Tag Archives: coronavirus

Faster, stronger, deadlier

When Japan finally realized its dream of hosting another summer Olympics, a big part of its bid campaign – other than greasing the wheels with $2 million dollars to a shady Singapore “consulting firm” serving as a conduit for alleged vote buying – was the assurance that the games would be safe from things like the March 2011 earthquake, tsunami and multiple nuclear meltdowns.

After spending millions and millions of dollars in repeated failed attempts lure the summer games over the years, Japan was not going to let the idea of 16,000 dead make anyone think bad things happen here.

“Japan is safe,” Japan’s then prime minister Shinzo Abe told the International Olympic Committee, when Tokyo’s titanic Olympic effort was launched in 2013 and declared unsinkable.

Since then, it has been: “Don’t worry about stadium costs. Don’t worry about logo plagiarism. Don’t worry about the effect on athletes and spectators from heat and humidity when Tokyo becomes a sauna in July and August. We’ve got this.”

To every problem that has arisen, the response of the government and organizers has been:

  1. Deny there is a problem.
  2. Downplay it.
  3. Insist the Olympics are simply too important to be affected by it.
  4. Admit that “No one saw this coming. What’s done is done.”
  5. Say, “Let’s move forward, because the Olympics are really important.”

When distance runners dropped like flies at the 2019 World athletics championships in Doha, the IOC unilaterally moved the Tokyo Olympic marathon to the northern city of Sapporo, outraging Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike. Of course, the IOC was complicit in handing Tokyo a summer Olympics IN THE SUMMER. Before the age of professionalism and big money TV deals, the first Tokyo Olympics were held in October.

So, when the coronavirus arrived, the style of the response was predictable. But unlike the customary costs of waste and fraud, denying and downplaying a deadly virus has given Tokyo an Olympic legacy future host cities will be hard pressed to meet.

The IOC at first joined the Tokyo Organizers in assuming the pandemic would be over in time to open the Olympics on July 24, 2020 and that there was no way the games could be postponed. The postponement which Abe announced but Japan never would have considered on its own, allowed to say everything will be safe by July 23, 2021.

But that time between Feb. 1 and March 24, a time when steps could have been taken to eradicate the virus in Japan the way it has been in Taiwan and New Zealand was wasted because high infection totals from testing and contact tracing would have been a bad look ahead of the Olympics. Once the postponement was in place, Japan issued a band-aid version of a state of emergency, where people were asked not to do things to increase infections but testing was still something the government was not on board with – because the Olympics in 2021 will be safe, right?

Last autumn, surveys indicated that the Olympic dream of sponsors, politicians and businesses poised to profit from them was not shared by 80 percent of the Japanese public, which had seen and heard enough. In accordance, IOC and the Japanese government began to switch from proclaiming Tokyo the first “post-pandemic Olympics” to the first “mid-pandemic Olympics.”

Four months ago, things appeared to be back on track as organizers and epidemiologists developed concrete plans in the Olympic Playbooks, but that optimism is now gone. Day by day, Japan watches as 2020’s policy of prioritizing the Olympics over testing and tracing is now bearing fruit in the form of rising infection rates from our fourth wave.

The international swimming federation had decided, according to the BBC, which saw the documents, to cancel its final Olympic diving qualifier in Tokyo over Japan’s inadequate coronavirus countermeasures and being asked to shoulder the burden of increased quarantines.

The event, however, is going forward, this week in Tokyo, without Australia, whose diving body declared them unsafe. Cancelling the Olympic qualifier would have been a bad look for Tokyo organizers, so I’m guessing the additional costs for coronavirus security that won’t be paid by the international swimming federation will be coming out of my taxes.

Meanwhile, the torch relay goes on, despite being canceled in some places, despite infections among relay organizing staff. It is like the Tokyo Olympics. It serves no purpose, except to build public support for the unpopular games, and is often being run away from the people it was supposed to entertain, while Olympic organizers reassure us daily that, “Yes, the Olympics will go on, and no, no one is considering cancellation.”

When the IOC began studying for its mid-pandemic event, it was encouraged by sports taking place in bubbles and by crowds at Japanese pro baseball, soccer and sumo. But that is no longer looking like the bright light it once was.

This week, the NPB’s Nippon Ham Fighters officially became an infection cluster, and so far, four of their first-team games and three of the club’s minor league games have been postponed.

But don’t worry, canceling the Olympics is not an option. Sure, if the U.S. athletics federation and swimming federation decide not to come, then there will be no Tokyo Olympics.

