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NPB wrap 8-26-21

Injury to closer Matsui puts pressure on Eagles

Yuki Matsui is expected to be out for around a month after suffering pain in his right thigh in practice on Wednesday, Nikkan Sports reported Thursday. The Eagles started the day second in the Pacific League, three games back of the Orix Buffaloes.

“There’s no chance he’ll be back in 10 days (when he’ll first be eligible for reactivation),” Eagles skipper and general manager Kazuhisa Ishii said. “I think to return to full fitness, it’s going to be closer to a month.”

Matsui is 0-2 this season with 0.63 ERA. His 24 saves are second in the PL.

Without Matsui, Sung Chia-hao took over in the ninth on Thursday to secure the Eagles’ win over Orix.

In the Central League, a pair of butt kickings left the Hanshin Tigers two games ahead of the Yomiuri Giants ahead of the weekend’s games.

Live chat with former NPB star Leon Lee

Monday, Aug. 30, 11 am Japan; Sunday, Aug. 29, 7 pm Pacific Daylight Time.

Lee, who played 1,255 games over 10 years in Japan from 1978 to 1987 for the Lotte Orions, the Taiyo Whales, and Yakult Swallows. In addition to his accomplishments, Lee is a keen observer with a knack for explaining complicated things simply. 

Bring your questions and enjoy.

Exclusive for jballallen.com and newsletter subscribers.

Eagles 7, Buffaloes 6

At Sendai’s Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi, Orix and Rakuten had the first decision of what was to be a three-game top-of-the-table Pacific League clash, and it turned out to be pretty entertaining after Tuesday’s game was rained out and Wednesday’s ended in a tie.

The Eagles built a 5-0 lead for Takahiro Norimoto (8-4, 3.63), who worked around a pair of one-out first-inning hits. Orix rookie Soichiro Yamazaki (0-1, 5.63) did the opposite. The right-hander fell behind everyone and got punished for it in a four-run first inning, capped by Ryosuke Tatsumi’s two-run single that left fielder Masataka Yoshida came within a hair of catching for the final out.

After sending nine batters to the plate in the first, the Eagles loaded the bases with one out in the second, as Daichi Suzuki scored his second run, on a Takero Okajima sac fly.

Masataka Yoshida got Orix a fourth-inning run with his 20th homer, but Hideto Asamura and Hiroaki Shimauchi, who’d each singled in a run in the first, teamed up to make it 7-1 in the home half. Asamura walked and Shimauchi established a career high with his team-best 15th home run.

The home runs kept coming in the sixth, when Yutaro Sugimoto hit his team-best 21st, with Yuma Mune aboard, and Adam Jones hit his fourth, trimming the Eagles’ lead to three.

That was all for Norimoto. He left after 5-2/3 inning with a runner on, having allowed four runs on nine hits but no walks while striking out five.

The Buffaloes, however, only picked up the pace against the bullpen, scoring twice against Tomohito Sakai in the seventh. Okajima prevented that runner from scoring when he leaped in right field to make the final out and rob substitute catcher Masato Matsui of an RBI double.

The Buffaloes got the leadoff man on in the seventh, but were denied a knockout punch of an inning after Shuhei Fukuda surprised the Eagles with a beautiful bunt only to stumble and fall coming out of the box for the first out. Mune and Yoshida singled to drive in one run and Sugimoto plated another with a sacrifice fly.

Orix threatened again in the eighth. Kotaro Kurebayashi, singled with one out to reach base for the fourth time, and put two on against Tomohiro Anraku. Fukuda’s poor luck continued as he smoked a ball down the line, where Brandon Dixon was playing to snare it for the second out. With two outs, Mune drilled a liner to center that Tatsumi got a good jump on and just caught up with.

Sung then worked a 1-2-3 ninth, retiring Yoshida, Sugimoto and Jones to end it in style, but other than a disappointing final inning, these Buffaloes are scary.

Lions 3, Hawks 0

At MetLife Dome, the Seibu Lions also had to make due on Thursday without their MVPs from 2018, Hotaka Yamakawa, and 2019, Tomoya Mori, who were deactivated as suspected close contacts of Yamakawa’s personal assistant, who tested positive for COVID-19.

Rookie Yutaro Watanabe (2-2, 2.74) worked five innings, walking three, striking out five and allowing two singles. Four relievers held the Hawks to two walks and a hit the rest of the way. Closer Kaima Taira earned his 12th save.

The Lions got on the board in the first via the home run as 38-year-old Takeya Nakamura, a six-time PL home run champion, hit his 11th with 37-year-old Takumi Kuriyama aboard after a two-out single.

