NPB games, news of June 21, 2019

The SoftBank Hawks moved to within one win of the team’s eighth interleague championship with a come-from-behind win over the Yomiuri Giants, who dropped a game back in the chase with the two clubs playing their final two games at Tokyo Dome on Saturday and Sunday.

With the two leagues splitting Friday’s four games, the PL on Saturday can wrap up the overall interleague win lead for the 14th time in 15 seasons. The PL now leads 51-39, and can own this year’s bragging rights with three more wins.

Of course, interleague is just part of the journey, and it doesn’t really matter which league wins it. Without interleague to brag about, the PL would have to fall back on the Japan Series, which it has only won 11 times over the past 14 seasons.

Interleague

Hawks 8, Giants 3

At Tokyo Dome, Shuhei Fukuda hit a grand slam off a former teammate and Kodai Senga reached double digits in strikeouts for the first time since April 27.

Senga (7-2) allowed two runs seven hits and four walks over six innings after striking his way out of a no-out, bases-loaded pinch in the second.

Yoshihiro Maru, who drove in all four of the Giants’ runs in Friday’s 4-2 win over Orix had three hits off Senga and scored both runs, one on an RBI single by Giants elder statesman Shinnosuke Abe and the other on his 13th home run.

Giants starter Cristopher Mercedes (5-3) cruised through five innings before giving up Seiji Uebayashi’s leadoff homer in the sixth and back-to-back two-out singles to Cubans Alfredo Despaigne and Yurisbel Gracial.

Rysuke Miyaguni walked the bases loaded and Carp catcher Takuya Kai slid headfirst to beat out an RBI bunt single to tie the game 2-2, and former Hawks side-armer Masahiko Morifuku came in and threw four sliders to the left-handed-hitting Fukuda, who slammed a fat 2-1 pitch way back into the right field stands.

Marines 12, Swallows 3

At Jingu Stadium, both clubs had a first-inning leadoff homer for the 14th time in NPB history as Lotte’s Takashi Ogino went deep off David Buchanan (1-5) and Yakult’s Tetsuto Yamada did the same to Kota Futaki in the bottom of the inning.

Ogino singled in a run in the fourth and doubled in another in the Marines’ seven-run fifth.

Futaki (5-5) twice allowed the Swallows to tie it, in the first on Yamada’s homer and in the second on a pair of singles and a wild pitch. The right-hander allowed three runs on four hits, a walk and a hit batsman, while striking out eight.

Yamada has now homered off of all 11 opposing NPB teams this season, a feat he also accomplished in 2016.

BayStars 3, Eagles 2

At Yokohama Stadium, Yamato Maeda hit his second sayonara double in three days, lifting DeNA over Rakuten.

BayStars’ starter Shota Imanaga struck out 12 over seven innings, but blew his 2-0 lead in the sixth inning on Hiroaki Shimauchi’s leadoff homer, a one-out walk to Jabari Blash and a two-out Zelous Wheeler double.

Eagles lefty Wataru Karashima allowed only two hits through five innings but both cleared the wall in Yokohama. Kazuki Kamizato opened the home half of the first with his sixth home run, while former Mariner Jose Lopez hit shots down the right-field line on consecutive pitches. The First sliced foul, while the second stayed fair for his 13th home run.

Edwin Escobar (3-2) pitched a 1-2-3 ninth to earn the win after Toshiro Miyazaki battled Rakuten’s Alan Busenitz (1-1) for a one-out walk to set the table for Maeda.

Dragons 4, Fighters 2

At Nagoya Dome, Shuhei Takahashi continued his torrid hitting with a three-run, first-inning homer off Kohei Arihara (8-3), who had not allowed a homer in his first three interleague starts, all wins for the right-hander.

Yuya Yanagi (8-2) allowed a run over seven innings on six hits and a walk, while striking out six. He’s now won five straight starts. Lefty Joely Rodriguez and right-hander Raidel Martinez, each struck out two batters in a scoreless inning to close it out for the Dragons.

Tigers 5, Lions 3

At Koshien Stadium, Deunte Heath inherited a no-out, two-on predicament in the seventh inning and struck out three but not before he’d loaded the bases with a walk and hit Ryutaro Umeno to force in the go-ahead run.

Kento Itohara, who singled to open the seventh and scored the go-ahead run, singled in an insurance run in the ninth, while Rafael Dolis worked a 1-2-3 ninth to record his 14th save.

Buffaloes 5, Carp 4

At Mazda Stadium, with both team’s closers sitting on the farm team due to lack of effectiveness, Orix won a battle of understudies against Hiroshima.

With Geronimo Franzua (5-3) on the mound, rookie Kaito Kozono’s error allowed the tying run to reach with one out in the ninth, and Masataka Yoshida followed with his 12th homer of the season.

