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NPB wrap 8-28-21

There were four ties among Saturday’s six games, causing each league’s leader to lose a half-game’s ground in the pennant race. Despite the lack of convincing results, there were some pretty good games. Three of the ties were terrific pitchers’ duels while one — is always the Lions and Fighters? — was kind of a dumpster fire.

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.

Swallows 2, BayStars 2

At Tokyo Dome, Tyler Austin went 0-for-4 at the plate, but two strikes he threw from right field enabled DeNA to secure a tie against Yakult by deflating a fourth-inning threat and then ending the game as the hosts were rallying with two outs against closer Kazuki Mishima.

The game was largely a pitching duel between Yakult’s Cy Sneed and DeNA’s  Fernando Romero. Sneed allowed three hits and a walk while striking out nine over six-plus innings, but all three of the hits were for extra bases, and two cleared the wall as the BayStars came back from a 2-0 deficit on Toshiro Miyazaki’s 11th home run to lead off the fifth and Keita Sano’s ninth to lead off the seventh.

Romero allowed two runs on seven hits and a walk while striking out four. The Swallows’ Munetaka Murakami hit his 31st home run with a man on in the first, taking advantage of the dome’s short power alleys to poke a 3-2 changeup away into the stands in left for an opposite-field shot after Tetsuto Yamada doubled with two outs.

Yakult threatened in the fourth on no-out singles by Yamada and Murakami. On a one-out fly, Yamada doubled down by trying for third but got doubled up by Austin.

Both bullpens were good enough, with Yakult’s Noboru Shimizu striking out the side in the eighth and Swallows closer Scott McGough working a 1-2-3 ninth and ending by striking out his United States Olympic teammate Austin on three pitches.

BayStars closer Kazuki Mishima started the inning in good form, with good life on his fastball and drop on his forkball. He went 3-2 on each of the first two batters he retired before line drive pinch-hit singles opened the door a crack for Yakult only for Austin to slam it shut by easily gunning down pinch-runner Daiki Watanabe to end the game.

Dragons 1, Giants 1

At Vantelin Dome Nagoya, Chunichi’s Yuya Yanagi allowed an unearned run over six innings while striking out nine, and Yomiuri’s Shosei Togo allowed one run over eight and also struck out nine before this one ended in a tie.

A day after his two singles drove in four runs, Dayan Viciedo opened his account on Saturday by leading off with his fifth homer this year against the Giants, and his 16th of the season. Someone on Twitter commented that Viciedo habitually destroys the Giants, but this is the first time he’s ever hit more than three home runs against them in his six Japan seasons.

The Giants tied it in the sixth, when Viciedo failed to stop a ball with one out for an error, and Takumi Oshiro delivered a two-out bases-loaded single. Kazuma Okamoto singled twice for the Giants, contributing to their sixth inning run and putting the potential go-ahead run on in the eighth before Katsuki Matayoshi got out of the inning.

Cuban Raidel Martinez worked a 1-2-3 ninth for Chunichi, and Brazilian Thyago Vieira did the same in the home half to seal the draw and set a team record for consecutive scoreless mound appearances with his 30th.

Carp 7, Tigers 6

At Hiroshima’s Mazda Stadium, Hanshin rookie Shoki Murakami (0-0, 19.29) allowed five runs over three innings in his second pro appearance to put the league leaders in a hole they nearly climbed out of before Hiroshima rookie Ryoji Kurihara struck out two in a 1-2-3 ninth to record his 22nd save.

Trailing by a run in the bottom of the first, Shogo Sakakura doubled in two runs for the Carp, Takayoshi Noma doubled in one more in the second, and homers by Seiya Suzuki, his 18th, and Ryosuke Kikuchi, his 10th, made it a 5-1 game after three.

