NPB news, games of June 6, 2019

The Pacific League improved to 11-7 at home at the end of the season’s first interleague series, with the SoftBank Hawks, the all-time leaders in interleague wins completing a three-game sweep of the Chunichi Dragons.

Interleague

Giants Eagles

At Rakuten Seimei Park, Yomiuri right-hander Toshiki Sakurai (2-1) overcame a fourth inning in which he walked three and allowed a single, to give up just one run on three hits and three walks over 6-2/3 innings. The 25-year-old struck out five.

Kazuma Okamoto broke a 1-1 tie with a sixth-inning solo homer off Ryota Ishibashi (3-3). The rookie right-hander allowed two runs on six hits over six innings.

Scott Mathieson made his season debut for the Giants. He allowed two hits in two-thirds of an inning, but struck out Jabari Blash swinging for the final out with the tying run on third.

Lefty Kota Nakagawa, who was handed the Giants’ closer role on May 8, struck out the side in the ninth, saved his sixth game.

Lions 9, Carp 2

At MetLife Dome, NPB’s home run leader, Hotaka Yamakawa, hit Nos. 24 and 25, the first one a miss-hit opposite-field shot that glanced off the dome’s ceiling covering as Seibu gave Hiroshima rookie Sho Yamaguchi (1-1) an interleague reality check.

Yamaguchi was coming off an impressive starting debut against Yakult. His good fastball and split were on display, but he missed too many sliders, and the Lions appeared to be waiting for those.

Kuo Chun-lin (1-0), who pitched in just three games last season for the Lions, allowed two runs over five innings. He gave up three hits, walked two and hit one, while striking out five.

The Lions hit five homers, while the bullpen easily kept the Carp in check over the final three innings. Hiroshima’s Ryoma Nishikawa had a sac fly in the Carp’s two-run first but failed to extend his hitting streak to 28 games.

Buffaloes 3, BayStars 2

At Kyocera Dome, rookie Tsubasa Sakakibara (3-3) scattered eight hits and three walks, allowing one run over seven innings, while striking out two. Shuhei Fukuda singled and scored a run in the third to open the scoring, and broke a 1-1 tie in the fourth with an RBI double.

Lefty Katsuki Azuma (3-2) allowed three runs, two earned, on eight hits and two walks in a brief 3-1/3 inning start in which he still threw 84 pitches. After Yoshitomo Tsutsugo homered to make it a 3-2 game in the eighth, the BayStars failed to bring the tying run in from scoring position against closer Hirotoshi Masui, who saved his 16th game.

Hawks 6, Dragons 4

At Yafuoku Dome, Yurisbel Gracial broke a 4-4, eighth-inning tie with a two-out, two-run single to lift SoftBank past Chunichi to a home series sweep. Gracial opened the scoring by homering for the third straight game. He went deep for two off the oldest pitcher in Japan, Chunichi’s Daisuke Yamai in the first inning.

Cuban compatriot Alfredo Despaigne homered for the second-straight game to make it 3-0 in the third, but Hawks starter Kotaro Otake (3-2) couldn’t hold the lead. The lefty, however, allowed four runs on eight hits, while striking out five over eight innings to get the win.

The Buffaloes should have taken a one-run lead in the eighth, when Yohei Oshima came home on a fly off the wall in right. He just barely slid home under the tag at home, and umpires declined to overturn the out call upon review.

Yuito Mori overcame a leadoff infield single in the top of the ninth to nail down his 16th save.

Fighters 3, Swallows 1

At Sapporo Dome, Nippon Ham’s Takayuki Kato (3-4) allowed a run on four hits and no walks over five innings, and four relievers kept Yakult off the board the rest of the way. Fighters closer Ryo Akiyoshi earned the save against his former team.

Wang Po-jung went 3-for-4 with a first-inning RBI single off Yasuhiro Ogawa (1-8), who scattered eight and a walk over six innings to allow just three runs, two earned, and keep Yakult close. Wang

Tigers 4, Marines 3, 10 innings

At Zozo Marine Stadium, Ikuhiro Kiyota tied the game in the ninth with a two-out, full-count RBI single off Hanshin closer Rafael Dolis (3-1), but Lotte’s Naoya Masuda (2-4) surrendered three-straight singles in the 10th to let in the decisive run.

Jefry Marte put the Tigers in the driver’s seat with a two-run, first-inning single and a third-inning sacrifice fly.

As the Tigers did the night before when their potential tying run was doubled off third to end the game, the Marines wasted a chance to tie it late in the game. With two outs in the eighth, Hiromi Oka took off for third, but stopped when catcher Ryutaro Umeno blocked a pitch from Kyuji Fujikawa in the dirt. Oka tried to get back to second, but Umenon threw him out easily to end the inning. When Marines manager Tadahito Iguchi came out to make some lineup changes, he could barely keep a straight face while talking to the umpire.

News

Norimoto throws 4th bullpen since surgery

Sankei Sports reported Thursday that Takahiro Norimoto, who had endoscopic surgery to clean out his right elbow on March 12, threw a 121-pitch bullpen on Wednesday, and touched 140 kilometers per hour. Through four sessions since his surgery, the right-hander has now thrown a total of 329 pitches.