Carp lefty Kyle Regnault survived a game of Russian roulette in the eighth, when he loaded the bases with one out, and another first-year import, Tyler Eppler (3-2) worked a scoreless eighth for the Buffaloes.

Brandon Dickson earned his second save in two opportunities to wrap it up for Orix.

News

Matsuzaka goes 6 in 3rd rehab game

Daisuke Matsuzaka inched closer toward pitching for the Chunichi Dragons’ top team after his throwing 108 pitches in a six-inning rehab start on Friday at Nagoya Stadium. Here’s the Sankei Sports story.

The 38-year-old, who suffered right shoulder inflammation in February when a fan gave him a high five, was pitching for the third time this year.

Fans lined up early to see Matsuzaka, who allowed two runs on seven hits with two strikeouts with his fastball maxing out 139 KPH (86.4 MPH). The right-hander was NPB’s comeback player of the year in 2018, when he went 6-4 after pitching in just one game the previous three seasons when he was with the SoftBank Hawks.

Giants on track to acquire D’Backs’ De La Rosa

According to Nick Piecoro of the Arizona Republic, right-hander Rubby De La Rosa is headed to Japan to play for the Yomiuri Giants.

A year ago, the Giants appeared solid in the bullpen with Arquimedes Caminero as their closer and bulldog Scott Mathieson as their principle set up guy. But Mathieson had season-ending knee surgery in August and Caminero struggled. This year, Mathieson was slowed by a bacterial infection and only recently returned to the first team, when he suffered a minor adductor muscle strain.

Ryan Cook was expected to close, but the right-hander has felt discomfort in his surgically repaired right elbow. He returned to action this past week.

The Giants have not won a Central League pennant since 2014 — equaling the franchise record for consecutive seasons without a pennant.

NPB games, news of June 20, 2019

The Pacific League added another four wins to its interleague

Interleague

Giants 4, Buffaloes 2

At Tokyo Dome, Yoshihiro Maru proved to be the two-out kiss of death for the Orix Buffaloes on Thursday, belting a two-out, two-run, game-tying, opposite-field homer to tie it in the sixth inning, and a two-out, two-strike, two-run triple to break the tie in the bottom of the eighth.

Buffaloes shorstop Koji Oshiro opened the scoring with a two-out, two-run, fifth-inning triple off 25-year-old Giants right-hander Toshiki Sakurai, who had allowed just one run in winning his previous two starts.

Sakurai struck out 10 but lost the strike zone after getting ahead of light-hitting Shuhei Fukuda 0-2. After a seven-pitch walk, Oshiro made Sakurai pay for his lapse.

Orix right-hander Kohei “K” Suzuki (1-3) faced just one batter over the minimum through five innings, but surrendered a leadoff pinch-hit single to Yasuhiro Yamamoto, but couldn’t get out of trouble with two outs against Maru, whose 12th homer of the season landed just inside the left-field foul pole.

Suzuki retired the next six batters but walked Yoshiyuki Kamei and Hayato Sakamoto with two outs in the eighth and Maru put the Giants in front with a two-run triple.

Kota Nakagawa saved his ninth game despite allowing a pair of one-out singles.

Hawks 6, Swallows 5

At Jingu Stadium, Seiichi Uchikawa went 4-for-5 with two home runs, and Nobuhiro Matsuda singled in two runs as SoftBank overcame three home runs by Yakult.

Yakult twice came from behind on two-run homers. Trailing 1-0 in the second, 19-year-old rookie Munetaka Murakami hit his 19th homer of the season off lefty Kotaro Otake (4-2).

The Hawks scored twice off former teammate Hiroki Yamada, who gave up an Uchikawa solo homer in the first and a one-out Uchikawa single in the fifth before getting yanked. Right-handed reliever Yugo Umeno came in and threw gasoline on the flames, giving up hits to all four batters he faced.

Tetsuto Yamada, however, tied it in the bottom of the inning with his 17th homer only for Uchikawa to answer with a two-run shot in the top of the sixth.

Hawks rookie Hiroshi Kaino, who blew his first career save attempt on Tuesday in his role as stand in while the Hawks are without closers Dennis Sarfate and Yuito Mori, retired the Swallows in order in the ninth.

Young Sluggers

YearNameTeamAgePAHR
1986Kazuhiro KiyoharaSeibu Lions1847131
1987Kazuhiro KiyoharaSeibu Lions1953629
1953Yasumitsu ToyodaNishitetsu Lions1843927
2019Munetaka MurakamiYakult Swallows1928219
1954Yasumitsu ToyodaNishitetsu Lions1958318
2015Tomoya MoriSeibu Lions1953117
1985Takayuki MurakamiKintetsu Buffaloes1945316
1967Taira FujitaHanshin Tigers1956116
1955Kihachi EnomotoMainichi Orions1859216
1988Yukio TanakaNippon Ham Fighters1954316
Most home runs in a season prior to age-20 season

The most interesting thing about this table is their positions. Only three of the players here Munetaka Murakami, Kiyohara and Enomoto) showed their early power as first basemen. Mori was a DH, who has since become Seibu’s regular catcher. All the others were shortstops.

