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NPB games, news of July 2, 2019

Tomoyuki Sugano, the winner of the last two Sawamura Awards as Japan’s most impressive starting pitcher, threw his first shutout of the season to lift the Yomiuri Giants to a four-game lead in the Central League ahead of the Hiroshima Carp, whose offense has continued to struggle.

The Carp, who led the CL in on-base percentage each of the last three seasons, rank fourth this year.

Central League

Swallows 3, Carp 1

At Mazda Stadium, Yakult won the first game of a series for the first time since May 11, as Yasuhiro Ogawa (3-8) struck out six and allowed a run over seven innings to earn the win over Hiroshima.

Shota Nakayama, the Swallows’ second draft pick last autumn, homered for third time in 37 pro at-bats when he helped spoil a second-straight strong start from Allen Kuri (3-4) with a second-inning solo home run. The Carp tied it in the fourth on a Seiya Suzuki walk and singles by Alejandro Mejia and Xavier Batista.

The Swallows, however, took the lead in the sixth on a Norichika Aoki single, a Kuri wild pitch and a two-out error on shortstop Kosuke Tanaka on a ball that missed his glove and went through his legs.

“It may have been an irregular hop, but I had to stop it,” Tanaka said. “I lack sufficient skill.”

“Because Kuri pitched so well, so I need to apologize. Everyone battled so hard without ever giving up but I was unable to maintain a good rhythm. For me to make a mistake like that led to our loss.”

Kuri, who was coming off his first career shutout a week earlier, allowed two runs, one earned, while striking out seven in six innings.

Giants 6, Dragons 0

At Tokyo Dome, Tomoyuki Sugano (8-4) struck out six and got himself out of a one-out, bases-loaded pickle to throw his first shutout of the season in Yomiuri’s win over Chunichi.

Yoshiyuki Kamei led off the first inning with a home run and Christian Villanueva, Hayato Sakamoto and Yoshihiro Maru each homered for the Giants.

The game highlights are HERE.

BayStars 4, Tigers 0

At Yokohama Stadium, DeNA rookie Taiga Kamichatani (5-3) struck out eight and walked one over 5-2/3 innings, and nine of the last 10 Hanshin hitters made out against the BayStars bullpen to stretch the Tigers’ scoreless inning streak to 23.

Keita Sano homered and had an RBI double, while Yamato Maeda continued to weave his late-inning magic by singling in two insurance runs in the eighth inning.

Pacific League

Hawks 8, Eagles 6

At Yafuoku Dome, Yurisbel Gracial drove in six runs, including two with an eighth-inning RBI single off Alan Busenitz (1-2) that reclaimed SoftBank’s lead and took Cuban compatriot Livan Moinelo (1-1) off the hook in a see-saw win over Rakuten.

Moinelo blew a 5-4 lead in the top of the eighth by issuing a one-out walk to Jabari Blash and a two-run homer from left-handed-hitting Ginji Akaminai. The Hawks, however, loaded the bases on three singles off Busenitz in the eighth, and Gracial, who blasted his 17th home run in the first inning, singled in two runs.

“It’s not easy to get the hits that win the game for your team, but I’ve been hitting very well, and I’m happy to get six RBIs,” said the 33-year-old Gracial.

Hiroshi Kaino struck out two in the ninth to record his fourth save as understudy for absent frontline closers Dennis Sarfate and Yuito Mori. The rookie has struck out 38 batters in 29-1/3 innings.

The win lifted the Hawks three games clear of the second-place Eagles at the top of the PL standings.

The game highlights are HERE.

Fighters 9, Lions 1

At Sapporo Dome, Nippon Ham continued to beat up on Seibu right-hander Kona Takahashi (7-5), who lasted a season-low 2-2/3 innings his last time out against the Fighters.

Takahashi left a lot of pitches up in the zone in the second, the Fighters put good swings on them and the first eight balls in play all went for hits in an eight-run inning.

Catcher Shingo Usami, who joined the Fighters in a four-way trade last week, got his first hits with Nippon Ham, going 3-for-4 with a double and two RBIs. It was the first three-hit game of his career.

“We’d been losing ever since I got here, so it feels good to win,” he said.

The game highlights are HERE.

Buffaloes 6, Marines 5, 10 innings

At Kyocera Dome, with the score tied 5-5, Orix loaded the bases in both the ninth and 10th innings, with both innings ending on video replays in a win over Lotte.

The first one overturned the call on the field and kept the game alive when Lotte center fielder Takashi Ogino threw a runner out at the plate to end the ninth. The 10th ended when the Marines were unable to get the force at home plate on a grounder to short that was ruled an infield single.

Brandon Laird hit his 22nd home run to leadoff the Marines’ three-run seventh — assisted by two walks and an error by Buffaloes’ first baseman Chris Marrero. However, Marrero’s second homer of the season, a leadoff shot in the bottom of the inning, tied it 5-5 and gave him something to celebrate on his 31st birthday.

Brandon Dickson retired the Marines in order in the eighth, and his teammates loaded the bases with no outs in the bottom of the inning on a double, an intentional walk and an error by Laird at third base. But Marines closer Naoya Masuda struck out a batter and got a fly out to shallow center that Koji Oshiro very nearly scored on.

Tyler Eppler (4-2) worked around a two-out single in the 10th, and earned the win on Oshiro’s one-out RBI infield single.

The game highlights are HERE.

News

Carp send Shimozuru to Eagles

The Hiroshima Carp have agreed on a trade with the Rakuten Eagles that will send 31-year-old minor league outfielder Ko Shimozuru, who made brief but high-impact contributions to the Carp’s pennants in 2016 and 2018, in exchange for 26-year-old minor league infielder Takumi Miyoshi.

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.