Category Archives: Baseball

Tatsunami leads hit parade

Longtime second baseman Kazuyoshi Tatsunami and former Dragons ace and BayStars manager Hiroshi Gondo are two of the newest members of Japan’s Hall of Fame.

2019 votes tells us hits matter more than anything

Kazuyoshi Tatsunami was admitted to Japan’s Baseball Hall of Fame on Tuesday in a vote that favored 2,000-hit guys. Tatsunami, with 2,480 career hits got 287 votes, eight more than needed for his selection, while two first-timers with 2,000 hits, Shinya Miyamoto and Alex Ramirez, shot up the rankings.

Tuffy Rhodes, easily the most deserving player on the ballot along with former major league catcher Kenji Jojima were left in their dust.

Ramirez is a decent candidate, and there’s nothing one can do to make Rhodes’ career any better or worse than it was. It is not an insult that more people voted for Ramirez, because we all look at things differently.

The way I see, it, Ramirez had 208 more hits than Rhodes, but Rhodes hit 84 more home runs, stole 67 more bases, scored 234 more runs, and — wait for it — drew 650 more walks. That’s a huge number in two careers that lasted about the same length.

Kazuyoshi Tatsunami, left front, with fellow Hall of Famer Hiroshi Gondo. Behind them are Tatsunam’s high school coach Junji Nakamura and Gondo’s predecessor as Chunichi Dragons ace, Shigeru Sugishita.

Rhodes, who was on 36.6 percent of the ballots two years ago, was at 22.8 percent last year and 29.6 this year. By contrast, Miyamoto, a sturdy player and a good leader if an underwhelming bat despite 2,133 career hits got 41.2 percent and Tomonori Maeda (2,119 hits) matched Rhodes’ 29.6 share.

To be fair, this leaves me at a loss to explain the lack of improvement for Takuro Ishii, a player of Tatsunami’s caliber with more speed and defense but fewer extra-base hits. Ishii. At 19.3 percent last year, Ishii improved to just 24.8 percent this time around.

The ultimate sacrifice

Or maybe its not just hits, but hits and sacrifices. That could explain why Masahiro Kawai, another solid baseball man of that generation was named on 50.7 percent of this year’s ballots. Kawai had 5m528 plate appearances with a .676 career OPS. The thing that sets him apart is his sacrifice hit total, a Japan-record 533. Like Miyamoto, he bunted more than he walked.

The last year there were no knockout first-year candidates, 2017, voters selected the player who got the most votes who was still on the ballot. That was Tsutomu Ito, a superb catcher and good hitter in an underrepresented position. But Ito is also fourth in career sacrifice bunts with 305. So Kawai is the leader, Miyamoto is third and both may be going into the Hall of Fame with Ito. This begs the question of why voters overlooked Ken Hirano, whose 451 career sacrifices rank him second. What could they have been thinking?

Or is thinking optional?

On good faith

Murray, Ohtani and baseball’s fugitive slave act

The news that the Oakland Athletics have the option of tipping the scales their way in the pursuit of two-sport star Kyler Murray, has shone a spotlight on MLB’s labor policies, and it’s not a pretty picture.

The current collective bargaining agreement between MLB and its players union deals a huge blow to the ability of amateur athletes to get market value for their services.

These rules limited Murray to a minor league contract and a fixed limit on the size of his signing bonus based on his draft slot — he was taken ninth overall. Unfortunately, Murray’s ascension as a pro football prospect have given him leverage he didn’t have when he agreed to the A’s deal.

Because both parties negotiated their original deal in good faith, the A’s are within their rights to put more money on the table.

Let’s talk about good faith for a second.

Shohei Ohtani, who was not an amateur like Murray, but an established professional and former MVP in Japan’s Pacific League, the world’s third-best after MLB’s two circuits, was told, “Sorry. But our rules say you’re an amateur.”

They might have added, “That’s because we can write our rules to say you’re an amateur. We have to do that because our owners are otherwise too irresponsible–they can’t help themselves from paying market value for amateur players and thus need to be coerced into exploiting our monopoly and depriving you of your rights. Got it?”

So instead of maybe $150 million as a 22-year-old when teams were allowed to exceed spending limits on international professional “amateurs” or waiting until 2020 and becoming a 25-year-old free agent — in MLB’s eyes — Ohtani signed a standard minor league contract with a signing bonus of around $3.5 million.

It’s too bad Ohtani wasn’t a football player. He could have had his agent enter him in the NFL draft, and then he would have been eligible to renegotiate, or perhaps not. MLB takes a harsh view of teams trying to woo players by making up the difference between their real market value and MLB’s soviet-style planned economy price.

Of course, Ohtani could have said — after signing — that he wanted to go home to play in Japan. That he got homesick. It happens. People understand. Perhaps the Angels and MLB would understand that $150 million would make him less homesick, perhaps not.

Ohtani, however, couldn’t threaten to return to NPB, because his old outfit has signed on to baseball’s version of America’s Fugitive Slave Act, which says no NPB team could then hire him — effectively putting him out of work. Take our rules or go wash dishes.

This wouldn’t be a problem if baseball adopted a more liberal system. You sign a player for as many years as you want to commit to him and pay him what you have to. When that period expires he’s free to go. If he wants to leave in the meantime, you can name your price or refuse. It’s essentially a free market. Unfortunately, professional baseball is ideologically opposed to free markets in any shape or form — except in its belief that its less-skilled employees such as minor leaguers and entry-level staff be paid as little as possible.

So the A’s and Murray, like the Angels and Ohtani, were all dealing in good faith. But when will MLB start doing that?