Tag Archives: Hanshin Tigers

Messenger to bow out

The Daily Sports reported Friday that veteran Hanshin Tigers hurler Randy Messenger told the Central League club he will retire. The Tigers released that news on Saturday morning.

The 38-year-old right-hander, who joined the Tigers in 2010, has a career record of 98-84 over 10 seasons with a 3.13 ERA. He has struggled with fitness this season, in which he has posted a 3-7 record with a 4.69 ERA.

Messenger pitched in 173 major league games before arriving in Japan. Prior to the Tigers, he pitched in the big leagues with the Florida Marlins, San Francisco Giants and Seattle Mariners.

From 2013, Messenger led the CL in strikeouts for two straight years, and led the league in wins as well the following year.

Among foreign registered pitchers, Messenger ranks fifth in wins. The top two on the list were contemporaries from Taiwan in the 1980s and 90s, the second two American contemporaries from the 1960s:

  • Kuo Yuen-chih (Genji Kaku) 117
  • Kuo Tai-yuan (Taigen Kaku) 106
  • (tie) Joe Stanka 100, Gene Bacque
  • Randy Messenger 98

Messenger returned to the United States at the end of July for treatment on his right shoulder, and returned to Japan on Aug. 8. On Thursday, he pitched for the farm team against the Tokushima Indigo Sox of the independent Shikoku Island League. He worked four scoreless innings before allowing four runs in the fifth.

Scapegoat time in Tiger Land?

“When you see a team looking around for a scapegoat, that’s a pretty good indication that one will soon be needed.”

Bill James

I’m not certain that Yangervis Solarte is being fitted for the goat horns or not, but the news today that he went 0-for-3 and made an error in his first game on the farm since being deactivated is a bad sign.

The bigger the team is in Japan, the greater the need for a fall guy when things go wrong. As a result, we see it a lot with Japan’s too oldest clubs, the Hanshin Tigers and the Yomiuri Giants — although less with the Giants now that their fascist generalissimo, Tsuneo Watanabe, is fading into the background.

Solarte is 13-for-69 with nine walks and a .406 slugging average, and has been a ball of energy and fun, although not a superior defender at short.

A friend of mine who was spending a year covering the Tigers for the Daily Sports, perhaps the paper that has the most intense Tigers following, told me that in the summer of 2012, a number of the team’s veterans –including legend Tomoaki Kanemoto — were hitting for a low average, but the coaches refused to criticize them to reporters, who badly needed a scapegoat.

According to the reporter, the coaches began giving harsh evaluations of Matt Murton and Craig Brazell in order to satisfy the media pack. This led to streams of annoying questions for Murton who eventually burst out with a sarcastic quip that gave the press what it wanted.

I don’t think the team is looking to turn Solarte into a scapegoat, but stories by the Tigers beat writers this summer suggested that Jefry Marte was the leading candidate until Solarte’s arrival, but that his new teammate is the man whose head is being fitted for horns by reporters.