Van den Hurk deactivated

The SoftBank Hawks deactivated Rick van den Hurk on Thursday, following the right-hander’s season debut on Tuesday, when he overpowered the Chunichi Dragons for the first four innings of a 5-1/3-inning start in which he allowed four runs on three hits but struck out eight without issuing a walk.

NPB games, news of June 5, 2019

It was time for some left-handed compliments on Wednesday as a pair of lefty starters, Hawks veteran Tsuyoshi Wada and Buffaloes youngster Daiki Tajima returned from prolonged injury absences, while 39-year-old southpaw Masanori Ishikawa went eight innings to record the 24th interleague win of his career, tied for second behind retired lefty Toshiya Sugiuchi.

And last out of the pen but not least, Yuki Matsui pitched in his fifth straight game for the Eagles after blowing a save on Tuesday. No word on whether the next thing that blows out will be his elbow or shoulder.

Interleague

Hawks 5, Dragons 2

At Yafuoku Dome, SoftBank rallied around 38-year-old returning former ace Tsuyoshi Wada, who allowed two runs over five innings in his first game since the 2017 Japan Series.

For the second straight night, home runs ruled the night in Fukuoka, the Hawks hitting four and the Dragons one, the same combination the teams put up in SoftBank’s 6-4 win on Tuesday.

Nobuhiro Matsuda homered for the second-straight night and Seiichi Uchikawa broke a 1-1 tie for the Hawks in the second. After that, the Cuban connections took over.

Cuban-born Dragon Dayan Viciedo tied it 2-2 in the fourth with his ninth homer. While Alfredo Despaigne broke the tie with his 16th in the sixth inning. After Livan Moinelo struck out the side in the top of the eighth, Cuban compatriot Yurisbel Gracial iced the contest with his 11th home run in the home half.

Marines 5, Tigers 4

At Zozo Marine Stadium, Lotte left fielder Ikuhiro Kiyota caught a low line drive and doubled off the runner at third base to end the game and leave Hanshin’s fans and players stunned when they thought they’d tied it up on a Shun Takayama RBI single.

Takayama’s drive held up enough for Kiyota to make a basket catch on his knees. He got up and fired home as Tigers pinch runner Kai Ueda stood at home and could only turn and look at third in disbelief.

Eagles 4, Giants 2

At Rakuten Seimei Park, Yuki Matsui, pitching in his fifth straight game, bounced back from a blown save the night before to record a 1-2-3 ninth and his 17th save in Rakuten’s win over Yomiuri.

Alan Busenitz (1-0) loaded the bases with one out in the eighth, and allowed the tying run to score, but earned his first win in Japan after the Giants bullpen issued three walks and hit a batter in a two-run Eagles’ eighth inning.

Jabari Blash doubled and walked and scored twice for the Eagles.

Swallows 5, Fighters 0

At Sapporo Dome, 39-year-old Yakult lefty Masanori Ishikawa (2-3) tied Tsuyoshi Wada and Hideaki Wakui for second place in interleague wins with his 24th after allowing three hits over eight innings. The loss snapped Nippon Ham’s seven-game winning streak.

Norichika Aoki homered, singled, scored twice and drove in two runs to pace the Swallows.

Buffaloes 5, BayStars 0

At Kyocera Dome, lefty Daiki Tajima (1-0), who won five of his first seven starts as a rookie last season after being Orix’s top draft pick in 2017, allowed four hits over five innings in his first game since last June. Tajima had been suffering from a left oblique muscle injury, but had a wicked slider in his return to duty.

Carp 9, Lions 1

At MetLife Dome, Kosuke Tanaka, a top-of-the-lineup hitter until his struggles dropped him to the bottom of the Carp order this spring, singled, doubled, homered, scored twice and drove in five runs in a win over Seibu.

Tanaka doubled and scored the tying run in the fourth, singled in the tie-breaking run in seventh to make it 2-1 and capped the scoring with a grand slam in the eighth.

Daichi Osera (6-2) allowed a run over six innings, and Xavier Batista hit his 17th home run to open the scoring in the eighth. It was his fifth home run in six games.

News

Yoshida to make June 12 debut

The Nippon Ham Fighters will send first-draft pick Kosei Yoshida to the mound on June 12, making his first team debut against the Hiroshima Carp at Sapporo Dome, despite giving up six runs in three innings against the Yomiuri Giants’ farm team on Tuesday. Yoshida electrified the nation last summer as the star of the national high school tournament, where he pitched unheralded Kanaashi Nogyo to the final, throwing 881 pitches over two weeks. Here’s the story on Sanspo.

Higashihama has surgery

Hawks right-hander Nao Higashihama is expected to miss three months after having endoscopic surgery on his right elbow, the club said Wednesday, according to Nikkan Sports. He was deactivated on May 23 with stiffness in the joint. According to the story, it is the first time he’s needed surgery on either his elbow or shoulder.

Nishikawa streak reaches 27

Hiroshima Carp utility man Ryoma Nishikawa extended his hitting streak to 27 on Wednesday when he beat out a ninth-inning infield single against Seibu. He was 0-for-3 with a seventh-inning sacrifice — when he bunted the go-ahead run into scoring position.

His streak is now the second longest in club history, six games short of the NPB record set by Yoshihiko Takahashi with the Carp in 1979.

writing & research on Japanese baseball

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