Until that happens, however, Japan’s dogged persistence to push forward regardless of the cost and opposition so far has taught us that no deaths will be too many for Japan to pull the plug on its own accord.

I swear, if these people were in charge of the Titanic in 1912, when two-thirds of the people aboard died two-thirds of the way to New York, the Tokyo Olympic organizers would have called it between 33 percent and 67 percent successful.

NPB wrap 4-9-21

Angry Fighters snap skid

Fighters 2, Buffaloes 1

At Osaka’s Kyocera Dome, the Nippon Ham Fighters ended their nine-game winless streak with a two-run eighth-inning that shouldn’t have happened, except it came against the Orix Buffaloes, who have a knack for making the improbable inevitable.

The game started as a scoreless pitchers’ duel between former Buffaloes ace Chihiro Kaneko and Orix right-hander Taisuke Yamaoka until the seventh, when things went half-right for the Buffaloes. Masataka Yoshida, on first from a leadoff single, was put in motion, preventing a double play and allowing him to score when Takahiro Okada chased a high breaking ball out of the zone from Kaneko but pulled it into the gap in right for an RBI double.

The Buffaloes loaded the bases with one out, but Fighters lefty Mizuki Hori made the great escape, and things began to buffalo for Orix in the top of the eighth and Kensuke Kondo on first with a single.

Twenty-year-old second baseman Ryo Ota went for a double play and got no outs instead of one. Veteran shortstop Ryo Adachi got a double play grounder that could have ended the inning but couldn’t get the ball out of his glove and Daiki Asama doubled in both runners.

Tyler Higgins worked a solid ninth for the Buffaloes, but he couldn’t put runs on the board, and the Fighters’ streak was over.

The win was Kuriyama’s 631st with Nippon Ham, tying the franchise record of Keiji Osawa.

“That doesn’t have anything to with anything,” Kuriyama said after the game.

Kuriyama, Nakata simmer

Fighters skipper Hideki Kuriyama had a rare blowup over cleanup hitter Sho Nakata, who hurt his own right eye in an accident on the team’s bench, according to Hochi Shimbun.

Nakata snapped his bat after striking out in the fifth inning of Wednesday’s 6-2 loss to the SoftBank Hawks and suffered a swollen right-eye in the process — in a Japanese version of the injury that ended Cecil Fielder’s brief career in Japan. Fiedler slammed his bat down in frustration and it bounced up and caught him in the eye.

Kuriyama was angry about it after Wednesday’s game, and again the next day, when he pulled Nakata from the starting lineup.

Nakata started against the Buffaloes on Friday and when reporters asked Kuriyama about the injury before the game, he said, “Don’t ask me. Ask him!”

Lions 7, Marines 4

At Chiba’s Zozo Marine Stadium, Seibu’s Aito Takeda, a man of several names, opened the scoring with his first pro homer, and liked it so much he hit another, capping a five-run Lions eighth with a three-run shot.

Marines right-hander Fumiya Ono (0-1) came in after Opening Day starter Kota Futaki allowed a run over seven innings. Ono loaded the bases with one out for Wu Nien-ting, who singled in two runs. Takeda then took Lions starter, Kona Takahashi, off the hook for the loss with his second home run.

Takeda is registered under his given name, although he turned pro in 2016 as Aito Otaki, and more likely than not changed it to his wife’s family name when he got married, a common practice when marrying into a family with no sons. He entered the game with 83 first-team plate appearances in 61 games.

The Marines took a 2-1 lead in the fourth on rookie Koki Yamaguchi’s two-run homer, his first as a pro.

Eagles 1, Hawks 1

At Sendai’s Rakuten Seimei Park, Rakuten’s Hideaki Wakui allowed a run over eight innings but failed to get his third win because SoftBank’s Shuta Ishikawa allowed a run over seven solid innings, and neither bullpen allowed a run.

Tigers 9, BayStars 2

At Yokohama Stadium, Shintaro Fujinami (0-1) walked five batters but didn’t allow a run until the seventh, when he led 9-0 and gave up a two-run shot to Daiki Sekine.

If there were prop bets on who would walk in the first batter in this game, I’m guessing you’d have had to get good odds to bet on Haruhiro Hamaguchi (0-2), who walked the No. 8 hitter to cap a three-run first-inning rally. Fujinami, who threw his fourth pitch of the game to the backstop on the fly, didn’t even load the bases until the third inning and then retired both batters he faced without ever getting to three balls on either to keep it scoreless.