Toyoda and Enomoto are in the hall of fame. Kiyohara deserves to be in on the basis of his playing career and may still make it — he’s off the ballot since no one thinks he’d get enough votes after his drug conviction to survive a single ballot. Fujita’s hall of fame credentials are impeccable but he is one of two guys who are out because they had toxic relationships with the media. Kiyohara nearly falls into this category, and if he is never elected that will be the reason.

Fighters 8, BayStars 4

At Yokohama Stadium, Kenshi Sugiya broke a 4-4, seventh-inning tie with a pinch-hit home run off former teammate Edwin Escobar (2-2) as Nippon Ham beat DeNA.

Yoshitomo Tsutsugo accounted for most of the BayStars’ offense with an RBI double in the first and a solo homer in the third, but the Fighters tied it in the sixth on a solo homer by Kotaro Kiyomiya.

Lions 2, Dragons 1

At Nagoya Dome, former Athletics right-hander Zach Neal (2-1), activated for the first time since April 23 following poor results in his first four starts, allowed a run on four hits and a hit batsman over five innings to earn the win as Seibu beat Chunichi.

Hotaka Yamakawa broke the ice in the second inning against the oldest pitcher in NPB, 41-year-old Daisuke Yamai (2-3), with his 27th home run. PL batting leader Tomoya Mori followed with an infield single, was doubled to third by Takeya Nakamura and scored on a ground out.

Kyle Martin continued his strong June by striking out three over two scoreless innings, while Katsunori Hirai worked the eighth and Tatsyshi Masuda the ninth for his 12th save.

Eagles 3, Tigers 2

At Koshien Stadium, Osaka native Ryota Ishibashi (4-3) pitched at the iconic Kansai ballpark for the first time as a pro, allowing two runs over seven-plus innings and scoring the winning run against Hanshin.

Ishibashi left the mound with two on and no outs in the seventh but a pair of relievers shut the door. Koji Aoyama retired Tigers cleanup hitter Yusuke Oyama to end the inning with the bases loaded.

Closer Yuki Matsui recorded his 23rd save, ending it when he retired Jefry Marte swinging when he tried to check his swing on a 3-2 pitch with the tying runner on base.

Rakuten leadoff man Eigoro Mogi singled in each of his first four at-bats. He drove in two runs in the fifth to tie it 2-2, and singled with two outs in the seventh so Hiroaki Shimauchi could break the tie with an RBI single off Tigers starter Haruto Takahashi (1-2). The stocky Ishibashi chugged around the bases from second to just beat the tag and give himself the lead.

The Eagles wasted a scoring chance in the eighth with a base-running mix-up that turned a grounder with runners on second and third into an inning-ending double play.

Carp 7, Marines 6

At Mazda Stadium, Hiroshima catcher Tsubasa Aizawa homered, doubled and singled in the winning run in the bottom of the ninth to lift the Carp to a walk-off win over Lotte, which fought back from a 6-0 sixth-inning deficit.

Geronimo Franzua (5-2) allowed an unearned run in the ninth on two hits and a walk to blow the save opportunity, but collected the win after the Carp ended a string of outstanding results by Brandon Mann (0-2) in the home half. The lefty walked the bases loaded with two outs, and Aizawa hit a first-pitch slider to win it.

The Carp sat regular shortstop Kosuke Tanaka and started highly touted rookie Kaito Kozono in his place. Kozono, who was selected as the first-round draft pick by four teams last autumn, singled in his first at-bat to open the home half of the first. He went 1-for-5 with two strikeouts.

Kozono was batting .189 in 185 at-bats in the Western League.

News

Eagles’ Norimoto hits 150 kph in 1st rehab game

Rakuten Eagles right-hander Takahiro Norimoto threw over 150 kilometers (93.2 miles) per hour on consecutive pitches Thursday in his three-inning rehab stint in a minor league game at Rakuten Seimei Park in Sendai.

Norimoto, who had surgery to clean out his right elbow in March, struck out four over three innings against the Yomiuri Giants’ Eastern League farm club.

“That I was able to pitch properly is everything,” Norimoto said. “I was pumped up. I’m about 60 percent of what I’m capable of.”

The 28-year-old Norimoto, who set an NPB record by striking out 10-plus batters in eight consecutive starts in the first half of the 2017 season, is expected to remain with the Eagles’ EL farm club for a few more weeks before being activated around the time of the all-star break.

writing & research on Japanese baseball

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