Mel Rojas Jr. singled in Takumu Nakano in the first against Yusuke Nomura (0-4, 6.12), who was yanked in the fourth and allowed three runs. Rojas singled in another run to make it a one-run game in the sixth only for Carp rookie Kota Hayashi to blast a two-run homer, his sixth in the bottom of the inning.

Buffaloes 2, Hawks 2

At Kyocera Dome Osaka, Adam Jones’ ninth-inning pinch-hit single off Yugo Bando plated the tying run with one out, but the right-hander struck out the next two batters to strand the potential winning run on second.

Hiroya Miyagi continued to look like a shadow of the guy who was striking out a batter an inning through June. The lefty struck out five batters for the first time since the Olympics ended, and continued to attack the zone, allowing his defense kept him in the game, allowing a run on seven hits, a walk and a hit.

Shuta Ishikawa, who’d struck out 11 batters in each of his previous two starts, didn’t have that extra gear, but managed to hold the Buffaloes to a run over seven innings.

Ryoya Kurihara delivered the Hawk’s third single in the third-inning single to give them a 1-0 lead, while Ishikawa overcame a pair of no-out singles in the bottom of the first to keep the Buffaloes scoreless through five.

Orix got even in the sixth after Ishikawa retired the top two batters in the order. Masataka Yoshida walked on four pitches and Yutaro Sugimoto, who had been completely overmatched by Ishikawa’s curve, got a 2-2 hanger and lofted it over second for a single. Ryoichi Adachi hammered the next pitch, pulling an inside fastball high off the wall in left to tie it, while Sugimoto was out at the plate on a superb relay throw from shortstop Kenta Imamiya.

Cesar Vargas, who pitched for Mexico in the Olympics and who had been with the Ibaraki Astro Planets in the independent BC Challenge League before signing the past week, made his first team debut with one out and a man on in the seventh. The right-hander walked one and hit one but did not allow a run. His walk came when Yuki Yanagita took a 3-2 pitch down the middle for Ball 4.

The Hawks broke the deadlock in the eighth, when Alfredo Despaigne doubled off Tyler Higgins and speedster Ukyo Shuto scored after a bunt and a pinch-hit sac fly from Yuya Hasegawa.

Hiroshi Kaino worked a 1-2-3 eighth, and after Orix’s Keisuke Sawada survived a scoreless Hawks ninth, SoftBank lefty Shinya Kayama walked Masataka Yoshida and Sugimoto, happy to be rid of Ishikawa, hit a booming single.

Bando recorded his first strikeout before Jones struck but then made his getaway in overpowering fashion.

Marines 5, Eagles 1

At Sendai’s Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi, Lotte rookie Roki Sasaki (2-2, 3.22) allowed three hits and walked two while striking out five over five innings in the first scoreless outing of his career, while the Marines bludgeoned Rakuten starter Takayuki Kishi (6-7, 3.43).

Kishi, who was wildly inconsistent through in April and May, allowed more than two runs in a start for the first time since May 25. He gave up five runs on 10 hits, a walk and a hit batsman while striking out two.

Takashi Ogino teed off on a high straight 1-0 fastball to put Lotte in front after two pitches, and Kishi surrendered three straight singles. His first out came on a play at the plate that could easily have been overturned on obstruction if umpires actually thought that hard about it. A Brandon Laird sac fly sent Sasaki to the mound with a two-run lead.

Sasaki also started less than sharp, but a double play prevented two walks and a single from becoming a run. Three more Marines singles in the second, the third by Ogino, made it 3-0. Sasaki allowed a pair of infield singles in the home half but for the second time got out of jail with a strikeout.

Laird’s 20th homer in the third, and Leonys Martin’s 22nd, in the fifth, made it 5-0.

The Eagles’ lone run came in the ninth, on an RBI double by former Marines captain Daichi Suzuki.

The Marines’ win moved them to within 2-1/2 games of first place, a full game ahead of the third-place Eagles, who have a 1-1/2 game cushion over the fourth-place Hawks.

