Category Archives: Baseball

NPB games, news of July 9, 2019

Takahiro Norimoto returned to duty for the first time this season with the Rakuten Eagles, and it was glorious. The right-hander struck out six while walking one and hitting one over six scoreless innings. He had good command of his fastball and splitter and mixed in some changeups and sliders to keep the Buffaloes honest in a 6-1 win that snapped the Eagles’ losing streak at 10.

“We got off to a great start this season, but honestly I think the guys were getting a little tired,” said Norimoto, who had elbow surgery on March 11. “Today I came intending to end this losing streak. “My teammates reassured me (with early run support). It really allowed me to relax and settle in.”

“This is where I belong. I had the operation so I could be 100 percent, so I’ve been pretty psyched up to get out here, and once I got here there was no holding me back.

Jabari Blash did most of the damage with his 21st home run, a two-out, three-run blast in the third inning, driving a fat 1-0 pitch nearly over the outfield seating in left at Rakuten Seimei Park with that loose easy swing of his.

The game highlights are HERE.

Marines 6, Fighters 1

Fighters manager Hideki Kuriyama has allowed only two starting pitchers to pitch past the fifth inning more than twice this season, with the rest getting pulled after two innings, or shortly after their second trip through the batting order. Those two are his workhorse, Kohei Arihara, and Naoyuki Uwasawa, who is out with a fractured kneecap.

On Tuesday, he sent Masaru Nakamura out, ostensibly to get through five innings, but the second trip through the Lotte order was too much for him. The 27-year-old right-hander, who has walked more batters in his career than he’s struck out, took the mound for the first time in two years. He faced five batters in the third, and all of them reached and walked four batters in his two-plus innings.

Ikuhiro Kiyota euthanized Nakamura’s stint with a grand slam that made it 6-0.

The game highlights are HERE.

Hawks 3, Lions 2

Seibu starter Ken Togame (3-4) fell to 5-13 in his career against SoftBank despite having his second straight solid start against the Hawks, allowing three runs, one earned, over seven innings. After an error put the hosts’ leadoff man on in the first, Shuhei Fukuda belted a two-run homer, and that was essentially the ballgame.

The Hawks had five of their seven base runners in a three-run first, while Seibu left nine on base.

The game highlights are HERE.

Giants 1, Tigers 0

Christian Villanueva doubled in the eighth off Onelki Garcia (2-4) and pinch runner scored on a groundout after a sacrifice moved him to third as Yomiuri edged Hanshin.

Toshiki Sakurai (4-1) threw seven scoreless innings for the Giants, giving way to Kota Nakagawa in the bottom of the eighth. Scott Mathieson was pulled after retiring the first two batters in the ninth, and lefty Kazuto Taguchi faced two batters en route to recording his first career save.

The game highlights are HERE.

Dragons 6, Carp 3

Yohei Oshima drove in two runs and scored another at Nagoya Dome as Chunichi handed Hiroshima its 10th straight loss.

BayStars 9, Swallows 4

Jose Lopez’s 19th home run, a fifth-inning grand slam iced the game as DeNA came from behind to beat Yakult at Jingu Stadium.

NPB games, news of July 8, 2019

By John E. Gibson
Guest Writer

The Tohoku Rakuten Eagles have lost the wind beneath their wings, and their fall from the top of the Pacific League standings continued Monday night in Yamagata Prefecture.

Orix used a Koji Oshiro sacrifice fly in the third inning, a two-out Yuma Mune RBI single in the seventh and seven scoreless innings from Taishi Yamaoka to send Rakuten to its 10th consecutive loss in a 2-0 decision.

Rakuten was leading the Pacific League when the skid started and is now at 39-39 and in fourth.

Yamaoka (6-2) fanned seven while holding the Eagles to one hit and one walk, and new closer Brandon Dickson tossed a perfect ninth for his sixth save as the Buffaloes won a close game at Kirayaka Stadium.

The skid is one shy of Rakuten’s franchise-worst mark, set in the team’s inaugural 2005 season.

