Tag Archives: Carter Stewart Jr

ramping up: 21 days to go

One aspect of the long layoff forced by the novel coronavirus is that players who were due to miss the original March 20 start of the season, are now regaining fitness and may be able to make the roster when the season finally starts on June 19.

350 days

That’s how long it will be between starts for Naoyuki Uwasawa when he takes the mound for the Nippon Ham Fighters in Tuesday’s practice game.

Last season, Uwasawa was a key component of the Rube Goldberg contraption that was the Fighters’ pitching rotation last season. Manager Hideki Kuriyama used him and Kohei Arihara as the pillars in conventional starting roles, with a handful of others tasked with going either once or twice through the opposing lineup depending on the skipper’s confidence in them.

In a June 18 interleague game, Uwasawa was kneecapped by a batted ball hit by Neftali Soto, the DeNA BayStars’ two-time Central League home run champ. Prior to that game, the Fighters starting pitchers were 26-18 with a 3.65 ERA. Afterward, even with some superb 1-inning opening acts by Mizuki Hori, they went 18-31 with a 4.32 ERA.

On Thursday, he faced five batters in a simulated game at the Fighters’ minor league facility in Kamagaya, Chiba Prefecture, and is expected to pitch two innings on Tuesday at the Lotte Marines’ Zozo Marine Stadium in Chiba.

Yanagita back with a bang

Yuki Yanagita, who until the recent ascension of Hiroshima Carp right fielder Seiya Suzuki, was considered the Japanese outfielder most coveted by MLB clubs, returned to the SoftBank Hawks’ first team for an intrasquad game on Saturday. Yanagita has been rehabbing since his 2019 dumpster fire of a season was capped with right elbow surgery in the offseason.

Yanagita missed most of the season with a knee injury and failed by the slimmest of margins to get the 140 days of service time needed to be a free agent this winter. Had the Hawks brought him up a few days earlier, he would have been on track to fulfil his stated goal of playing in the majors. They didn’t and he signed a long-ass contract that keeps him in Fukuoka for essentially the rest of his career.

On Saturday, according to the Sankei Sports, he hit an opposite-field homer from submarine right-hander Rei Takahashi, the Pacific League’s 2019 rookie of the year and another player who was due to miss the start of the season in March but now has a shot at helping out the rotation from the start.

Stewart takes drive off shin

The Hawks’ Carter Stewart Jr left the mound after pitching just one inning when he took a shot off his right shin that was turned into the final out of the inning.

Iguchi changes tune on Sasaki

Eighteen-year-old right-hander Roki Sasaki who repeatedly was clocked at over 100 miles per hour in his final high school season, apparently will appear in a practice game for the Lotte Marines in the coming weeks, manager Tadahito Iguchi indicated to the media on Saturday.

Earlier in the week, Iguchi had said Sasaki, who twice hit 160 kilometers per hour in a simulated game on Tuesday, would not be ready to appear in a game next month.

Stewart’s maiden effort a wild ride

Ten months after signing Carter Stewart Jr to a six-year contract, the SoftBank Hawks used the delayed start to the season to give the 20-year-old right-hander some first-team pitching experience on Friday.

Stewart allowed one run on a solo homer, gave up two singles, walked five and struck out five. He touched 95.7 mph on his final pitch of the first inning, when he escaped a one-out bases-loaded jam with a strike out.

Of the 46 fastballs I have a record of, he made his catcher reach on 24 of them and hit the target with five. Of 32 curves, he missed badly with 19 and hit the glove with seven. But even when he missed, he was hard to hit.

Here are the game highlights, courtesy of Pacific League TV.

On top of never having faced Stewart before, the right-hander had another advantage: elite spin. Stewart was spinning a lot of his curves over 3,000 RPM according to the broadcast display. The MLB average last year was 2,531, while Charlie Morton’s average was 2,886. Of course, NPB’s somewhat tackier balls are thought to give pitchers an advantage with their spin pitches, but that extra oomph meant more fat pitches that were miss-hit.

Stewart has a big body, so its possible that his balance and command will take a little while to develop, but he is definitely going to be a fun pitcher to watch.

After spending four months last year with the Hawks’ third team competing against amateurs and independent minor leaguers, Stewart is set to move up to the Western League, where SoftBank’s main farm team plays. SoftBank manager Kimiyasu Kudo, who said the chances of Stewart contributing on the first team this season were not zero.