Jefry Marte doubled in Koji Chikamoto to open the scoring and came home on a Yusuki Oyama sac fly before Hamaguchi’s bases-loaded walk completed the rally.

Rookie Teruaki Sato launched his third homer, off reliever Yuki Kuniyoshi, out of the ballpark. Kuniyoshi allowed all six runs in Hanshin’s six-run sixth. Marte singled in another run, Oyama doubled in two and Jerry Sands capped the rally with an RBI single.

Carp 2, Giants 0

At Hiroshima’s Mazda Stadium, Ryosuke Kikuchi and Seiya Suzuki continued to tear it up. Kikuchi, the first batter to face Tomoyuki Sugano (0-1) since the Giants’ ace was deactivated after Opening Day with leg issues, homered to open the bottom of the first, and Suzuki made it 2-0 before Sugano settled down and followed by bowling six scoreless frames.

Daichi Osera (2-1) went six innings, allowing six hits and a walk while striking out six. Lefty Daisuke Moriua walked the first two batters he faced in the seventh and walked Hayato Sakamoto intentionally to load them and got out of the inning against Takayuki Kajitani.

Rookie Carp closer Ryoji Kuribayashi recorded his fourth save, ending it by getting Sakamoto to hit into a double play.

https://twitter.com/tom_mussa/status/1380450757326073858

Sasaki rocks on the farm

Rocket-armed 19-year-old Roki Sasaki, whom the Lotte Marines expect to bring up to the first team within a month, allowed a hit over three scoreless innings in Friday’s Eastern League game against the Seibu Lions, Hochi Shimbun reported.

The right-hander with the super smooth delivery touched 95 mph. He allowed a leadoff single and hit a batter while striking out two in his 39-pitch outing.

Punch-drunk Fighters swap 8 players

The Pacific League’s Nippon Ham Fighters, winless over their last nine games with seven losses and two ties, replaced eight players on their active roster on Friday.

Outfielder Chusei Mannami was among the eight activated players. The 21-year-old, the Fighters’ fourth pick in the 2018 draft, is tied for the Eastern League home run lead with five and slashing .340/.421/.745.

The Fighters’ minor league facility in Kamagaya is a hitter’s park in a hitter’s league, and Fighters’ minor leaguers often put up some gaudy numbers before getting reality checks at cavernous Sapporo Dome.

Starting pitchers

Pacific League

Eagles vs Hawks: Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Hayato Yuge (0-0, 2.45) vs Rei Takahashi (0-1, 5.11)

Marines vs Lions: Zozo Marine Stadium 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Manabu Mima (0-0, 2.31) vs Shota Hamaya (1-1, 3.72)

Buffaloes vs Fighters: Kyocera Dome (Osaka) 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Sachiya Yamasaki (0-1, 3.60) vs Naoyuki Uwasawa (0-2, 8.74)

Central League

BayStars vs Tigers: Yokohama Stadium 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Taiga Kamichatani (0-0, 22.50) vs Koyo Aoyagi (1-0, 2.08)

Dragons vs Swallows: Vantelin Dome (Nagoya) 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Yuya Yanagi (0-1, 2.25) vs Yasuhiro Ogawa (1-0, 2.03)

Carp vs Giants: Mazda Stadium 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Allen Kuri (2-0, 3.00) vs Shosei Togo (1-0, 1.80)

Active roster moves 4/9/2021

Deactivated players can be re-activated from 4/19

Central League

Activated

GiantsP18Tomoyuki Sugano
CarpP58Reira Fujii
CarpIF69Ryutaro Hatsuki

Dectivated

CarpP67Yuta Nakamura
CarpOF55Ryuhei Matsuyama
SwallowsOF49Daiki Watanabe

Pacific League

Activated

MarinesP60Rikuto Yokoyama
LionsP21Ken Togame
LionsP48Shota Takekuma
FightersP19Chihiro Kaneko
FightersP35Takahiro Nishimura
FightersIF91Yuto Takahama
FightersOF66Chusei Mannami
BuffaloesIF36Tatsuya Yamaashi

Dectivated

MarinesP49Fumiya Motomae
LionsP43Mitsuo Yoshikawa
LionsP64Towa Uema
FightersP31Toru Murata
FightersP40Suguru Fukuda
FightersIF2Kenshi Sugiya
FightersOF4Yuya Taniguchi