Category Archives: Paid Content

3 hits and a near miss

The Hanshin Tigers swept May’s top player awards in the Central League, with closer Robert Suarez winning the pitcher’s award and rookie Teruaki Sato the hitter’s honor. The Pacific League awards went to SoftBank Hawks pitcher Nick Martinez and Orix Buffaloes outfielder Masataka Yoshida.

None of the awards were terrible, and though one never expects relievers to get it unless no starting pitcher wins three games, Suarez’s selection was a good one. The weakest link of the bunch was Sato. He had a great month, and you can’t pick everybody, but selecting Sato over DeNA’s Tyler Austin is like announcers drooling over hard-hit Sato flies that died on the warning track.

Here’s what the NPB website had to say about Sato. The first paragraph is relevant, the second filler, interesting stuff that that tells us about the player a little without saying why he is deserving of an award.

“Sato played in all 19 of his team games and led his team with 19 RBIs and six home runs, while leading the league with a .630 slugging average. He had seven three-hit games.”

“He showed plenty of power and clutch hitting. In particular, against Hiroshima on May 2, Sato batting fourth for the first time hit a superb come-from-behind grand slam, and on May 28, against Seibu, he became the second CL rookie and the first since Shigeo Nagashima in 1958 to hit three home runs in a game. He powered the Tigers as they ran away with first place.”

Now let’s do DeNA’s Tyler Austin but without the filler:

Austin played in all 22 of his team’s games and led his team with 16 runs, while leading the league with 17 walks, a .457 on-base percentage and a 1.068 OPS after finishing second in the league with a .610 slugging average. Compared to Teruaki Sato, Austin reached base 15 times more while making the same number of outs.

The other really deserving pitcher in the CL was Chunichi Dragons starter Yuya Yanagi, who led the league with a 0.82 ERA and 26 strikeouts, but only went 2-0 with his teammates scoring 2.05 runs behind him per game. Suarez worked 12 innings compared to Yanagi’s 22 and saved nine games. No complaints with that choice since I’ll buy that Suarez’s innings were on the whole twice as valuable as Yanagi’s. Well done.

Martinez was a no-brainer for the NPB crowd. He went 4-1 with a league-leading 1.97 ERA and led the PL with 34 strikeouts. Yoshida, too, was a good choice after leading the league in RBI and OPS. Brandon Laird, who was second in OPS, and led with nine home runs would have been a good choice, too.

He’s not the 1st

When Nippon Ham’s Hiromi Ito pitched against the Yomiuri Giants on Sunday, June 6, the announcers talked about the right-hander’s roots as the first Fighters’ top draft pick from Hokkaido. The remarkable thing is that Ito is not the first pro ballplayer from his village in Hokkaido, where all-star reliever Koki Morita grew up.

Morita, who died of cancer at the age of 45, was a classmate of Ito’s father when they were children, and like the younger Ito, Morita was signed after being selected in the first round of NPB’s draft. But unlike Ito, he wasn’t the Taiyo Whales’ (currently the DeNA BayStars) first pick in 1987.

The NPB draft is a strange animal that is constantly evolving and regressing. Since it was introduced in the mid-1960s to rob amateurs of their negotiating rights, one principle has been a guiding factor — that it should not become an engine of competitive balance.

From the mid-1990s until 2006, elite college and corporate league players were free to sell their services to the highest bidders but other than that period, teams have been given an equal shot at signing any player in a given round through a lottery that has nothing to do with the waiver order.

NPB under the table

The way this works now in the first round, and the way it has often worked in the first and other rounds in the past has been to have each team secretly nominate its pick for that round. These are then announced. The rights to each player chosen by more than one team are assigned by lot, with a representative from each team, often the manager, going up to the front of the room and picking a card out of a box.

You can’t always get what you want…

Teams that fail to get their man, then secretly nominate alternate selections, and the rights of players named by more than one team are again assigned by lottery.

I had this discussion with John E. Gibson a couple of weeks ago on the podcast, when I said it was hard for me to say “Hayato Sakamoto was the Giants’ first pick in the 2006 draft,” because the Giants weren’t going after him. Their target that year was Naomichi Donoue, who has never been much more than a utility infielder for the Chunichi Dragons. Sakamoto was their first-round signing, but he wasn’t their first pick. We know this because they said he wasn’t.

Morita’s case has long fascinated me because, like Sakamoto, he wasn’t the first pick, and in Morita’s case, the club could have done much, much worse had they gotten who they wished for, Kazushige Nagashima, the dreadful son of Giants legend Shigeo Nagashima.

One night I watched Kazushige on TV, and he politely told the story about how his preference was to play in Yokohama for the Whales rather than in Tokyo for the Swallows.

Be careful what you wish for

The table below lists the most fortunate draft “failures” in the last 40 years. Hikaru Takano was a useful pitcher for a time. But Hisanobu Watanabe was an ace for a championship team. It may be too early to pronounce Kotaro Kiyomiya a failure, but I’ll bet the Fighters would happily trade him and a half dozen other players to get Munetaka Murakami.

YearTeamSignedWanted
1982YomiuriMasaki SaitoDaisuke Araki (Yak)
1983SeibuHisanobu WatanabeHikaru Takano (Yak)
1987HanshinKoji NodaKen Kawashima (Hir)
1987TaiyoKoki MoritaKazushige Nagashima (Yak)
2005OrixTakahiro OkadaTakanobu Tsujiuchi (Yom)
2006YomiuriHayato SakamotoNaomichi Donoue
2010RakutenTakahiro ShiomiYuki Saito (Nip)
2010YakultTetsuto YamadaTakahiro Shiomi, Yuki Saito
2017YakultMunetaka MurakamiKotaro Kiyomiya (Nip)

With that I’ll leave you with this catchy Sammy Davis Jr. tune.