Tag Archives: Domingo Santana

NPB wrap 11-10-21

The final stage of Japan’s Central and Pacific leagues’ Foreplay Series began Wednesday in Tokyo and Osaka and it was all about young arms.

I don’t know if I’d say Yakult’s 20-year-old rookie Yasunobu Okugawa overshadowed 23-year-old Japan and Orix ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto, since getting a 3-0 first-inning lead, even at Jingu Stadium, is different from holding on to a 1-0 lead for eight innings, but damn what a night for the youngsters.

Okugawa was the fourth pitcher in his league to throw a shutout in his FS debut, while Yamamoto was the sixth in the PL, and the second to throw a “mushkyu”–a complete game without a walk or hit batsman, following Lotte’s Yoshihisa Naruse in 2007. Yamamoto’s 1-0 FS shutout win was the third in league history. Okugawa’s mushikyu shutout was the first in the history of CL foreplay, and a bit of a surprise since veteran umpire Kazuaki Nako appeared to have forgotten his specs.

Yamamoto struck out 10 in his four-hitter, Okugawa nine, while throwing a six-hit Maddux. Neither walked a batter. Yamamoto, however, had to deal with his team only scratching out one run against the Marines’ superb defense. Adeiny Hechavarria made a couple of show-stopping grabs, reminding me of how glad I am that this team is still playing.

“Today was Yamamoto, Yamamoto, Yamamoto. I guess you could say it was about Yamamoto.”

–Orix manager Satoshi Nakajima

Wednesday’s FS games

Buffaloes 1, Marines 0

At Kyocera Dome Osaka, Ayumu Ishikawa walked two in the first, and that was the ballgame, speedy Yuma Mune hustled home to score on a close play at the plate after Takahiro Okada hit a two-out bullet to right.

Masataka Yoshida returned for Orix for the first time since Oct. 2, ripped a single, drew a walk and was denied another hit on a flare to center by wonderful center fielder Hiromi Oka. Did I say the Marines were fun?

Ishikawa walked three and allowed five hits, but between Oka, Hechavarria, and another play by Yudai Fujioka, usually a shortstop but playing at third, Lotte squeezed the life out of the Buffaloes’ potential rallies.

Orix, with one win advantage as league champion, leads the best-of-seven series 2-0.

Swallows 4, Giants 0

At Tokyo’s Jingu Stadium, Okugawa retired the Giants in order in the first, and Yakult caught some breaks against Giants right-hander Shun Yamaguchi, who had more movement on his pitches than generally considered practical.

Leadoff man Yasutaka Shiomi doubled when Yamaguchi missed down the middle 0-1, and went to third on a groundout. After Tetsuto Yamada walked, Shiomi scored when shortstop Hayato Sakamoto made an awkward catch on a tough flare in shallow left.

Shiomi said third base coach and former speedster Kazuki Fukuchi, told Shiomi to run like hell if Sakamoto was in poor position to throw, and he beat the relay home.

Yamaguchi missed with his next pitch down the pipe and Domingo Santana put it in the seats and grasped his good fortune that the game was being played at the Swallows’ home run-friendly ballpark.

“It didn’t feel that good but we’re at Jingu, so thank God.”

–Domingo Santana

Shiomi who went 2-for-4 after he was robbed of a leadoff hit by Giants right fielder Seiya Matsubara, doubled in an insurance run in the eighth.

Yakult, with one win advantage as league champion, leads the best-of-seven series 2-0.

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A final note. The Giants and Swallows finished the season 11-11-3 against each other, the Marines and Buffaloes 10-10-5.

Starting pitchers

Yomiuri Giants manager Tatsunori Hara isn’t messing around, and instead of waiting to use his nephew and ace Tomoyuki Sugano in Game 3, has decided to commit him early. Otherwise, Games 2 will be lefties for the home teams and righties for the visitors.

Buffaloes vs Marines: Kyocera Dome (Osaka) 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Daiki Tajima (8-8, 3.58) vs Manabu Mima (6-7, 4.92)

Swallows vs Giants: Jingu Stadium 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Keiji Takahashi (4-1, 2.87) vs Tomoyuki Sugano (6-7, 3.19)

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NPB wrap 10-26-21

Seeing the Swallows watch the end of the Tigers’ game on the Yokohama Stadium big screen felt like a distant echo of Sept. 15, 2003, when the Tigers beat the Hiroshima Carp in an afternoon day game and then waited for the BayStars to beat the Swallows in Yokohama Stadium so they could celebrate. But the Tigers in 2003 had been sitting on a magic number of one for about a week but couldn’t buy a win at Nagoya Dome but they were going to win sooner or later with more than two weeks left in the season.

