NPB games, news of June 30, 2019

Trading places is the theme after the second four-player trade this past week.

Pacific League

Lions 11, Buffaloes 3

At MetLife Dome, Orix outhit Seibu 16-10, but the Buffaloes pitchers issued 10 walks, while Orix had three runners thrown out on the bases.

The Buffaloes-Lions highlights are HERE.

Hawks 4, Fighters 3

At Sapporo Dome, Nippon Ham Fighters manager Hideki Kuriyama’s frustrated expression has been a feature of this series as his players failed to execute pitches and routine plays and that was the case again on Sunday.

With a 3-2 lead in the eighth, setup man Bryan Rodriguez served up a couple of fat pitches that gave the Hawks a leadoff single, while a misplay in left helped Yurisbel Gracial’s double bring the runner home to tie it.

Rodriguez could have left with the game tied, but shortstop Kazunari Ishii fumbled a grounder to short with the infield in and had to settle for getting the second out at first base as the Hawks took the lead.

HIroshi Uranao gave up two runs in two innings as a “short starter,” the Fighters’ version of an opener, but Chihiro Kaneko made a game of it by allowing a hit and a walk over 3-2/3 scoreless innings.

“Making an excuse wouldn’t change anything,” Kuriyama said. “If we’re shorthanded or whatever it might be, it wouldn’t make a bit of difference. We just have to do our jobs.”

“You put things behind you, whether that’s losing six straight or winning six straight, be prepared and do your job.”

On a last note, I sure hope the term “short starter” doesn’t catch on, because that might mean a clarification was in order every time a more diminutive pitchers was slated to start.

And while we’re on the subject, here are shortest pitchers in NPB this season with more than one start:

PitcherTeam2019 StartsHeight
Manabu MimaEagles13168
Masanori IshikawaSwallows12169
Katsuki AzumaBayStars5170
Yasuhiro OgawaSwallows13171
Kazuto TaguchiGiants2171
Taisuke YamaokaBuffaloes13172
Haruhiro HamaguchiBayStars7173
Wataru KarashimaEagles12174

The Hawks-Fighters highlights are HERE.

Central League

Giants 4, Swallows 3

At Akita’s Komachi Stadium, the Yakult bullpen, which has been relatively solid this season blew a late lead as Yomiuri completed a two-game sweep in their Tohoku series.

Kazuki Kondo gave up three-straight singles to open the eighth as the Giants tied it, and closer Taichi Ishiyama surrendered a two-out single on a 3-2 fastball to veteran Yoshiyuki Kamei and Hayato Sakamoto doubled on the next pitch to put the visitors ahead for good.

Dragons 1, Tigers 0, 11 innings

At Nagoya Dome, Yuya Yanagi struck out 10 without a walk over eight innings, and Chunichi got past Hanshin with a manufactured run in the 11th off closer Rafael Dolis.

A Ryosuke Hirata leadoff walk, a sacrifice, a groundout and a wild pitch handed the Dragons a walk-off win.

Carp 2, BayStars 2, 12 innings

At Yokohama Stadium, Hiroshima’s Geronimo Franzua was unable to protect a 2-1 lead for a two-inning save as Yamato Maeda had yet another late double and scored in the ninth on Keita Sano’s two-out RBI single.

Over the span of six games, Maeda has had a pair of sayonara walk-off doubles and now scored the tying run after doubling with one out in the ninth.

Both of the Carp’s runs came on Alejandro Mejia’s two-run, seventh-inning home run.

News

Buffaloes, Dragons join trade frenzy

The Chunichi Dragons on Sunday sent a trio of players to the Orix Buffaloes in exchange for two players and cash. The deal sent 28-year-old lefty Takahiro Matsuba and 25-year-old reserve outfielder Kengo Takeda to the Dragons in exchange for 31-year-old catcher Masato Matsui, 31-year-old outfielder Yusuke Matsui, and slugging 27-year-old outfielder Steven Moya.

With the Dragons struggling on the mound Raidel Martinez and Joely Rodriguez keep the bullpen above water, and Enny Romero provides innings in the rotation, while last year’s batting champ Dayan Viciedo is holding down the other of Chunichi’s four foreign player slots. That has left Moya to bide his time in the Western League, and the Chunichi deal should open him up for more playing time with Japan’s worst offensive team.

“That Meneses business has happened, and we just don’t have time to go to the States and look for another player,” Orix general manager Junichi Fukura said. “We think Moya’s batting has a strong upside and on top of that he has experience in Japan, so that’s big. We are grateful to Chunichi for their generosity.”

The Buffaloes are without their No. 2 catcher, Torai Fushimi, who suffered a ruptured Achilles tendon during interleague play, while outfielder Stefen Romero is out with an oblique muscle strain and first baseman Joey Meneses has received a one-year doping ban.

Technically, it’s one, four-player trade and a “cash trade” for Moya, because that’s how Japanese baseball does things.

NPB games, news of June 29, 2019

On a rainy day in eastern Japan, all 12 teams were in action for the first time since interleague’s final scheduled day last Sunday. The Swallows hosted the Giants in Akita and in a holdover from the old days, when playing in remote parks often involved uncertain travel connections by train, games played more remote locations often involve an extra day for travel.

Saturday’s highlight was an inside-the-park home run. By their nature, these are fluke plays, but I doubt you’ve seen one like this and it proved to be the decisive play of the game.