Brandon Taiga Tysinger, filling in at first for Yamakawa was hit by a pitch to open the Lions’ fourth and scored on a single by Toshihiro Okada, who’s filling in for Mori.

Hawks starter Shunsuke Kasaya (2-3, 5.40) allowed all three runs. He walked three and struck out six, while surrendering five hits.

The win moved the fourth-place Lions to within 4-1/2 games of the idle Hawks.

Carp 11, Giants 2

At Tokyo Dome, Hiroshima gave Giants ace Tomoyuki Sugano (2-5, 3.72) a hot reception in his first game since the Carp shelled him for four runs in 2-1/3 innings on July 1. Seiya Suzuki hit a two-run first-inning homer on a hanging 3-2 breaking ball, his 16th, and Shogo Sakakura followed with a solo shot, his sixth.

Suzuki stuck a fork in this game after reliever Chiaki Tone took the mound for the Giants in the seventh with a three-run home run, and Sakakura, not to be outdone by his teammate, blasted his seventh home run in the ninth, also with two on.

Allen Kuri (8-6, 3.74) allowed a run over six innings in which he gave up two hits but walked five. Kuri battled with umpire Kazuhiro Kobayashi over the definition of the strike zone, leading to a pair of walks that loaded the bases in the Giants’ fifth before the right-hander lost it and missed badly to Yoshihiro Maru forcing in a run.

The Giants’ other run came on Akihiro Wakabayashi’s fifth home run, in the seventh.

The Carp made it 5-1 in the sixth on a Sakakura single and a homer by Ryosuke Kikuchi, his ninth. Sugano threw a high slider away on an 0-2 pitch and Kikuchi swatted it out.

Giants left fielder Yoshiyuki Kamei saved Sugano a run with an inning-ending catch in the second, and Carp left fielder Ryoma Nishikawa prevented two from scoring when he ended the seventh by leaping for a drive at the wall with two runners on.

Giants-Carp highlights

Tigers 9, BayStars 3

At Kyocera Dome Osaka, Hanshin’s Joe Gunkel (7-1, 2.38), pitching for the first time since the BayStars tagged him for three runs over five innings in his July 14 loss, allowed two runs, one earned, over 6-1/3 innings and scored the eventual winning run in the third inning.

DeNA lefty Yuya Sakamoto (4-3, 4.58) allowed five runs over four innings to take the loss after going six innings and beating the Tigers in his previous start.

Koji Chikamoto hit Sakamoto’s first pitch of the game for his ninth home run, and Tyler Austin returned the favor. After Gunkel pitched a 1-2-3 first, Austin led off the second with his 21st home run.

Gunkel, however, opened the Tigers’ third with a single and scored the tie-breaking run on a groundout after Chikamoto doubled. Jerry Sands blasted a two-run home run, his 20th, and Yusuke Oyama tripled and scored on a Teruaki Sato sac fly.

Austin walked and scored from first in the sixth when left fielder Mel Rojas Jr. failed to stop a Toshiro Miyazaki single. That proved to be little more than a delaying action as rookie Takumu Nakano singled in one run in a three-run seventh and another in the eighth for good measure.

Friday’s starting pitchers

Eagles vs Marines: Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Masahiro Tanaka (4-5, 2.84) vs Kota Futaki (4-5, 4.31)

Lions vs Fighters: MetLife Dome 5:45 pm, 4:45 am EDT

Wataru Matsumoto (7-5, 3.32) vs Takahide Ikeda (3-9, 3.52)

Buffaloes vs Hawks: Kyocera Dome (Osaka) 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Yoshinobu Yamamoto (10-5, 1.76) vs Nick Martinez (7-2, 2.05)

Swallows vs BayStars: Tokyo Dome 5:30 pm, 4:30 am EDT

Yasunobu Okugawa (5-2, 3.88) vs Masaya Kyoyama (1-3, 6.35)

Dragons vs Giants: Vantelin Dome (Nagoya) 5:45 pm, 4:45 am EDT

Yudai Ono (3-8, 3.46) vs Shun Yamaguchi (2-2, 2.94)

Carp vs Tigers: Mazda Stadium 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Daichi Osera (5-3, 3.21) vs Yuki Nishi (4-8, 3.45)

Active roster moves 8/26/2021

Deactivated players can be re-activated from 9/5

Central League

Activated

GiantsP18Tomoyuki Sugano
GiantsP50Chiaki Tone
TigersP28Taiki Ono
TigersP36Masumi Hamachi
TigersP49Joe Gunkel

Dectivated

GiantsP54Daisuke Naoe
TigersP48Yukiya Saito
TigersP69Daichi Ishii

Pacific League

Activated

LionsP12Yutaro Watanabe
LionsC37Sena Tsuge
LionsIF49Brandon Taiga Tysinger
EaglesP13Kohei Morihara
EaglesP14Takahiro Norimoto
BuffaloesP63Soichiro Yamazaki

Dectivated

LionsC10Tomoya Mori
LionsIF3Hotaka Yamakawa
EaglesP1Yuki Matsui

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NPB Wrap 8-25-21

We waited an extra day for the showdown between the Pacific League’s top two teams, the Orix Buffaloes and Rakuten Eagles, and we get a tie. There are days when I wonder why they even play.