Lions 8, Fighters 8

At MetLife Dome 5 pm, there was a lot of thunder but not much clarity as Nippon Ham jumped out to a four-run first-inning lead and was up 7-0 before Seibu batted and scored four runs in the fifth.

Lions starter Tatsuya Imai lasted five innings and allowed seven runs on four walks and seven hits, including two solo home runs, Wang Po-jung’s third and Yuto Takahama’s seventh. Fighters starter Takayuki Kato stranded five runners over four scoreless innings before his good fortune ran out.

Sosuke Genda followed a one-out error with his second homer, and Shuta Tonosaki doubled in two. Trailing 8-4 in the seventh, Tonosaki homered for the second straight day, a two-run shot that was his fourth of the season. Aito Takeda, doubled in a run and scored the tying run on a single by Genda.

Sunday’s starting pitchers

Eagles vs Marines: Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi 5 pm, 4 am EDT

Ryota Ishibashi (-) vs Enny Romero (0-0, 4.15)

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

Keisuke Honda (0-1, 1.98) vs Hiromi Ito (7-5, 2.80)

Buffaloes vs Hawks: Kyocera Dome (Osaka) 1 pm, 12 midnight EDT

Glenn Sparkman (0-0, 4.50) vs Tsuyoshi Wada (4-5, 4.52)

Swallows vs BayStars: Tokyo Dome 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Juri Hara (0-1, 4.91) vs Shota Imanaga (3-3, 3.69)

Dragons vs Giants: Vantelin Dome (Nagoya) 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Shinnosuke Ogasawara (6-6, 3.12) vs Yuki Takahashi (9-3, 2.84)

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

Hiroki Tokoda (1-2, 3.98) vs Takumi Akiyama (9-4, 2.88)

Active roster moves 8/28/2021

Deactivated players can be re-activated from 9/7

Central League

Activated

GiantsOF2Yang Dai-kang
TigersP41Shoki Murakami
CarpP39Yasunori Kikuchi

Dectivated

GiantsOF36Shingo Ishikawa
TigersP36Masumi Hamachi
CarpP46Mikiya Takahashi
SwallowsP11Yasunobu Okugawa

Pacific League

Activated

MarinesP17Roki Sasaki
LionsP40Ichiro Tamura
BuffaloesP59Cesar Vargas

Dectivated

MarinesP18Kota Futaki
LionsP98Matt Dermody
BuffaloesP26Atsushi Nomi

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NPB wrap 8-27-21

This weekend’s series will again see the Central League contenders vs the pretenders as the league-leading Tigers are at the Carp, the second-place Giants are at the Dragons, and the third-place Swallows play host to the BayStars at Tokyo Dome.

By the time Sunday’s game rolls around, the BayStars, whose home park was the venue for Olympic baseball and softball, will have played nine of their last 12 games at Tokyo Dome, three as the home team, three as visitors against the Giants, and three as visitors against the Swallows, whose home park is still unusable due to its proximity to National Stadium during the Olympics and Paralympics.

The Pacific League has two series between the four contenders, the fourth-place Hawks at the first-place Buffaloes and the third-place Marines at the second-place Eagles. The other final series is between the last-place Fighters at the fifth-place Lions, who started play on Friday 4-1/2 back of the Hawks.

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.

Marines 3, Eagles 1

At Sendai’s Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi, Masahiro Tanaka — the man who runs forgot — battled for seven innings before the Lotte Marines broke a 1-1 tie against Tomohiro Anraku (3-1) in a two-run eighth.

Anraku who was fortunate to work an inning without allowing a run in the Eagles’ 7-6 win over the Buffaloes, gave up a leadoff homer to Shogo Nakamura and walked the next two batters, allowing another run to score.

Marines starter Kota Futaki allowed a run over six innings, and new Marine Yuki Kuniyoshi (1-0) worked a scoreless seventh. Chihaya Sasaki stranded two runners in the eighth. Alan Busenitz kept the Eagles in the game with a scoreless ninth before Lotte closer Naoya Masuda shut things down for his 27th save.