Pacific League

Hawks 5, Fighters 4

At Sapporo Dome, Nippon Ham’s understudy closer, Naoya Ishikawa, came within one strike of nailing down his third save. But Seiji Uebayashi followed Seiichi Uchikawa’s two-out, two-strike single with a strange home run in SoftBank’s come-from-behind win.

With one out, Fighters right fielder Taishi Ota robbed Nobuhiro Matsuda of a one-out single only for Uchikawa to lob 1-2 pitch off the end of his bat into right for a single. Then a little craziness ensued as Uebayashi’s drive bounced on the top of the wall and stayed in play, forcing him to speed up as he rounded third for a half-trotting, inside-the-park homer.

Here’s a clip of Seiji Uebayashi’s game winning inside-the-parker.

“With two outs, I had to be looking for extra-bases,” Uebayashi said. “I didn’t think I could hit a home run there, but I’m happy I did.”

“I wasn’t certain it went over, but (when I got around second coach (Arihito) Muramatsu was frantically waving me in, so half-way through I had to run for real.”

Fighters starter Toshihiro Sugiura, looked sharp through four innings, and Ryo Watanabe overturned a 1-0 deficit with a three-run, fourth-inning homer after Hawks starter Kotaro Otake walked a batter and surrendered a flare single off the end of Wang Po-jung’s bat.

Remember the line in Bull Durham, where Tim Robbins said a guy hit a pitch, “like he knew I was going to throw a fastball”? That’s what Ryo Watanabe’s home run looked like. The Fighters’ 1.78-meter second baseman stayed back on a first pitch curveball on the outside part of the plate and leaned into it, driving it out to distant left center.

Manager Hideki Kuriyama pulled Sugiura after two hard-hit balls to open the fifth, but reliever Kazutomo Iguchi hit a batter and missed with a high 1-0 fastball that was smoked for a two-run, game-tying single.

The Fighters retook the lead on a leadoff double in the fifth, a drag-bunt sacrifice and a sacrifice fly by Ota. After using four pitchers to get through the fifth inning, Kuriyama, who appeared to be practicing his scowl for most of the game needed four more to get his team within one strike of a victory.

The game highlights are HERE.

Eagles 2, Marines 2, 6 innings, rain

At Rakuten Seimei Park, the Rakuten Eagles hit a pair of leadoff home runs, but stranded seven runners over five innings before their game with Lotte was called due to rain.

For the life of me, I don’t understand Japan’s aversion to suspended games. In a country that deals with high school pitching marathons in the blistering heat of summer, one would think they could suspend those games, but perhaps that would violate some unwritten rule that says if you start a game today, you have to finish it today.

For years, the high school federation’s answer has been to take games that go past a certain number of innings and, wait for it, replay them from the start — ostensibly to spare the pitchers’ arms, when so often it is the same guy who just threw 12 innings who will have to start from scratch.

The game highlights are HERE.

Lions 7, Buffaloes 0

At MetLife Dome, Lions starter Keisuke Honda located his little 140-kph fastball and his changeup well, and was spared when the Buffaloes failed to do much with his mistakes as he struck out five and walked two over six scoreless innings.

Buffaloes starter Tsubasa Sakakibara, looking to throw his 11th straight quality start, gave up two runs in the first before striking out cleanup hitter Hotaka Yamakawa with no outs and a runner on third and getting an inning-ending double play.

Chris Marrero, who had been cooling his heels on the Buffaloes’ farm team since the start of June drove a hanging changeup foul before striking out in his first at-bat and drilled a hanging slider for an out in his second, but was hitless.

The game highlights are HERE.

Central League

Giants 6, Swallows 2

At Akita’s Komachi Stadium, Shun Yamaguchi pitched seven scoreless innings i in Yomiuri’s win over Yakult, making him the 353rd pitcher to reach 1,000 innings pitched.

Yamaguchi dueled veteran Swallows lefty Masanori Ishikawa through six innings. Ishikawa left trailing 2-0, only for the bullpen to cough up three more runs in the seventh.

Dragons 6, Tigers 1

At Nagoya Dome, Chunichi lefty Yudai Ono allowed a run on eight hits over seven innings, while striking out five and walking none, while Hanshin side-armer Koyo Aoyagi gave up five runs in the second inning.

Joely Rodriguez pitched out of a one-out, two-on jam in the eighth and Raidel Martinez struck out the side in order in the ninth to close it out.

Dragons catcher Takuma Kato drilled a 2-1 fastball down the line for a one-out, second-inning, bases-loaded double that plated the first two runs in a five-run inning off Aoyagi.

BayStars 2, Carp 1, 10 innings

At Yokohama Stadium, Toshiro Miyazaki’s two-out, bases-loaded single lifted DeNA past Hiroshima to its third straight win. The loss left the Carp 2-1/2 games back of the Giants in second place.

News

Tigers’ Fujinami appears ready for return

In what was billed as his final tuneup before returning to the first team, Hanshin Tigers right-hander Shintaro Fujinami allowed a run over eight innings and touched 154 kph on Saturday in a Western League game against the Hiroshima Carp at Mazda Stadium. He allowed four hits, while striking out eight and walking one.

The Sankei Sports story is HERE.

Blash out of action after Japan-high 10th plunking

Jabari Blash was held out of the Eagles’ lineup on Saturday after being hit by a pitch on the right arm on Friday by Eagles closer Naoya Masuda in the ninth inning. He was removed for a pinch runner.

Blash is leading the team with 19 home runs and 57 RBIs. He has been by pitches 10 times to lead the PL in that category. Chunichi’s Dayan Viciedo leads the CL with 10.

writing & research on Japanese baseball

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