Category Archives: Baseball

NPB games, news of June 8, 2019

With eight home runs through the first four games of interleague, the SoftBank Hawks entered Saturday undefeated against the Central League this season with an NPB-high 79 home runs. Kris Johnson kept them in the park on Saturday only for the Japan Series champs to turn the tied with the help of a couple of fifth-inning bunts.

With five wins in six road games on Saturday the PL, which hasn’t lost a Japan Series since 2012, improved to 19-10 after four days of interleague competition.

Interleague

Hawks 4, Carp 2

At Mazda Stadium, Seiichi Uchikawa doubled in the tie-breaking run in the fifth inning after two bunts, resulting in an error and a sacrifice, put the go-ahead run on second with one out against Kris Johnson (5-4).

Rei Takahashi (6-1) bounced back from allowing a career-high six runs in his previous start to allow two innings over seven innings. After a scoreless inning from Shota Takeda, the Hawks turned to Livan Moinelo in the ninth inning instead of Yuito Mori, who had pitched the previous four games.

Moinelo worked a 1-2-3 inning to record his second save.

Fighters 10, Tigers 5

At Koshien Stadium, former Orix Buffaloes ace Chihiro Kaneko left after throwing six scoreless innings for the first time in his career. The right-hander gave up three hits and a walk, while striking out four.

Kotaro Kiyomiya singled in Taishi Ota as the Fighters took the lead against Minoru Iwata in a two-run fourth. Ryo Watanabe highlighted Nippon Ham’s seven-run seventh with a grand slam. Iwata allowed eight runs, 10 hits, two walks and a hit batsman.

Eagles 2, Dragons 1

At Nagoya Dome, Takayuki Kishi (2-0) continued to impress in his third game since coming back from an Opening Day hamstring injury. The right-hander allowed a run on six hits over seven innings and improved to 8-1 in his career against the Dragons.

Chunichi’s Enny Romero (3-5) struck out 10 over seven innings but took the loss after rookie Ryosuke Tatsumi doubled to open the seventh and scored as a result of back-to-back sacrifices. Tatsumi went 2-for-4, his second-inning single helping set up the Eagles’ first run.

Alan Busenitz and Yuki Matsui came out of the pen to retire the last six Dragons, with Matsui earning his 18th save.

BayStars 7, Lions 3

At Yokohama Stadium, DeNA starter Shoichi Ino (3-2) allowed two quick runs, but ended up stealing the show. The right-hander allowed no more runs over six innings, drove in the tying run and scored the go-ahead run in the win over Seibu.

Edwin Escobar, Spencer Patton and Yasuaki Yamasaki held the potent Lions offense to a run over three innings, while the BayStars hitters bludgeoned lefty Daiki Enokida (2-2) for four runs on nine hits in 2-1/3 innings.

Buffaloes 5, Swallows 4

At Jingu Stadium, Stefen Romero opened the scoring with a two-run home run off David Buchanan (1-3) and brought Orix from a run down in the third with a three-run shot.

Tetsuto Yamada homered off Buffaloes starter Taisuke Yamaoka (5-2) to tie it in the first, but once he had the lead again, the right-hander allowed one run over his last three innings, and four relievers shut down Yakult the rest of the way.

Marines 6, Giants 5

At Tokyo Dome, Lotte handed new Yomiuri closer Kota Nakagawa (2-1) his first loss as a pro, scoring four times in the ninth to overcome a 3-2 deficit.

Nakagawa surrendered the tying run on a leadoff double and a one-out Daichi Suzuki RBI single. With two outs, he was pulled after allowing another single. Right-hander Seiji Tahara, however gave up an RBI single to Shogo Nakamura, and a two-run double to Tsuyoshi Sugano.

With two outs in the bottom of the ninth, Giants cleanup hitter Kazuma Okamoto made it close with a two-run homer off Marines closer Naoya Masuda, who earned his 12th save.

News

Sugano to return Sunday

Yomiuri Giants ace Tomoyuki Sugano will be activated on Sunday to pitch against the Lotte Marines in his first action since May 15 after feeling discomfort in his lower back during practice five days later. Sugano, who has won the last two Sawamura Awards is 5-3 with a 4.36 ERA.

Yanagita not close to coming back

Nishinihon Sports reports that Hawks center fielder Yuki Yanagita is not expected back from a muscle tear behind his left knee until after the all-star break at the end of July.

Yanagita is one of only two players in NPB history along with Hall of Famer Sadaharu Oh to lead his league in on-base percentage and slugging average in four straight seasons.

He was hurt on April 7. Although he was originally expected to be out only a few weeks, a second opinion suggested he take his rehab far more slowly. He only recently resumed jogging and is doing some light work off a tee.

