OK. It doesn’t quite have the same ring to it as Paul Simon’s iconic line from “Mrs. Robinson,” but how often does one come across a baseball player connected with hair cuts and shaves?
Maglie, of course, was known as “the barber” because he gave threw up and in, giving batters close shaves. In that respect, Maglie’s closest NPB comp was Hall of Famer Masaji “razor” Hiramatsu, known for buzzing batters with his “shoot” — a four-seam fastball that’s thrown slightly off center to give it arm-side run.
But from this year, NPB has a real barber, former Minnesota Twin Kennys Vargas, has joined the Lotte Marines and is open for business. In a story that ran in Sankei Sports, Vargas said he’s been cutting hair since he was 13 and has given haircuts to Puerto Rico compatriot Neftali Soto of the DeNA BayStars. In a video shared by the Marines, we get a look at the big man in action, giving Marines communications director Kajiwara a trim.
Japan jones
Vargas said he’d been trying to get to Japan for three years, and only got his opportunity after spending all of 2018 with the Twins’ Triple-A club. With his wife and two young children, a five-year-old daughter and a one-year-old son, set to join him, Vargas is keen to learn the game here so he can stick.
“Three years ago, they (Japanese teams) started looking for me. I was playing for the Minnesota Twins,” he said. “But the Twins wouldn’t let me go. Last year, I spent the whole year in Triple-A, so I decided to go to Japan because I didn’t want to spend be in Triple-A. I knew I had the talent to make some money in Japan for my family. That’s when the decision was made.”
It will not be easy making the grade in a six-team league for a player who struck out in nearly a third of his Triple-A at-bats. Few players have succeeded here having done that, with Wily Mo Pena being about the best, and even then it was a tough slog.
“You have to forget about the United States,” Vargas said. “You’re in Japan. You have to deal with the situation in Japan. Forget about the States. As soon as my family gets here, I’ll concentrate 100 percent on what I’m doing. I’ll see America in October.”
“They study a lot, the hitters, the pitching, so you need to be mentally strong to try and produce at this level. ‘He can’t hit inside, so let’s throw him inside. Or throw him offspeed. They’re always trying to figure out, and you figure them out.”
In addition to having a few friends playing ball in Japan and an experienced teammate in Brandon Laird, Vargas admitted to having a mentor in former Hawks outfielder and Puerto Rican compatriot Pedro Valdes.
“My friend,” Vargas said of Valdes. “He helped me a lot. He’s like my secret hitting coach. When he saw me, and he saw me doing something wrong, he called me right away. He said, ‘Don’t lower your hands too much.’ He’s always there for me.”
“There are a lot of opportunities for guys here. There used
to be just two foreigners on the major league level, but it’s way better. This
is a great show in Japan. The stadiums are good. The fans are great. Coming to
Japan is going to be a good decision, as soon as you start hitting.”
Ichiro Suzuki announced his retirement at a press conference after midnight in Tokyo on Friday, March 22. I have translated the entire press conference from start to finish to give you a sense of how it went down. I hope you enjoy. I have included the original Japanese text. The questions have been mercilessly shortened, however.
He made two curtain calls, once after he left the game at the start of the bottom of the eighth inning, and again after the Mariners’ extra-inning win over the Athletics. What follows is the Japanese and English text of his retirement press conference early on the morning of March 22 in Tokyo.
Ichiro Suzuki tips his cap to fans at Tokyo Dome as he leaves his last big league game. on March 21 ,2019. Photo by Seito Takamizawa
–You succeeded in realizing your dream of becoming a
pro baseball player. What have you gained?
“I don’t really know if I succeeded or not. Where
do you measure it from? Because if you can’t do that, then I’m unable to judge.
I dislike that word, “success.” Trying the major leagues, or any other world, I
think requires great courage because you are taking on the challenge of a world
that’s new for you. In that sense I would use the word “success,” but that’s
because you go because you think you’ll succeed. If you don’t go because you
think you can’t be successful, I think that will become a source of regret. Basically, I try things
because I want to do them. But what have I gained? I guess that’s how I feel
about it. I wanted to get about 200 hits, and I thought I could. My first year
our team won 116 games, 93 the next two. So in those three years I didn’t think
winning was such a difficult thing. It is in fact extremely hard. That
realization might be the big thing I took away.”
–You do your offseason training in Kobe. Now that
you’ve retired do you have some emotion to want to repay a debt of gratitude to
the city?
