Tag Archives: Munetaka Murakami

Olympic Tourney Day 10

Japan ended decades of professional Olympic frustration on Saturday beating a scrappy U.S. team 2-0 in the Tokyo Olympic final, while South Korea, suffered an ignominious defeat in the bronze medal game against the Dominican Republic, leaving the defending champs from the 2008 Beijing Olympics off the medal podium.

Japan 2, United States 0

At Yokohama Stadium: Aggressive pitching from a bunch of young arms, a good swing by young slugger Munetaka Murakami on a hanging changeup from Nick Martinez and one late unearned run ended Japan’s long painful wait for an Olympic gold medal on Saturday.

Masato Morishita allowed three hits and hit a batter while striking out five and survived a fifth-inning scare to earn his second win, while Kodai Senga, Hiromi Ito, Suguru Iwazaki and Ryoji Kuribayashi completed the six-hitter.

Kuribayashi, pitched in all five of Japan’s games, winning two as Japan came from behind in walk-off wins against the Dominican Republic in the group stage and against the U.S. in their quarterfinal.

Martinez caught a break in the first inning, or rather first baseman Tristan Casas caught one, turning the second smoked ball off him into a line-out inning-ending double play. He also worked out of a one-out bases-loaded jam in the fourth by getting SoftBank Hawks teammate Yuki Yanagita to hit into a force at the plate before striking out Ryosuke Kikuchi.

The one mistake Martinez couldn’t get back was a changeup high and away to Murakami, who belted his lone home run of the Olympics, getting off the end of the bat and just over the wall in left center.

Tetsuto Yamada opened the eighth with his second single, off Yakult Swallows teammate Scott McGough, and scored on a sacrifice, a Masataka Yoshida single and a throwing error.

Dominican Republic 10, South Korea 6

At Yokohama Stadium: Juan Francisco finally found himself in Japan. A stunning disappointment for the Yomiuri Giants, he homered and broke a 6-6 eighth-inning tie with a two-run double to help crush South Korea’s hopes of a return to the Olympic medal podium.

https://twitter.com/tom_mussa/status/1423889440062246914

Leading 6-5 in the eighth, South Korea gambled that former big leaguer and NPB star closer Oh Seung Hwan could protect the lead. Jeison Guzman led off with a single, was sacrificed to second and scored after a single, a walk and a wild pitch.

Francisco doubled to the gap in left to make it 8-6 and Johan Mieses hit a towering homer, his second, to make it 10-6. Kim Jin Uk allowed no further runs. The Koreans threatened against Jumbo Diaz in the ninth with runners on second and third with no outs but could not score.

As the Dominicans celebrated, many also paused to show respect to Kim Hyun So, the former big leaguer and 2008 Olympic team member who had a big game but also made the final out.

The Dominicans jumped all over Kim Min Woo for four runs in the first. Emilio Bonafacio doubled, stole third and scored on Julio Rodriguez‘s first homer. Francisco followed with his homer. Mieses walked, and Cha Woo Chan took over on the mound.

A Melky Cabrera single and a Jose Bautista walk loaded the bases and Mieses scored as catcher Charlie Valerio drove in his fourth run, with a sac fly.

Right-hander Go Woo Suk worked a 1-2-3 second for South Korea, Kim Hyun doubled to lead off the home half and scored on Park Kun Woo’s single. KT Wiz-kid Kang Baekho singled but Dominican starter Raul Valdez pitched his way out of trouble.

Park Se Woong relieved Go with one on and one out in a scoreless fourth, and Kim led off South Korea’s fourth with his third home run.

https://twitter.com/tom_mussa/status/1423863644824158208

The Dominicans answered back with a run off Park in the fifth on a two-out Mieses single and a Cabrera double, but then the roof caved in.

The Koreans chased Valdes with three straight no-out singles. Luis Castillo allowed a run to score on a groundout. With Dario Alvarez on the mound, leadoff man Park Hae Min stole third and scored on a wild pitch. Kim walked.

https://twitter.com/tom_mussa/status/1423874894937395203

Pinch-hitter Oh Jae-Il drew a pinch-hit walk off Jhan Martinez, and Kang greeted Yomiuri Giants lefty C.C. Mercedes with an RBI single to put South Korea ahead 6-5.

Dumb record redux

On Wednesday, Hanshin’s Teruaki Sato hit his 19th home run, which is now being touted as tying a record for a left-handed-hitting rookie since Japan’s elite pro baseball league expanded and split into two leagues in 1950, Chunichi Shimbun reported.

This is a dumb record on par with last year’s “longest winning streak from the start of the season for a pitcher who pitched on Opening Day” record, set by Yomiuri Giants ace Tomoyuki Sugano.

First of all, “record” Sato tied starts from 1950, giving the existing record to Yoshinobu Takahashi, of the Giants, for a team that played 130 games. In 1946, in a really tough home run environment, Hiroshi Oshita hit 20 for the Senators, a team that played 105 games.

Anyone see a pattern there?

The Tigers record for home runs by a rookie, the story says, was 22 by right-handed-hitting catcher Koichi Tabuchi.

Another problem is Japan’s determination to only call first-year pros rookies. No one in the media will ever call a second-year pro a rookie, period. This is problematic because the qualifications are clearly defined. Currently, a player who’s been a pro for fewer than five years, who hasn’t pitched more than 30 innings on the first team or had more than 50 plate appearances is a rookie, whether they want to call him that or not.

In 2019, a left-handed hitter won the Central League’s Rookie of the Year Award after hitting 38 home runs, but if you want someone else to have a record, say a popular player for the Giants or Tigers, then let’s find a workaround and just start making shit up.