Tag Archives: Ariel Martinez

NPB news: Aug. 13, 2023

Japan had a special game Sunday that had nine hitless innings from a starter, a 10th-inning homer as one team took the lead against Japan’s most dominant closer and a come-from-behind extra-inning walk-off.

Before that, I have a brief explanation. There were no blogs Friday or Saturday, because I’ve decided to take family holidays and podcast recording days off from the daily blogs. Friday, Teruyo and I walked up Takaozan to enjoy eating at the beer garden with her friends and Saturday I went to Tokyo Dome during the day to talk to players and coaches before the DeNA-Yomiuri game and then did a podcast so that was that.

On Friday, the Seibu Lions, DeNA BayStars and SoftBank Hawks all got off to good starts in their weekend series, while the Dragons and Carp decided to get a head start on what was to be a weekend full of nail-biting early in a 3-3 tie, with Takahiro Matsuba allowing the only run given a Dragons starter would allow entire weekend and end with a bang.

The Hanshin Tigers eked out a tense 1-0 win over the Swallows for their eighth straight win in what was also a harbinger of the games to come, while in Sendai, Takayuki Kishi threw his first shutout in two years to beat Orix.

After their bright starts, the Hawks and BayStars got hammered Saturday, by the Fighters, and Giants, respectively, while Seibu closer Tatsushi Masuda (4-2) surrendered two ninth-inning runs in Chiba in a 3-2 loss to the Marines. Hanshin beat the Swallows again by one run, 4-3 for their ninth straight win, while Yuki Okabayashi hit safely in his 25th straight game, tying Chunichi’s franchise record, set by Hall of Famer Michio Nishizawa in 1949, in a 3-2 win behind seven scoreless innings from Hiroto Takahashi (5-7), who out-dueled Masato Morishita (6-3).

That brings us to Sunday, when the Dragons and Carp resumed their drama, big time. Meanwhile, the Tigers may be winning like nobody’s business, but they lost regular catcher Ryutaro Umeno for the foreseeable future when a pitched ball fractured his left ulna.

Sunday’s games

Dragons 2, Carp 1, 10 innings: At Nagoya Dome, Yuki Okabayashi hit safely in the first inning off Atsushi Endo, who threw seven scoreless innings for Hiroshima, but Yuya Yanagi threw nine hitless innings for the Dragons with nothing to show for it but being able to crack jokes on the hero-interview podium.

The Carp broke the deadlock in the 10th on Shota Dobayashi’s two-out home run off Raidel Martinez (2-1), but the lead didn’t last long. Carp closer Takuya Yasaki (4-1) took over in the home half to close it out and gave up back-to-back homers to Takaya Ishikawa and Shingo Usami.

“I was up there trying to get on base, and in the process, I hit a home run, so that was good. In the end, I expected Usami to do something and he did, so it worked out like I expected,” Ishikawa said of his new teammate.

Usami joined Chunichi this summer in a trade from the Fighters after regular catcher Takuya Kinoshita went out hurt. The 30-year-old now has three homers this season, two shy of his career high in 2022. It was the 16th of his career. Hero interviews, of course, are an exercise in white lies, so that’s exactly where someone says they expect real offense from a reserve catcher with a .599 career OPS in 827 plate appearances.

Okabayashi is now seven games shy of the Japan pro baseball record of 33 straight games with a hit, set by Hiroshima’s Yoshihiko Takahashi in 1979.

As pointed out by Jason Coskrey, Yudai Ono last year saw his no-hitter evaporate in the 10th inning against Hanshin in Nagoya, when Teruaki Sato, of all people, doubled with two outs. Ishikawa, was also a hero that day, singling in the winning run in the 10th with one out and the bases loaded.

Dragons-Carp highlights
Continue reading NPB news: Aug. 13, 2023

NPB news: July 18, 2023

Monday was a national holiday in Japan, Sea Day, so we had baseball ahead of the Wednesday and Thursday’s all-star games. Carter Stewart Jr. and Shumpeita Yamashita squared off in a duel of hard-throwing rookies with good curveballs, Tomoyuki Sugano didn’t make it out of the first inning in one of the year’s wildest games, and Hiroshima’s Hiroki Tokoda did it all on the mound and at bat

Monday’s games

Buffaloes 2, Hawks 1, 10 innings: At Fukuoka Dome, Shumpeita Yamashita (8-2) struck out eight over seven innings while allowing two singles and two walks. Carter Stewart Jr. (0-2) was nearly as impressive. He surrendered five hits, two on slow rollers, striking out seven and walking two. He pitched out of a fourth-inning jam – when right fielder Ukyo Shuto robbed Yuma Tongu of a two-out two-run double. A hard-hit double in the sixth, and a one-out walk set up all three Orix runs.

Leandro Cedeno crushes SoftBank for the second straight day.

Leandro Cedeno put a good swing on a decent fastball and knocked it into the right-field home run terrace for his fifth homer.

Shota Abe and Yuki Udagawa each contributed a scoreless inning of relief with Udagawa earning his second save.

The loss was SoftBank’s ninth straight, the Hawks’ longest since 1996, the year Hawks fans in Osaka – from where the franchise had moved seven years earlier – pelted the Daiei team bus with eggs. The Buffaloes go into the second half with a 3-1/2 game lead over the Marines.

Continue reading NPB news: July 18, 2023