“Kobe’s streets are special to me. As for repaying,
I wonder what that might be. From my standpoint as a player, I thought of
nothing but continuing my career and playing as long as I could. Kobe? Repay a
debt of gratitude? I suppose I can do my best to pay them some taxes.”
–(Japanese) players who go to the majors now follow a
path from playing (in the high school
tournaments) at Koshien Stadium, and from there to Japanese pro ball and then
the majors. Based on your own experiences if there was a different a system, that
would make it easier for Japanese to go to the majors, what would that be? This
is hypothetical, but could there be some kind of developmental system or is
playing in Nippon Professional Baseball still the best way?
“I really don’t know in much detail about systems
as such. My baseball foundations were laid in Japan for my future of playing in
MLB. But in the case of building the necessary foundation in order to play in
MLB, I know that the sooner you go the better, but Japanese baseball still has
much to teach, so it’s really not fair to look just at the different systems.”
–What did you Japanese baseball teach you?
“One could argue that from the standpoint of
fundamentals, how to play the game, Japanese junior high school-level players
may be better than major leaguers because of the focus on teamwork through
things like relay plays. We (Japanese) can execute those things without being
told. That’s Japanese baseball, but over there, well… the players used to be
athletic and have high individual potential, and I think that is still the case,
but (my hope that teammates would become better fundamentally) it was so
frustrating. Eventually, it became so frustrating I just put it out of my mind.”
–We were looking forward to facing the Angels’ Shohei
Ohtani, but it didn’t come to pass. Did you want to face him?
“I think I answered that already, but my thinking
is he is a guy who has to be No. 1 in the world. It’s unfortunate about a
matchup against each other. I wanted to pitch against Shohei if that had been
possible. Please don’t misunderstand that. ”
–What kind of player do you think Shohei Ohtani will
become?
“What will he be? I think that’s something only a
fortune teller can explain. If one was capable of pitching and hitting, what I
would like to do is pitch one season and bat the next. In that way one could
win the Cy Young Award one year and win the home run title the next. That’s
because it’s something I can’t even consider. After all, Shohei is the kind of
player who invites that kind of impression. He’s already proved he’s a player
who is different from others. I think that playing two ways is pretty cool. You
don’t look like that answer is going to satisfy you.”
“OK. Let’s say he wins 20 games in one year as a
pitcher, and hits 50 home runs the next and is MVP. That’s a monster, but it’s
not something you can exclude as a possibility. That’s kind of how I look at him.”
–It is said you agreed with the sentiment that you
would hate the idea of yourself as a retired player.
“I don’t think I would say, ‘I hate that.’ I don’t
believe I said I dislike the idea of myself as someone who isn’t a player.”
–So can you imagine yourself as something other than a
baseball player?
“Since you don’t like that (answer), do you mean seeing myself playing a different kind of baseball? I already talked about that. I’m kind of hungry and my concentration is fading. My recollection of what I said before is…Did I talk about “kusayakyu” (backlot baseball)? In any case, I think that would be fun. I would be the kind of player who masters kusayakyu. In that case, I’d be really serious at it. Are you listening?” “I am so hungry. Is this not enough? How long have we been going at this? An hour? 1 hour, 20 minutes? Oh my. I was kind of hoping to be out with people until late, and now I’m starving.”
–When you look back on your career, what are you proud
of (from Mr. Kobayashi of the Daily Sports)?
“Hold on. I think I answered that already. Mr.
Kobayashi is your concentration also wavering? I absolutely definitely answered
that, so that’s one less question for me.”
–When you were in elementary school, you wrote in your
graduation essay ‘My dream is to be a top-level baseball player.’ What would
you like to say to that boy that was you?
“Listen kid. You’re not going to get a 100 million yen ($900,000) signing bonus. Yes, that’s right. No, we say to have big dreams, but they are also hard. I also wrote that I wanted to be a No. 1 draft pick with a bonus of 100 million, but that proved beyond my grasp. So in a sense, is that not frustration, too? Is that a good place to end this? I really want to polish this off properly, so OK one last question.”
–During your first time with the Mariners, you said a
number of times that ‘I feel lonely when I play.’ But with the Yankees and
Marlins, your role changed. Then you had that situation last year, and now
you’ve retired. Did you continue to play with that feeling of loneliness? Or
did the nature of the loneliness you felt change?
“I don’t feel that anymore. At this stage, not at
all. This might be a little different (from what you meant), but when I arrived
in America, when I came to the majors, I became a foreigner, because I was in
America and that made me a foreigner there. Through this thing of becoming a
foreigner I began to consider other people, began to imagine things like the
pain of others.”