Tag Archives: Hanshin Tigers

NPB games, news of Oct. 9, 2019

The final stage of Japan’s two misnamed Climax Series opened for business on Wednesday at the league champions home parks. The unorthodox format for the Japan Series tournament’s quarterfinals and semifinals is a best-of-seven

Central League champion Yomiuri Giants and the Pacific League champion Seibu Lions entered the six-game series with a one-win advantage.

Hawks 8, Lions 4

At MetLife Dome, the Hawks caught most of the breaks and now are three wins shy of knocking off Seibu in the final stage for the second-straight year.

Lions starter Zach Neal fell victim in the first inning to a lucky roll, when a little chopper stayed fair for a one-out infield single. That was followed by two very good swings from Yuki Yanagita and Nobuhiro Matsuda that produced two runs off low changeups.

Neal, who hadn’t walked a batter since Aug. 27, saw that streak end in the sixth, when he put Alfredo Desapaigne on after facing 125 consecutive batters without issuing a walk. With two outs and the bases loaded, Neal kept the ball down to Seiichi Uchikawa, and the two-time batting champ rolled over a two-strike sinking fastball for an easy groundout as Neal left the field roaring and pounding his glove.

After the Lions scored four runs behind him, the right-hander surrendered a solo homer to Yurisbel Gracial to open the seventh and promptly left the game.

The Hawks turned the game on its head in the eighth, when Katsunori Hirai, pitching in his 82nd game of the year, allowed a pair of one-out singles. Kaima Taira took over, struck out Matsuda but lost pinch-hitter Yuya Hasegawa on a good high fastball that he flared into left for an RBI single, tying it 4-4. Taira’s worst pitch, perhaps, came next and cost Seibu the lead. Catcher Tomoya Mori tried to catch a low slider about to bounce, but it hit off his glove, allowing pinch-hitter Ukyo Shuto to score the go-ahead run on a harshly ruled passed ball.

Hawks lefty Tsuyoshi Wada, who has not been anything like the master craftsman he was in June, had little control or command and gave up a steady stream of fairly hard-hit balls.

But while the Lions’ pen opened the door a crack and surrendered three insurance runs in the ninth, the Hawks relievers allowed one run over five innings.

The game highlights are HERE.

Giants 5, Tigers 2

At Tokyo Dome, Yomiuri snapped Hanshin’s final-stage win streak at four, taking an early lead behind 15-game winner Shun Yamaguchi and holding on to take Game 1 and earning a 2-0 series lead.

The Tigers last reached the final stage in 2014, when they swept all four-games played to advance to the Japan Series and a five-game defeat at the hands of the Hawks.

Yoshihiro Maru and Kazuma Okamoto homered for the Giants in the first inning. Hayato Sakamoto made up for grounding into a first-inning double play ahead of Maru with a two-run second-inning single.

Game highlights are HERE.

1 of Japan’s unwritten rules

Yudai Ono led Japan’s Central League in earned run average this season, passing Hiroshima’s Kris Johnson on Monday in his final start, when he was pulled after not allowing a base runner over 3-1/3 scoreless innings.

The issue

The game was a meaningless one for the Dragons, but not for their opponents, the Hanshin Tigers, who needed to win in order to advance to the playoffs at the expense of the Hiroshima Carp.

By pulling an effective starter, the Dragons reduced their ability to compete and make the Tigers earn the win, but guaranteed Ono would lead the league in ERA. The Tigers went on to win 3-0, scoring seconds after Ono left the mound.

Both the Dragons and Carp had something to gain from a situation if Ono did not allow an earned run over 3-1/3 innings and the Tigers won the game. That doesn’t mean there was an agreement, tacit or otherwise, to defraud the Carp, but such things happen in sports when teams pursue their selfish interests.

Kris Johnson weighed in on Twitter, expressing shock that gambling was going on in a casino. But it’s very typical behavior in Japanese society, where social rules give precedence to the workgroup over the law.

Japan rules

Team sports often demand an individual sacrifice individual gain for the greater good of the team. That means you don’t swing for the fences in an effort to win the home run title on a 3-2 pitch out of the strike zone if taking that pitch will force in a run and win your team a game.

I’ve written this before but in Japan, teams are also expected to generate rewards for team members in helping them pursue individual accomplishments. This is why pitcher Satoru Kanemura had a meltdown in 2006 when Nippon Ham Fighters manager Trey Hillman pulled him in the fifth inning of what would be his last start of the season, leaving him just one win shy of reaching double digits in wins.

Kanemura believed the team owed him a chance to win 10 games, and Hillman was violating that contract. He believed that because teams bend over backward to do stupid things in order to block opponents from beating their players to individual titles.

The Seibu Lions once threw intentional wild pitches with Lotte’s Makoto Kosaka on first base so he wouldn’t steal second and beat Kazuo Matsui for the Pacific League stolen base crown. Intentional walks are common. The Yomiuri Giants in 1985 and later the Daiei Hawks in 2001 and 2002 famously refused to challenge opposing hitters who were in danger of threatening the single-season home run record of their manager, managerSadaharu Oh.

Oh himself has called that sort of behavior distasteful because he was a fierce competitor and is a gentleman. But the culture here expects it.

Had Ono needed a win to lead the league in wins, there is no chance he would have come out early.

Players expect this behavior, fans expect this behavior. That’s the way it is. I don’t like it, but the regular season is 143 games long. I suppose if a few games here and there are marginally tainted because stupid stuff happens, I can live with it.

It’s not like six or seven teams here are tanking because spending less is more profitable.