The Marines and Hawks each won, pushing third-place Lotte a half-game back of the Eagles with SoftBank another half-game further back in fourth.

The Yomiuri Giants were the sole winners among the Central League’s top teams, moving them one game behind the leading Hanshin Tigers, who lost, and one ahead of the Yakult Swallows, who tied.

Sugano, Gunkel return to mound

Giants ace Tomoyuki Sugano was named to start Yomiuri’s game on Thursday against the Hiroshima Carp, the first time he’ll take the mound with the first team in nearly two months. On July 2, the right-hander was deactivated for the fourth time this season.

On Aug. 19, Sugano allowed a run over four innings on the farm in a game in which he hit 150 kph (93 mph), and has been working out with the first team at Tokyo Dome this week.

Meanwhile, Hanshin’s Joe Gunkel, who last pitched on July 14, when he suffered his only loss of the season, will get the start for the Tigers on Thursday against the DeNA BayStars. Gunkel (6-1, 2.47) allowed three runs over five innings in his last outing, also against DeNA, when he suffered his only loss of the season.

In Wednesday’s other news

The Orix Buffaloes have signed former Padres and Mexico right-hander Cesar Vargas, while the Seibu Lions have handed a one-month suspension to rookie pitcher Ken Sasaki for violating the team’s coronavirus safety protocols.

Vargas solid in farm debut

Live chat with former NPB star Leon Lee

Monday, Aug. 30, 11 am Japan; Sunday, Aug. 29, 7 pm Pacific Daylight Time.

Lee, who played 1,255 games over 10 years in Japan from 1978 to 1987 for the Lotte Orions, the Taiyo Whales, and Yakult Swallows. In addition to his accomplishments, Lee is a keen observer with a knack for explaining complicated things simply. 

Bring your questions and enjoy.

Exclusive for jballallen.com and newsletter subscribers.

Giants 5, Carp 3

At Tokyo Dome, Kazuma Okamoto broke a 3-3 eighth-inning tie with a two-run home run, his Japan-best 31st as Yomiuri twice came from behind to beat Hiroshima, with Thyago Vieira recording his 14th save in the ninth and tying a team record, set by lefty Kyosuke Takagi in 2012, with his 29th consecutive scoreless appearance.

Hiroshima’s Shogo Sakakura opened the scoring with a two-out RBI single, and Zelous Wheeler tied it by drawing a two-out bases-loaded walk on a borderline 3-2 pitch from rookie Shogo Tamamura in the home half.

After three hits in the first, the Carp repeated the feat in the second, with Tamamura doubling in two with his first extra-base hit as he drilled a fastball to the gap in right.

Hayato Sakamoto, who singled and scored in the first, singled again in the third and scored on Okamoto’s second hit, a double. Wheeler then doubled in Okamoto, who finished a triple shy of the cycle.

Giants-Carp highlights

BayStars 10, Tigers 2

At Kyocera Dome Osaka, Shugo Maki didn’t finish a triple shy of the cycle. The DeNA rookie shanked a fly down the line in right that bounced around in the corner, allowing him to reach third with his third career triple.

Tigers rookie Masashi Ito (6-6, 3.08) allowed five runs in three innings, his briefest outing yet, while Shinichi Onuki (4-5, 4.97) allowed two runs, one earned over six innings in which he struck out nine, walked two and allowed three hits.

Onuki pitched out of a two-out, two-on jam in the first by striking out rookie Teruaki Sato, and then gave himself the lead when he singled in two runs in the top of the second.

Toshiro Miyazaki, who singled and scored in the second, singled in the third to put two on for Maki, who made it 5-0 with his 14th home run.

Takumu Nakano singled in two for the Tigers in the third, but the BayStars scored three more in the fourth against Yukiya Saito, Hanshin’s second pitcher. A two-out Keita Sano infield single and two walks loaded the bases. Maki singled in two runs, and catcher Hikaru Ito singled in another.

Swallows 3, Dragons 3

At Shizuoka’s Kusanagi Stadium, Chunichi small-balled its way to a tie, coming from behind on a ninth-inning manufactured run to spoil what would have been an old-timer’s day win for Yakult.