The Buffaloes scored in the fourth when Ryoichi Adachi ran around catcher Kengo Horiuchi’s attempted tag on Oshiro’s fly to right. A replay request failed to overturn the call.

Steven Moya’s one-out single in the seventh opened the door for an insurance run. Keita Nakagawa forced the pinch runner at second, but stole second, and scored on Mune’s single.

Rakuten’s Zelous Wheeler got tossed in the eighth for arguing a strike call on a check-swing, perhaps showing the growing frustration amid the losing streak.

The Eagles will look to get a boost on Tuesday, when right-hander Takahiro Norimoto is slated to make his first start of the season.

The game highlights are HERE.

Fighters 5, Marines 3

Sho Nakata slugged a pair of two-run homers for Nippon Ham and Kenshi Sugiya added a solo shot to back Hiroshi Urano (2-1), who went five strong innings for the victory over Lotte at Zozo Marine Stadium.

The game highlights are HERE.

Hawks 8 Lions 7, 12 innings

Pinch-hitter Ryoya Kurihara of SoftBank hit a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to end a marathon battle against Seibu at Tokyo Dome in which both teams’ closers blew ninth-inning saves to send the game into extra innings.

Down to their last strike with a runner on in the ninth, Tomoya Mori hit a two-run homer to the opposite field off rookie Hiroshi Kaino, taking advantage of the shortest power allies in Japan. Lions closer Tatsushi Masuda returned the favor in the home half, surrendering a liner into the stands from Seiji Uebayashi to tie it.

The game highlights are HERE.

Dragons 3, Carp 2

Daisuke Yamai, at 41 NPB’s oldest pitcher, helped push Hiroshima’s skid to a season-worst nine games as Chunchi topped the Carp at Nagoya Dome.
Yamai (3-3) limited the Carp to a run on two hits with four walks and two strikeouts over 6.1 innings, and Zoilo Almonte, Dayan Viciedo, and Yota Kyoda all knocked in runs for the Dragons.

“I may be 41, but I don’t feel like I’m 41. I intend to keep plugging away, so please cheer for me,” Yamai said after his first win over the Carp in nine years.

Swallows 5 BayStars 3

Taishi Hirooka capped a four-run second inning with a two-run blast, and Hiroki Yamada (1-0) earned his first win in two seasons as Yakult topped Yokohama DeNA at Jingu Stadium.

Yakult’s bullpen allowed just two singles over the final 3-2/3 innings to close out the win with David Huff and Scott McGough working 1-2-3 innings in the eighth and ninth, respectively. McGough, who hasn’t allowed a run in 14 straight games, recorded his third save.

Giants 4, Tigers 3

Yang Dai-kang’s tiebreaking RBI h9t in the eighth was the difference as Yomiuri outlasted Hanshin at Koshien Stadium.

Closer Kota Nakagawa came in to pitch a scoreless eighth, while Scott Mathieson, in his second game back from an adductor strain, worked around a pair of two-out walks in the ninth to earn his first save of the season.

The game highlights are HERE.

The short and long of Hideki Kuriyama

–By Jim Allen

After two straight days of two-inning “short starters,” manager Hideki Kuriyama got five innings of one-run ball from Urano in a more-conventional start.

As John Gibson (@JBWPodcast) and I mentioned this week on the podcast, figuring out manager Hideki Kuriyama’s pitching staff usage would require some serious elbow grease. Urano was making his second start of the season after allowing two runs over two innings the previous Sunday. It was a short outing, but was it one of Kuriyama’s typical two-inning short starts? I have no idea. Until then, Urano had only been used as a middle reliever this season.

Even when he took the mound for the first time in a week, Urano was only allowed to throw 67 pitches. He wasn’t dominating, and one key to Kuriyama’s pitching staff jigsaw puzzle may well be Urano’s batter-faced total: 18. It could be that Kuriyama only expects his second-tier starters to go through the opposing lineup twice.