NPB games, news of Sept. 15

Definitely not “all right”

When Japanese fielders are in danger of converging on a fly ball, one player is supposed to call for the ball by shouting, “ohrai! ohrai!” (all right). This is also the phrase used when one is instructing drivers with obstructed views that it is OK to turn or back up.

I learned that this was the phrase because of Sunday’s Lions-Marines game, and I guess Lotte left fielder Shohei Kato has since been asked by coaches whether he knows it or not.

Moving near the warning track toward left-center, Kato strode into center fielder Takashi Ogino, who appeared oblivious that his teammate was also tracking the ball. The ball was not caught and rolled away, as Lions batter Fumikazu Kimura circled the bases for all he was worth.

Typically, the losing team in a walk-off game, walk off, but from the looks on the faces of Kato and Ogino, neither appeared to be in any hurry to head to the visitors’ clubhouse at MetLife Dome.

“It was a routine ball,” Marines manager Tadahito Iguchi said. “If you make mistakes, you lose.”

Akira Otsuka, the team’s outfield defense coach, said, “An outfielder catches the ball, even if there’s a collision.”

Credit goes to Kimura for hustling from the instant he hit the ball. A moment’s hesitation and he’s on third base with a chance this game remains tied 5-5 and heads to the 12th inning. An outfielder, Kimura was open to the possibility that the ball might drop.

“When evening approaches in this ballpark, it gets dark outside and you can lose track of the ball,” he said.

As a result, the Seibu Lions won 6-5, moved into first place in the Pacific League with a magic number of nine to clinch the pennant and booked their place in the postseason.

For the second day in a row, the Lions blew a ninth-inning lead. This time it was principle middle reliever Katsunori Hirai, pitching in his 76th game of the season and his fourth game of the week, who allowed Lotte to tie it.

Starter Daiki Enokida gave Seibu a solid outing through six innings. At that stage, he had allowed one run on six hits and a walk. But he stayed in the game until after he loaded the bases with two outs and surrendered a tie-breaking three-run triple to Lotte’s Daichi Suzuki.

Elsewhere in the Pacific League

Fighters 7, Hawks 5

At Sapporo Dome, SoftBank rookie Hiroshi Kaino (2-5) missed up in the zone a few times in the eighth inning, and they were pounced on for RBI singles by Sho Nakata and Kotaro Kiyomiya as Nippon Ham came from behind.

Hawks third baseman Nobuhiro Matsuda drove in the game’s first run in the second inning when he became the 72nd player in Japanese pro baseball history with 300 career doubles.

Game highlights are HERE.

Buffaloes 7, Eagles 1

At Kyocera Dome, Orix’s Yoshinobu Yamamoto (7-5) scattered six hits and three walks, allowing a run over seven innings to earn his first win since being sidelined for an oblique muscle strain in August. Stefen Romero broke the game open with a three-run, eighth-inning double.

“There weren’t many pitches I was really happy with, but I think I made some solid adjustments,” said the 21-year-old, who is now 12-1/3 innings shy of qualifying for the league ERA title with his 1.72 figure in just his third season out of high school ball.

Game highlights are HERE.

Central League

Giants 6, Tigers 5

At Tokyo Dome, Alex Guerrero’s 20th home run, an eighth-inning, two-run shot, brought Yomiuri from a run down, and Rubby De La Rosa worked a 1-2-3 ninth to earn his seventh save. Hanshin’s Pierce Johnson (2-3) took the loss, while Scott Mathieson (2-2) pitched a perfect eighth to earn the win.

Sugano shelled again, bound for farm

Giants ace Tomoyuki Sugano, activated after allowing four runs in two innings on Sept. 4, when he was diagnosed with lower back trouble, is bound for deactivation again after allowing four runs over four innings against the Tigers without control or command.

“If I am on that mound any longer, I’m being a burden,” he said.

Pitching coach Kazutomo Miyamoto said, “I don’t know if 10 days was enough for his back trouble, but he was not able to put anything into his pitches.”

Game highlights are HERE.

BayStars 6, Dragons 2

At Nagoya Dome, Jose Lopez broke a 2-2, fifth-inning tie with a two-run home run, his 29th, as DeNA beat Chunichi as Edison Barrios (1-1) allowed two runs over five innings to earn the win.

Swallows 8, Carp 7

At Mazda Stadium, journeyman right-hander Kengo Tagawa, Yakult’s second draft pick in 2012, allowed a run over 5-2/3 innings to earn his first career win thanks to two home runs and five RBIs by reserve shortstop Taishi Hirooka in a win over Hiroshima.

NPB games, news of Sept. 14, 2019

The Ono NoNO

Eight days after Japan had its first no-hitter in 13 months, it had another, as Yudai Ono allowed a runner to reach on an error and a walk in a 3-0 win over the Hanshin Tigers on Saturday.

When Kodai Senga no-hit the Lotte Marines a week ago last Friday, it was the Hawks’ first no-hitter since before Donald Trump was born. The Dragons, on the other hand, have thrown six of NPB’s last 18 no-hitters.

Ono, the Dragons’ first draft pick in the 2010 draft, improved to 9-8 on the season. He has a 58-61 record.

Pacific League

Lions 4, Marines 3

At MetLife Dome, Seibu closer Tatsushi Masuda, who pitched with the maximum allowable lead in two of Seibu’s previous three games, couldn’t hold a two-run, ninth-inning lead against Lotte.

The Lions, however, won the game with one out in the 10th. With portly slugger Takeya Nakamura on first, Marines center fielder Hiromi Oka misplayed Ernesto Mejia’s one-out, medium-deep fly. When he fell trying to make the catch the ball rolled and rolled and Nakamura chugged home from first.

Here’s the post-game hero interview with winning pitcher Tsubasa Kokuba (1-0) and Mejia.

Game highlights are HERE.

Hawks 3, Fighters 1

At Sapporo Dome, Yurisbel Gracial singled in the tie-breaking run in the fifth, and Yuito Mori recorded his 32nd save by stranding two runners in the ninth, as SoftBank beat Nippon Ham to maintain a tiny winning-percentage-point lead over Seibu.

The loss eliminated the Fighters from pennant contention.

Game highlights are HERE.

Buffaloes 3, Eagles 2

At Kyocera Dome, Yuma Mune drove in all three Orix runs, while starter Taisuke Yamaoka (11-4) lost his shutout bid in a two-run Rakuten eighth inning. Brandon Dickson stranded two runners in the ninth to earn his 19th save.

Game highlights are HERE.

Central League

Carp 6, Giants 5, 10 innings

At Tokyo Dome, Yomiuri manager Tatsunori Hara was unhappy after his team wasted a one-out, bases-loaded chance to break a 5-5 tie in the ninth inning in a 10-inning loss to Hiroshima. The Carp then scored the winning run in the 10th on a passed ball by catcher Takumi Oshiro.

“You could see who was clutch and who wasn’t,” said Hara after Alex Guerrero and Oshiro popped up one after the other to end the ninth.

Game highlights are HERE.

Dragons 3, Tigers 0

At Nagoya Dome, Dayan Viciedo reached base four times, and he and Nobumasa Fukuda each scored one run and drove in another to back Yudai Ono’s no-hitter.

BayStars 7, Swallows 4

At Yokohama Stadium, DeNA hammered lefty Masanori Ishikawa (7-6) for five runs over five innings in a win over Yakult, in which Swallows second baseman Tetsuto Yamada was caught stealing for the first time since Aug. 22, 2018, ending his record streak of 38 successful stolen base attempts.

writing & research on Japanese baseball

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