Trailing by a run in the ninth, the Dragons scored against closer Scott McGough on a leadoff single, a sacrifice, a groundout to second and a wild pitch before Chunichi closer Raidel Martinez worked a 1-2-3 ninth to get no save, no hold and no nothing.

The run spoiled a potential win for 41-year-old lefty Masanori Ishikawa, after the Swallows rallied from a run down following a pinch-hit walk by 39-year-old Seiichi Uchikawa and a two-run RBI single by 39-year-old Norichika Aoki.

And just to show the Dragons were not practicing age discrimination, 44-year-old Kosuke Fukudome robbed Aoki of a first-inning single with a diving catch and drew a walk that contributed to Chunichi’s two-run second inning.

Chunichi starter Takahiro Matsuba allowed three runs, two earned, over 4-2/3 innings. The Dragons loaded the bases in the second with no outs, on a hit batsman, an Ariel Martinez single and a Fukudome walk. Two runs scored when third baseman Munetaka Murakami failed to stop a sharp grounder from Naomichi Donoue, but Ishikawa retired the next three batters to keep the game close.

The Swallows halved Matsuba’s lead in the fourth on a one-out Tetsuto Yamada single and a Jose Osuna double, before rallying to take the lead in the fifth.

Hawks 6, Lions 1

At MetLife Dome, Kodai Senga (2-1, 6.28) allowed two hits over seven innings. He walked six and struck out nine but did not allow a hit until one out in the seventh. With the Hawks leading 3-0 in the fourth, the right-hander drew a full-house, walking three and striking out three in a scoreless inning.

Zach Neal (1-4, 4.64) allowed five runs over seven innings on nine hits, three walks and a hit batsman. Neal surrendered three runs after retiring the leadoff batter in the third. A hit batsman and a walk put two on, and Ryoya Kurihara was credited with an RBI single on a grounder that third Wu Nien-ting failed to come up with. Wu chased down the ball in foul territory and threw to the plate, allowing both runners to advance and score on an Alfredo Despaigne single.

Dariel Alvarez’s two-out bases-loaded infield single, on an 0-2 pitch he chased well outside the zone made it 4-0 in the fifth. Despaigne doubled home Yuki Yanagita in the seventh. Kenta Imamiya doubled and scored on a sacrifice fly in the eighth.

Eagles 2, Buffaloes 2

At Sendai’s Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi, Hiroto Kobukata hit the first pitch from Orix’s Daiki Tajima for his third home run. The Buffaloes, got even on Yutaro Sugimoto’s 20th homer with one out in the second against rookie Takahisa Hayakawa.

Better defense would have spared the Buffaloes in the fourth. Luis Okoye singled on a hot shot to third that Yuma Mune couldn’t handle, and Tajima bobbled a sacrifice bunt to put two on with no outs. After a failed sacrifice, Kobukata fouled off three 3-2 pitches before lining a fastball down the pipe for his second RBI and a 2-1 lead.

Marines 7, Fighters 4

At Sapporo Dome, two-run sixth-inning homers from Kyota Fujiwara, his fifth, and Koki Yamaguchi, his sixth, brought Lotte from two runs down against Ryusei Kawano (2-3, 2.36).

Yusuke Azuma (1-0) who took over for Lotte starter Kazuya Ojima with one out and one in the fifth, earned the win after walking a batter and getting out of the inning with a double play to prevent the Fighters from expanding on their 3-1 lead.

Yuto Takahama drove in a run with the third of three Fighters first-inning singles. The Marines tied it in the fifth on two singles and a throwing error.

Ryusei Sato, acquired in a recent trade from the Lions, went 2-for-4 with a walk and scored three of the Fighters’ runs, while Lotte leadoff man Takashi Ogino doubled twice walked and scored a pair of runs.

Naoya Masuda, the sixth Marines pitcher, worked the ninth for his PL-leading 26th save.

Thursday’s starting pitchers

Eagles vs Buffaloes: Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Takahiro Norimoto (7-4, 3.45) vs Soichiro Yamazaki (0-0, 0.00)

Lions vs Hawks: MetLife Dome 5:45 pm, 4:45 am EDT

Yutaro Watanabe (1-2, 3.50) vs Shunsuke Kasaya (2-2, 5.14)

Giants vs Carp: Tokyo Dome 5:45 pm, 4:45 am EDT

Tomoyuki Sugano (2-4, 3.29) vs Allen Kuri (7-6, 3.88)

Tigers vs BayStars: Kyocera Dome (Osaka) 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Joe Gunkel (6-1, 2.47) vs Yuya Sakamoto (4-2, 4.06)

Active roster moves 8/25/2021

Pacific League

Activated

BuffaloesP29Daiki Tajima

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