The Hawks started the season without left fielder Yurisbel Gracial and fourth outfielder Akira Nakamura. Although both have since returned to duty, regular right fielder Seiji Uebayashi is now out with injury.

NPB games, news of June 7, 2019

The SoftBank Hawks, who have won more interleague games than any other team in Japan, improved to 4-0 against the Central League on Friday, when they opened their Japan Series-rematch series against the three-time defending CL champion Hiroshima Carp.

In Yokohama, Seibu Lions third baseman Takeya Nakamura singled in a run, his 184th RBI in interleague play, moving him out of a tie with DeNA manager Alex Ramirez for the career interleague lead in runs driven in.

With three wins and two losses on Friday, the Swallows and Buffaloes were rained out, the Pacific League leads this season’s melee 14-9.

Interleague

Hawks 6, Carp 3

At Mazda Stadium, Kodai Senga (6-1) struck out eight over seven scoreless innings, pitching SoftBank past the Carp.

The Hawks broke the ice in the fifth on a two-out, Texas leaguer to right off the bat of career minor leaguer Yusuke Masago. Yurisbel Gracial homered for the fourth-straight game in the sixth, off rookie starter Hiroki Tokoda. Hawks catcher Takuya Kai drove in two more in the inning with a double off the top of the wall in dead center off reliever Yasunori Kikuchi.

Coming off his first loss of the season, Senga gave up three hits and walked two. He retired the last 10 batters he faced. Lefty Livan Moinelo retired the first two Carp batters in the eighth before giving up back-to-back singles and Seiya Suzuki‘s 16th home run of the season.

Yuito Mori worked around a one-out walk to record his 17th save.

Tokoda (5-3) gave up four runs on six hits and two walks, while striking out two over 5-1/3 innings.

Giants 4, Marines 3

At Tokyo Dome, Kazuma Okamoto drove in Yomiuri’s winning run for the second straight night. Restored to the No. 4 spot in the order after he homered to break a 1-1 tie the night before, Okamoto singled home Yoshihiro Maru in a come-from-behind win over Lotte.

Rookie Akihiro Wakabayashi tied it 2-2 in the fourth by homering with a man on against Kota Futaki. The right-hander had retired the first two batters he faced in the inning, and did so again in the fifth before allowing Maru’s two-out double and back-to-back RBI singles from Okamoto and Takumi Oshiro.

Cristopher Mercedes (5-3) allowed just two run on seven hits and four walks over five innings. After three scoreless innings from the bullpen, closer Kota Nakagawa allowed a run in the ninth but nailed down his seventh save.

Futaki (4-4) struck out eight, but walked three and surrendered seven hits over five innings.

Lions 6, BayStars 2

At Yokohama Stadium, Shuta Tonosaki powered the offense and
Kona Takahashi allowed two runs over seven innings as Seibu beat DeNA.

Tonosaki, doubled in a run and scored in the fourth inning, and homered for the third straight game, breaking a 2-2 fifth-inning tie. He doubled in another run in the Lions’ two-run seventh.

Takahashi allowed three hits and two walks, while striking out five and the Lions’ bullpen retired six straight batters to close it out. DeNA starter Shota Imanaga struck out 12, but walked five and gave up seven hits, allowing five runs over seven innings.

Dragons 13, Eagles 3

At Nagoya Dome, Yuya Yanagi (6-2) gave up a run over seven innings, while Chunichi scored four runs off of each of Rakuten’s first three pitchers.

Atsushi Fujii singled and scored in the first and cracked a three-run home run in the second as the Dragons handed the Eagles their third loss in interleague, dropping them into third place.

Fighters 3, Tigers 2

At Koshien Stadium, Kohei Arihara (7-2) worked six innings, allowing two runs, and Taishi Ota‘s seventh-inning sacrifice fly snapped a 2-2 tie as Nippon Ham got past past Hanshin.

Arihara allowed four hits and two walks while striking out seven, while lefty Naoki Miyanishi struck out the side in the seventh. Naoya Ishikawa and closer Ryo Akiyoshi furnished two more scoreless innings, with Akiyoshi recording his 12th save.

Yuki Nishi (3-5) gave up three on eight hits and two walks over seven innings to take the loss.

News

Tigers to deactivate set-up man Johnson

Pierce Johnson, who leads the Central League with 19 holds and the Hanshin Tigers pitching staff with 28 games, will be deactivated on Saturday. Johnson, who was given the night off on Thursday in Chiba, went to the bullpen for about 10 minutes on Friday before returning to the clubhouse.

According to Sports Nippon, the club said, “We are concerned about fatigue from his heavy workload. He is being deactivated in order to be refreshed. He did not suffer an injury.” Actually, the word they use is that there was no “accident,” that being the word for an event causing damage to a body or some equipment.

The late great Wayne Graczyk used to rip into that usage the same way he’d talk about “timely errors” — run-scoring errors.