning when he was awarded first, but he did get hit in the ninth by reliever Kaima Taira — who was also ejected and instigated the final bench clearing.

“We’re getting hit too many times,” Orix manager Norifumi Nishimura said with anger in his voice — although the only two of the whole bunch that may have been intentional was the Buffaloes hitting the Lions catchers — and might go some ways to explain why Satake was so incensed when Orix’s catcher got hit.

Lions skipper Hatsuhiko Tsuji said he was embarrassed by the whole thing.

“This leaves a bad taste in your mouth,” Tsuji said. “As a professional, I think it’s an embarrassment. It’s all our fault.”

Lions cleanup hitter Takeya Nakamura then put the game to rest by clearing the bases with a three-run double.

Game highlights are HERE.

Hawks 3, Eagles 0

At Rakuten Seimei Park, rookie Rei Takahashi (10-3) surrendered seven singles but got three double plays turned behind him in 6-2/3 scoreless innings.

Rakuten rookie Hayato Yuge (2-1) gave up a run in each of the first two innings, and left having struck out six in his six innings on the mound. Hawks leadoff man Keizo Kawashima opened with a walk, was doubled to third by Seiichi Uchikawa and scored on a ground out.

Hawks catcher Takuya Kai doubled with two outs in the second, went to third on an infield single and scored on a delayed double steal. the Hawks final run came on Alfredo Despaigne’s 30th home run. Fellow Cuban Livan Moinelo worked the ninth to record his fourth save.

Game highlights are HERE.

Marines 6, Fighters 1

At Tokyo Dome, Nippon Ham closer Ryo Akiyoshi (0-3) surrendered five runs in the ninth inning, as Lotte came from behind to hand the Fighters their sixth-straight loss.

In an unusual pitching progression — even for the Fighters – Mizuki Hori put up his fourth-straight scoreless first inning as an opener, and Johnny Barbato walked two over his two innings before giving way to Toru Murata. The former Cleveland Indian allowed a single over three innings.

The Marines tied it in the seventh off Naoya Ishikawa, who gave up a leadoff double to Seiya Inoue and a Katsuya Kakunaka RBI single.

Ayumu Ishikawa started for the Marines and allowed a run over 6-1/3 innings while striking out five. Three relievers retired the next five batters, before the Marines broke the game open in the top of the ninth.

Game highlights are HERE.

Central League

Carp 2, Giants 1, 11 innings

At Mazda Stadium, Seiya Suzuki doubled and came home in the 11th on a sacrifice fly by reserve catcher Yoshitaka Isomura to earn a walk-off win that snapped Yomiuri’s five-game win streak.

Suzuki singled in the second and scored from first with no outs when Ryuhei Matsuyama lined one into the wide-open gap in right-center for an opposite-field double.

The Giants tied it in the eighth, when Hayato Sakamoto outsmarted the Carp on the bases. With one out and runners on the corners, Sakamoto stopped halfway to second, allowing the lead runner Shinnosuke Shigenobu to score before the Carp could complete the double play.

Swallows 8, BayStars 7

At Jingu Stadium, Wladimir Balentien decided a see-saw game with a seventh-inning RBI double that plated Norichika Aoki, and three relievers sealed the win with scoreless innings over DeNA.

Scott McGough, who gave up runs in his previous three outings as closer, worked a scoreless eighth to set up David Huff, who earned his first save in Japan.

Tigers 0, Dragons 0, 12 innings

At Nagoya Dome, Hanshin had two runners on in an inning seven different times thanks to eight hits and seven walks, but was unable to score against Chunichi.

News

Welcome No. 104 Kiyomiya

I wonder how many people knew that through Aug. 12, the Nippon Ham Fighters’ franchise had 103 different players bat fourth in their order. Sports Nippon did, so the paper alerted the public on Twitter that second-year slugger Kotaro Kiyomiya, their first-round pick in 2017, would make his debut in the four hole on Tuesday, becoming No. 104 in team history.

I’m sure someone must know or care, but I can’t quite guess whether one could count that community on one hand or not.