Tag Archives: Japan Series

NPB news: Oct. 20, 2022

NPB held its new-player entry draft on Thursday, which went as predicted but left some wondering what a three- four- or five-way player might look like, while Orix is cleaning house of pitchers getting Tommy John surgery, and I have a kind of Japan Series preview.

Japan Series preview

Ladies and gentlemen, we have a mystery, and I’m disappointed I didn’t spot it before, but when one doesn’t have one’s own data base of daily results, one tends to miss things.

Runs scored and runs allowed

The Yakult Swallows scored 9.4 percent more runs than their opponents while slashing .250/.318/.410 while surrendering a slash line of .259/.320/.402. I’m sure it’s happened before, but it is weird.

Teams’ Runs Created in Japan tend to exceed actual runs scored by about 12.5 percent, but Yakult is an outlier and has been an outlier since Shingo Takatsu became manager, their RC exceeded runs scored by 8.3 percent in 2020, by 6.7 percent in 2021 and by 6.9 percent this season, so I’m inclined to say that this is a feature of Yakult’s offense and not a fluke. Their opponents created 632 RC but scored just 566, which is normal for Japanese teams.

The Orix Buffaloes, who outscored their opponents by 7 percent, slashed .246/.317/.361 while their opponents slashed .236/.298/.340, which looks much more normal and their RC – RS relationship is also normal for Japan for both them and their opponents.

Yakult

The Swallows had four advantages over their opponents this year: two that show up in their slash line, their home run power and walks, and two that don’t, base stealing, turning double plays while staying out of them on offense.

Yakult’s offense had one ostensible disadvantage. The Swallows struck out in 20 percent of their plate appearances. This seems like a lot, but not only is it fairly common now, but the Swallows are the sixth straight Central League champion to strike out nearly 20 percent of the time during the regular season.

Orix

The Buffaloes, on the other hand, were the Pacific League’s contact-hitting poster children, they led the PL in sacrifices with 114 and struck out less than any other team in Japan. They also had, along with the Hawks, one of the best strikeout staffs in Japan.

Orix was good at preventing home runs, even when factoring in their park effects, but not good at hitting them, something that changes with the return to form of 2021 PL home run leader Yutaro Sugimoto, who hit 32 last year but just 15 this season. So I’m going to assume they’re a better home run-hitting team than their season numbers suggest and might be a more efficient offense than they were during the season.

How it might shake out

The Swallows struck out 58 times in last year’s six-game series, and might equal or surpass Hiroshima’s record 68 for a six-game series set against the Hawks in 2018. The Swallows survived this season on turning double plays and cutting down base stealers, and should have an advantage scratching out runs with their speed and power that Orix may have a hard time matching.

If Munetaka Murakami hits as well as he did over the course of the season, rather than continuing to be the low-average slugger he became at the start of September, then Yakult’s power advantage will be a huge.

Right now it’s small, but probably still significant. Unlike last year, when five of the six games were played inside, four games this time are scheduled outdoors, when long-sequence offenses, like Orix’s are more likely to suffer in the cold.

The Buffaloes will get runners on, and if they are not trailing, they will probably sacrifice a lot if only to stay out of double plays, since they may have trouble stealing.

The Buffaloes are clearly superior in their starting pitching, but not as good defensively, although they do appear to have better outfield arms. The Swallows are going to throw strikes and the Buffaloes are going to foul a lot of those off, and get into Yakult’s bullpen. Of course, the Swallows’ pitching strength is their bullpen, so that is a mixed blessing. That and their formidable offense make them a dangerous late-inning team.

Leaving it till late

Yakult was 35-34-4 when trailing by three runs or less after the seventh inning, which was the best record in Japan, while the Buffaloes were 29-40-2, which is still above average. Yakult was 9-9-3 in games tied at the start of the eighth inning, the same as when their games were tied after the eighth inning. The Buffaloes were 9-12-2 when tied after the seventh, and 4-11-2 when tied after the eighth.

It’s going to be an intriguing series, but I’ll stick with the Swallows. On this week’s podcast, I said Swallows in seven, but I’m going to go with six, instead. I like Orix and won’t be disappointed or surprised if they win.

