Tag Archives: Masahiro Tanaka

Tanaka shirts a hot item

The Rakuten Eagles may not have wrapped up their first pennant since 2013 with the signing of their former ace Masahiro Tanaka, but they are reaping a windfall just two weeks into camp Kyodo News (Japanese) reported Monday.

Since Tanaka returned last month for the first time since he closed out Game 7 of the 2013 Japan Series with a save, the Pacific League team has sold 5,000 No. 18 Tanaka replica shirts in 10 days, for a total retail value of 70 million yen, or roughly 6.3 percent of the right-hander’s contract reported at 900 million yen ($8.7 million

Rakuten’s director of goods and merchandising, Takashi Watanabe, said, “It exceeds our expectations. There’s no sign it’s stopping yet. It’s the same kind of momentum from when we won the championship in 2013.”

Tanaka, by the way, has been scheduled to take the mound for the first time in a practice game on Feb. 20.

Okinawa gets its 1st women’s team

Although Japan’s baseball-playing population is dwindling, women are flocking to the game. Okinawa Prefecture, which hosts spring training camps for most of NPB’s 12 teams, is getting into the act, writes Nikkan Sports columnist Hirokazu Terao.

Kumiko Nakayama, a vice chairman of the prefectural high school baseball federation, will officially start the team in April. Nakayama is the principal of Nambu Shogyo (Commercial) High School, and for 10 years served as the director of baseball for both Chubu Shogyo and Urasoe Shogyo high schools.

The manager of those schools at the time said he invited her since high school baseball was education and he wanted her to assist in developing the youngsters. It’s typical in high school games to see the school’s baseball director sitting on the bench near the manager, but Nakayama rarely did so, but the manager recalled her saying, “People would say, ‘What’s a woman doing there?’ I don’t want to be seen as just a decoration.”

Nakayama made use of her education specialty to set up an analytics team that racked pitch location and the flight of batted balls, and a support team so students other than players could contribute.

According to Terao, the national women’s high school hardball federation reported 36 member schools in 2020, up from seven in 2010, while Japan’s national women’s team has won six straight world championships. Two of NPB’s 12 teams, the Pacific League’s Seibu Lions and the Central League’s Hanshin Tigers, have established women’s club teams.

“So many women want to play, but as they progress from junior high to high school and graduate or leave the prefecture, it becomes economically unfeasible to keep at it,” Nakayama said. “I love baseball and felt I had to do something about it.”

Nakayama has held two events to show what the team is about ande expects the team, based on the main island’s southern Shimajiri District, to start with 12 to 13 members. To make it easier for women from other islands or from the main island’s northern districts to participate she’s rented space in a nearby home.

In a month when Japan’s deep-rooted misogyny was highlighted by the sexist remarks of a former prime minister, Nakayama’s words as an educator give Japan something positive to look forward to.

“We can’t foresee the future,” she said. “But women, too, can play an active role nationwide. School club activities are part of education, and if you challenge yourself through baseball and become a leader, it will improve your school. Building roots in the community is important, too. If this contributes to students finding jobs or getting into universities, I want to support that.”

Tanaka tries to find zone

Masahiro Tanaka threw his second bullpen of the spring on Tuesday at the Rakuten Eagles’ spring camp in Kin, Okinawa Prefecture, when he proved to be popular with the umpires as well, Full-count reported.

A feature of Japanese camp is the umpires calling balls and strikes in the bullpen. Former Hanshin Tigers reliever Jeff Williams once told about his catcher and the bullpen umpire nearly coming to blows over the ump’s calls in his first pen of the spring.

Tanaka, who was trying to re-acclimate himself to the way balls and strikes are being called in Japan now questioned reserve catcher Takahiro Shimotsuma after 22-year-old third-year umpire Kazuki Nishizawa called a ball.

  • Tanaka: “Did that miss a little? Was it low?”
  • Shimotsuma: “It was the fault of my catching.”
  • Tanaka: “No way. A ball is a ball.”

If umpires show Tanaka the same kind of deference Shimotsuma did, the right-hander might never leave Japan, although Nishizawa was apparently less helpful, the Nikkan Sports wrote when Tanaka quizzed him about where the top of the strike zone was.

Swing, swing, swing

Japanese spring training varies from the MLB version in a number of ways too numerous to mention here. But one of those attracted the attention of a writer for Chiba Nippo on Tuesday.

Although Japanese clubs end practice in the afternoon and have a day off every five or six days, it’s not that simple. Just as player are expected to engage in individual free workouts prior to spring training at team facilities with the coaching staff watching from afar, batters are expected to swing at the team hotel well into the night.

When he managed the Lotte Marines, Bobby Valentine said it was never part of the plan but rather a part of the culture, that after dinner players would go to the hotel parking lot and swing their bats.

Watching the players take their after-hour practice swings from the veranda of his hotel room has become a part of current Marines manager Tadahito Iguchi, the report noted.

“Everyone’s swinging,” he said. “I can’t tell who’s doing it because it’s dark, but you can hear that sound a good swing makes. That’s the degree to which they are doing ‘furikomi,'” Iguchi said.

Furikomi is a compound of the verb “furu” to swing and “komu” do something continuously, completely or intently, see the more common baseball term “nagekomi.”

“If you don’t swing, you can’t add the physical ability to hit.”

The story was more about the emphasis Iguchi is placing on players focusing on using their lower bodies to power their swings, but you get the picture.

The answer is always ‘more’

A day after every hit he allowed in a simulated game came off his fastball, Hiroshima Carp right-hander Yuta Nakamura went to the bullpen to make corrections, the Nikkan Sports reported Tuesday.

Nakamura threw a 234-pitch all-fastball bullpen.

“My fastball wasn’t good yesterday,” he said, while admitting he got carried away. “I came with then intent of doing a nagekomi with my fastball, but I may have thrown too much.”

Nakamura documented his endeavor with a Rapsodo system, to check his rotation and spin axis.

“I have a lot better feel for it now,” he said.

And in new school

Tuesday was R&D day at the SoftBank Hawks’ camp in Miyazaki, the Nikkan Sports reported when the four-time defending Japan Series champs invited tech companies and researchers into camp to measure four hitters’ motions as they swung.

“They measured how the position players moved, their swing speed and the rotational axis of the balls (off the bat),” said manager Kimiyasu Kudo, who has been pursuing a degree in sports science. “From the data they get we’ll be able to advise players going forward.”

The club had invited staff from Driveline to its 2019 autumn mini camp.