The Eagles struck in the first. Leadoff man Hiroto Kobukata singled on a shot off Futaki’s foot and scoring on a Daichi Suzuki double. Although the Eagles collected base runners, runs did not result and the Marines tied it 1-1 in the fifth, when Hisanori Yasuda appeared to be looking for a first-pitch slider, and Tanaka hung one inside that he pulled into the right-field stands for his seventh home run.

Tanaka, who matched his season high with three walks, survived a couple of scrapes in the sixth and seventh, when Yasuda hit a jam-shot for his third hit of the game, before leaving after throwing 100 pitches.

By scoring one run over seven innings with Tanaka the pitcher of record, his run support this season fell to 2.42 runs per nine innings. The Eagles entered the game scoring 3.88 runs per game.

Buffaloes 2, Hawks 0

At Kyocera Dome Osaka, Yoshinobu Yamamoto (11-5, 1.64) allowed four hits while striking out nine in his second straight complete-game victory, beating Nick Martinez (7-3, 2.09) in a duel of Tokyo Olympic standouts.

The biggest threat Yamamoto faced came in the third inning after a pair of no-out singles. But it quickly evaporated as the second-half “these aren’t the Hawks we’re used to” moments continued, when a sacrifice attempt saw both existing SoftBank runners tagged out at third base. Olympic bunting hero Takuya Kai didn’t get down a good one, but did beat the return throw from third to first.

But when the dropped throw was dropped and rolled away from first baseman Kota Nakagawa, Kenta Imamiya had a “when in Rome moment” or a “when in Osaka do as the Buffaloes do – or did rather” brain fart. The ball stopped rolling and Nakagawa gunned Imamiya down at third to complete a 2-5-3-5 double play.

Ryo Nishimura’s two-run double off the wall put the Buffaloes up 2-0 after Masataka Yoshida drew a leadoff walk and Yutaro Sugimoto singled with no outs. Left fielder Ryuya Kurihara threw out Nishimura trying to score on a single, a call that withstood a review for obstruction on Kai, who made the tag as Nishimura slid into his foot blocking the plate.

Had the umpiring crew been given better monitors than the Buffaloes’ owners pay for at Kyocera Dome, they might have overturned the call, since Kai blocked the plate when he did have the ball – legal in the MLB but not in Japan — and his glove may have missed the runner’s leg anyway.

With the lead in hand, Yamamoto began stomping the breath out of the Hawks. After Kurihara doubled with two outs in the seventh, Yamamoto struck out Alfredo Despaigne despite falling behind 3-0. A two-out ninth-inning single brought PL home run leader Yuki Yanagita to the plate, and Yamamoto won that battle, striking him out on eight pitches to end it.

Fighters 7, Lions 2

At MetLife Dome, Nippon Ham’s top two hitters, Daiki Asama and Haruki Nishikawa combined to reach base seven times and score four runs, while No. 3 hitter Yuki James Nomura and Kensuke Kondo (batting cleanup?) scored three runs and drove in four.

Shuta Tonosaki opened the scoring for Seibu, leading off the bottom of the second with his second home run, but the Fighters made it 2-1 on Kondo’s two-run fourth-inning triple. Nomura’s fifth-inning RBI single made it 3-1 but Lions rookie Yoshinobu Mizukami got the final two outs and left the bases loaded.

Seibu’s Takumi Kuriyama made it 3-2 in the sixth with a leadoff homer, his fourth, in a battle of veterans between the 37-year-old left-handed hitter, and 36-year-old side-arm lefty Naoki Miyanishi. Kondo, however, walked and scored on a sac fly in the seventh off Reed Garrett, and the Lions’ fifth pitcher, Matt Dermody surrendered three more in the eighth.