The draft

The nine teams that announced their top draft picks selected those guys, while two of the teams that didn’t, the Hanshin Tigers and Lotte Marines, went after one of the announced picks and came up empty in their first-round draft lotteries with the Giants, and Eagles, respectively.

The TV broadcast then let Tatsunori Hara ramble on for an impressive amount of time, only to be outdone by Tsuyoshi Shinjo reveling in Nippon Ham getting the rights to two-way college star Kota Yazawa, whom Shinjo, in BIGBOSS mode said something along the lines of: “We’ve got a two-way player, but he can be a three-way player or a four- or five-way player.”

The Fighters also expended a third-round pick on the New York Yankees’ second-round pick from 2013, Gosuke Kato, who finished last season with Triple-A Syracuse after playing a handful of MLB games for Toronto.

In the developmental draft, SoftBank selected 14 players for the second straight year as they prepare to stock their fourth-tier minor league team. I tend to see the D draft as an indicator of which teams are committed to longterm player development, because while non-roster developmental contracts are cheap, having the players around and teaching them costs money. The Tigers and Swallows picked just one player each.

Orix cuts another Tommy John patient

In the wake of Orix demoting their top 2021 draft pick, pitcher Ren Mukunoki to a developmental contract as he rehabs from Tommy John surgery, the Buffaloes have told pitcher Ryoga Tomiyama, who is now awaiting the procedure, that he will not be offered a contract for 2023.

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Series 2020 Game 4

The Pacific League’s SoftBank Hawks wrapped up the 2020 Japan Series with a 4-1 win over the Central League’s Yomiuri Giants on Wednesday at Fukuoka’s PayPay Dome on the back of two-run home runs by Yuki Yanagita and Takuya Kai.

The Hawks’ fourth-straight title makes them only the second club after the Giants to post a winning streak that long. The Giants won nine straight between 1965 and 1973. The Hawks have now won a record 12 straight series games and 16 straight series games at homes — their last loss in Fukuoka coming in Game 5 in 2011, when Wednesday’s starter Tsuyoshi Wada took the loss.

The Giants, whose choice of starting pitchers has sparked questions, sent unheralded right-hander Seishu Hatake. The 25-year-old showed SOME tremendous movement on his pitches but also hung a few up in the zone, and the Hawks crushed them.

For the first time in the series, the Giants scored first on back-to-back no-out doubles by Akihiro Wakabayashi and Hayato Sakamoto. Wada bore down, working around a two-out walk by striking out Hiroyuki Nakajima on 14 pitches.

The Hawks needed just two pitches to take the lead in the home half. Hatake hung two splitters to Akira Nakamura and Yuki Yanagita. The first went for a one-out double, the second for a two-run homer.

Wada, who didn’t have his trademark command, gutted it through the second inning after surrendering a leadoff single, but two more mistakes from Hatake and merciless execution from the Hawks made it 4-1 in the bottom of the second. Taisei Makihara swatted a high slider for a single and with two outs Takuya Kai hammered a high straight fastball for his second homer of the series.

Giants right-hander Shosei Togo, who was mysteriously left out of the Giants’ starting pitching plans, came in as the visitors’ third pitcher with two on and two outs in the third. After issuing a walk, he retired the next seven batters. Brazilian flame thrower Thyago Vieira touched 101.9 mph in his 1-2/3 innings.

With the Giants trailing by three in the seventh, ace Tomoyuki Sugano began warming up in the bullpen, making some wonder that the Giants might bring him out for a farewell mound appearance, but he never did more than warm up and lefty Kota Nakagawa mopped up in the eighth.

With a three-run lead, Wada left after two, and hard-throwing 24-year-old Yuki Matsumoto allowed singles over 2-2/3 scoreless innings. Lefty Shinya Kayama retired Yoshihiro Maru to end the fifth. Submarine right-hander Rei Takahashi started a parade of three straight 1-2-3 innings from the bullpen with Sho Iwasaki pitching the seventh and Livan Moinelo electrifying the eighth.