This time was a lot tighter and both teams did their part to take it down to the wire, Hanshin not being eliminated until their final regular season game.

Tsuji: Never can say goodbye

Hatsuhiko Tsuji has accepted the Seibu Lions’ request to remain as manager for the 2022 season the team said Tuesday night according to Sponichi Annex. Word had been leaking that Tsuji was ready to walk away with the Lions poised to replace him with farm manager Kazuo Matsui.

Tuesday’s games

BayStars 5, Swallows 1

At Yokohama Stadium, Domingo Santana and Yuhei Nakamura broke open a 1-1 tie with back-to-back third-inning two-run doubles, and Yakult hung on to beat DeNA, and then waited a few minutes for Hanshin’s game to end so they could celebrate.

Doubles by BayStars rookies Kaito Mori and Shugo Maki made it 1-0 with two outs in the first off Yakult’s Hirotoshi Takanashi. The Swallows wasted a leadoff single in the first but not in the second, when Munetaka Murakami singled, Santana doubled and the tying run scored on a groundout against Shota Imanaga (5-5, 3.08).

Takanashi worked a 1-2-3 second and the Swallows put up four runs in the third. Yasutaka Shiomi and Norichika Aoki opened with singles. Imanaga jammed Tetsuto Yamada and Munetaka Murakami, Yamada’s pop to shallow right was caught but Murakami’s loaded the bases with a single.

Santana’s second double made it 3-1, and Yuhei Nakamura doubled off the wall to drive in two more. Imanaga loaded the bases with one out, but allowed no more runs and was pulled for a pinch-hitter in the BayStars’ third.

The Swallows went to the bullpen in the fifth. Starter Keiji Takahashi (4-1) stranded two in the sixth and one in the seventh, while Noboru Shimizu and Scott McGough each allowed two runners in their scoreless innings to close it out.

Dragons 4, Tigers 1

At Koshien Stadium, Chunichi’s Shinnosuke Ogasawara (8-10, 3.64) allowed four hits and a walk while striking out four over six innings, and three relievers retired the final nine Tigers to consign Hanshin to second place.

The Dragons got two on with one out in both the first and second, and a Tigers error made the second time a charm thanks to an error. Shuhei Takahashi’s leadoff single and a one-out Yuki Okabayashi single put runners on first and second. Yusuke Oyama fielded a tailor-made double play ball and got the force at second, but second-baseman Kento Itohara’s throw skipped past first to bring in the game’s first run.

With two on and two out in the bottom of the second, Hanshin manager Akihiro Yano began pulling out stops, pulling starting pitcher Koyo Aoyagi (13-6, 2.48) for a pinch-hitter.

Hanshin’s second pitcher Masaki Oyokawa lost the leadoff hitter in the fifth when he struck him out on a wild pitch. A walk and a one-out Yota Kyoda singled to load the bases. Kosuke Baba struck out the first batter he faced but surrendered a two-run Yohei Oshima single that made it 3-0.

The Dragons added a run against setup man Suguru Iwazaki in the eighth on a one-out Oshima single, a stolen base by pinch-runner Shohei Kato and a two-out infield single when the umps ruled Masaru Watanabe beat Yamazaki to the bag.

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Fighters 1, Lions 0

At Sapporo Dome, the Lions inched closer toward their first last-place finish since 1979, when Seibu purchased the team and moved them to the suburbs outside Tokyo.

The Fighters broke a scoreless tie on a walk, a sacrifice in which the batter reached on a fielder’s choice, another sacrifice that left first base open and the team that issued the fewest intentional walks this year, went for it to load the bases, allowing Go Matsumoto draw a walk-off walk.

Fighters right-hander Naoyuki Uwasawa allowed two hits while striking out seven over 7-2/3 innings, while Seibu’s submarine right-hander Kaito Yoza went six innings.

Nippon Ham now trails the fifth-place Lions on winning percentage points, .440 to .438 with two games to play. A win and a tie for the Fighters will secure them a fifth-place finish.

Wednesday’s starting pitchers

Eagles vs Marines: Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Takahiro Norimoto (11-5, 3.18) vs Kazuya Ojima (10-4, 3.86)

Active roster moves 10/26/2021

Deactivated players can be re-activated from 11/5

Central League

Activated

TigersOF25Taiga Egoshi
DragonsP36Yuichiro Okano

Dectivated

DragonsP38Takahiro Matsuba

Pacific League

Activated

LionsP14Tatsushi Masuda
FightersP52Takahide Ikeda
FightersOF4Yuya Taniguchi

Dectivated

MarinesC22Tatsuhiro Tamura

The Orix Buffaloes deactivated their entire roster ahead of the playoffs.

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