Tag Archives: Matsutaro Shoriki

NPB to punish dangerous swings

Starting Tuesday, batters in Nippon Professional Baseball games who lose control of their bats while swinging will be punished by warnings and automatic ejections.

Any swing in which the bat leaves both hands — including cases where it accidentally slips—will now be classified as a “dangerous swing.” If the bat strikes another person such as an umpire or player, or flies into a dugout, camera area, or the stands, the batter will be automatically ejected. In other cases, the batter will receive a warning, and a second warning in the same game will result in ejection.

The rule was agreed to by NPB’s executive committee less than a month after umpire Takuto Kawakami was seriously injured by a blow to the side of the head when on April 16, Yakult Swallows slugger Jose Osuna lost his grip on an errant swing.

Kawakami had emergency surgery and remains in a coma. Since then, NPB umpires have been wearing helmets. Ten days days after his unfortunate followthrough felled Kawakami, Osuna again made contact after a swinging third strike with the head of Chunichi Dragons catcher Yuta Ishii.

NPB will also continue discussing whether cases in which a batter releases only one hand from the bat and it hits the catcher or home plate umpire should also be subject to discipline.

Rules Committee Chairman Seiji Yamakawa explained the intent behind the change.

“Regardless of whether it is intentional or accidental, throwing a bat is extremely dangerous. More than imposing penalties, we strongly want to raise hitters’ awareness of safety,” Yamakawa told reporters.

The speed at which the rule came into being echoed a similar rule enacted during the 1994 season by the Central League when pitchers were first ejected for striking any batter near the head.

Visitors to Japan remark on its outward efficiency, but that is a product of the incredibly inefficient process. Before decisions are made organizations typically go through every last conceivable detail–no matter how time consuming and irrelevant–and make sure everyone signs off on every step so that no one can be held accountable for the group’s actions.

This process reveals many potential flaws but takes forever and wastes an incredible amount of time.

But, probably because the Giants and their most famous former player, manager Shigeo Nagashima, were involved in a May 11, 1994, dustup, things moved at lightning speed even without the help of social media.

Three batters were hit in the game, benches emptied and both teams were warned. The funniest thing about the game was when umpires informed the Jingu Stadium crowd that Swallows manager Katsuya Nomura and Giants head coach Yutaka Sudo would be ejected if the trouble did not end.

Despite the rationale of my friend Osamu Ino, one of the game’s umpires, I’m pretty sure the officials were not going to summon the wrath of Giants fans down upon their heads by handing Nagashima the first ejection of his storybook career.

If things had proceeded at normal NPB speed–just ask former MLB international boss Jim Small about the start of the WBC–the “dangerous pitch” rule might have taken years to formulate.

This one, however, touched the Giants, whose parent company has lorded over NPB since Yomiuri Shimbun owner Matsutaro Shoriki created Japan’s first league in 1936. CL owners acted with amazing speed and got things done.

It’s the exception that proves the rule.

On a side note, Osuna was deactivated for poor form for the first time since making his NPB debut in 2021. He was restored to the active roster Tuesday, against the Hanshin Tigers, and once forced Tigers catcher Torai Fushimi to duck out of the way of his followthrough.

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MLB and Japan’s sellouts

Note: Updated this after hearing from one Pacific League team about the status of foreign amateur acquisitions.

The sellout crowds at Tokyo Dome from starting from March 15 to see the Hanshin Tigers’ and Yomiuri Giants’ exhibitions against the Chicago Cubs and Los Angeles Dodgers are a testimony to the fact that Japan, or at least the Yomiuri Shimbun, which is promoting the Major League Openers at Tokyo Dome, has come to peace with the fact that Japanese baseball will never seek to rival MLB.

The games, culminating with a two-game series between the Cubs and Dodgers and their five former Nippon Professional Baseball stars, are a symbolic surrender, as if the Tokugawa Shogunate not only welcomed Commodore Mathew C. Perry and his black ships’ incursion into Japan’s home waters but sold tickets to a parade in their honor.

For fans, the games’ attraction is undeniable. Five Japanese stars, including Shohei Ohtani, arguably the best baseball player ever, symbolize the quality Japan can produce. But on the flip side, their status as returning heroes for a foreign baseball power symbolize the fact that Japan’s major leagues are content to be second rate.

Don’t get me wrong. Japanese baseball is really good, really hard and really entertaining. It is a quality product. But it is also one whose proprietors show little desire in improving. NPB’s current mantra is: “Let’s have the best baseball we can while losing our best players to MLB, because we won’t spend one penny more to actually compete with MLB in terms of quality.”

A little history

NPB’s business model is a baseball version of the United States’ first governing agreement, the Articles of Confederation in that it subordinates the interests of the whole to the whims of the most powerful partners.

Yomiuri, since Day 1, has taken advantage of this situation to turn the pro baseball business into an analogy of Japan’s Tokugawa Shogunate, which petrified the country’s social system as it existed on Oct. 1, 1600, when Tokugawa Ieyasu decisively defeated his principal rivals for national power at the battle of Sekigahara.

For 250 years, the Tokugawa clan ran Japan through a divide-and-conquer system that ensured they would be the big fish in the Japanese pond by impoverishing the other clans, monitoring them closely to ensure they never acted in concert and banning virtually all interaction with foreign countries.

This latter policy, however, proved to have fatal consequences when the U.S., led by Commodore Perry, and its technologically advanced European rivals came calling in the middle of the 19th century.

For 89 years, Yomiuri has pushed rules and policies that curbed overall growth and development by guaranteeing each team exclusive rights to its home game broadcasts and merchandise income, making it harder for NPB to market lucrative joint broadcasting and licensing deals, limiting the growth of those channels that could benefit all teams.

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