BayStars 4, Swallows 0

At Tokyo Dome, Masaya Kyoyama (2-3, 5.09) allowed two hits and no walks while striking out seven over seven scoreless innings, while Yakult rookie

Yasunobu Okugawa (5-3, 3.89) gave up three seventh-inning solo home runs in his 6-2/3 innings.

Toshiro Miyazaki broke up a scoreless game with a two-out homer, his 10th. Neftali hit Okugawa’s next pitch for his 18th home run and Shugo Maki followed with his 15th home run. A pair of no-out walks in the eighth set up a DeNA insurance run.

Dragons 4, Giants 1

At Vantelin Dome Nagoya, Yudai Ono (4-8, 3.31) gave up one run on three hits and two walks over seven innings, and Dayan Viciedo drove in four runs with a pair of two-run singles off Shun Yamaguchi (2-3, 3.53), who was gone after two innings.

Viciedo singled in two runs in the first after Yamaguchi allowed the leadoff man to reach by failing to catch a throw at the bag. A one-out single and Masaru Watanabe’s second hit, a double, set the table for Viciedo’s second two-run single.

Kazuma Okamoto got the Giants on the board with a solo homer, his Japan-best 32nd, and the Giants bullpen was rock solid for seven, but the damage had been done.

Katsuki Matayoshi worked a 1-2-3 eighth, and Raidel Martinez retired Hayato Sakamoto, Zelous Wheeler and Okamoto in the ninth to record his 12th save.

Carp 6, Tigers 4

At Hiroshima’s Mazda Stadium, Daichi Osera (6-3, 3.09) allowed two runs, one earned, over six innings, and Shogo Sakakura and Ryosuke Kikuchi each drove in a fourth-inning run to put the Carp up for good.

Yuki Nishi (4-9, 3.50) gave up three runs over six innings, but Raul Alcanatara surrendered two more in the seventh as the Carp pulled away. Rookie Carp closer Ryoji Kuribayashi struck out Jerry Sands and retired Yusuke Oyama in the ninth to work around a walk and a single and record his 21st save.

Mel Rojas Jr. made it 1-0 in the second with his fifth home run. Nishi singled and scored on a throwing error to make it 2-0 Tigers in the third. An error contributed to Hiroshima’s first run, on Ryoma Nishikawa’s third-inning RBI single, before the Carp went ahead in the fourth.

A night after they combined for five runs and nine RBIs against the Giants, Seiya Suzuki doubled and scored on Sakakura’s RBI single. Kikuchi doubled Sakakura home to make it 3-2. Suzuki doubled in two runs in Hiroshima’s seventh.

Saturday’s starting pitchers

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

Takayuki Kishi (6-6, 3.14) vs Roki Sasaki (1-2, 3.73)

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

Tatsuya Imai (6-4, 2.80) vs Takayuki Kato (3-6, 3.72)

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

Hiroya Miyagi (11-1, 2.01) vs Shuta Ishikawa (4-8, 3.13)

Swallows vs BayStars: Tokyo Dome 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Cy Sneed (2-1, 4.50) vs Fernando Romero (0-2, 4.91)

Dragons vs Giants: Vantelin Dome (Nagoya) 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Yuya Yanagi (8-5, 2.20) vs Shosei Togo (8-5, 3.91)

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

Yusuke Nomura (0-4, 6.12) vs Shoki Murakami (0-0, 19.29)

Active roster moves 8/27/2021

Deactivated players can be re-activated from 9/6

Central League

Activated

BayStarsP43Takuya Shindo
SwallowsP11Yasunobu Okugawa

Dectivated

BayStarsP34Shingo Hirata

Pacific League

Activated

HawksP48Yuta Watanabe
MarinesOF79Leonys Martin
EaglesOF54Ren Wada
BuffaloesP35Motoki Higa

Dectivated

HawksP67Shunsuke Kasaya
MarinesOF38Akito Takabe
EaglesIF9Brandon Dixon
BuffaloesP63Soichiro Yamazaki

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