Tag Archives: Munetaka Murakami

NPB wrap 6-11-21

Interleague Day 16 See-saw game

The Central League’s Hanshin Tigers took Round 1 of the showdown between league leaders on Friday thanks to a two-run homer by Jefry Marte that downed the Pacific League-leading Rakuten Eagles.

A day after the PL took their first lead in interleague wins, the CL had one of its best days, going 5-1, outscoring the PL 19-12. The CL now leads 42-40 with 11 ties, while the PL leads in runs scored 412-372, and the Buffaloes, thanks to a gem from Yoshinobu Yamamoto, now lead the interleague standings.

Saturday’s ound 2 between the Tigers and Eagles will be youth, Hanshin rookie Masashi Ito, vs experience, Eagles veteran Masahiro Tanaka

Close shave for Miyagi

Nineteen-year-old Orix Buffaloes lefty Hiroya Miyagi, who has surprised everyone with his maturity on the mound, delivered another surprise on Friday, when he turned up for practice with his long curly locks replaced by a buzz cut, Nikkan Sports reported.

“One my older teammates cut it for me, but I thought he was going to cut it down to 9 millimeters,” Miyagi said. “But he forgot to put on the attachment and instead cut it down to half a millimeter.”

Tigers 3, Eagles 2

At Sendai’s Rakuten Seimei Park, Hanshin side-armer Koyo Aoyagi (5-2) gave up two runs, on a first-inning error and a Hiroaki Shimauchi triple, and on Eigoro Mogi’s 10th home run, in the second, but lasted eight innings. Tigers rookie Teruaki Sato manufactured a fifth-inning run off Hideaki Wakui (6-4) through a leadoff walk, a two-out stolen base, a throwing error and a Yoshio Itoi infield single.

Jefry Marte turned the game around in the sixth when he put the fat part of the bat on a fat hanging slider for his 12th home run. Robert Suarez worked the ninth for his Japan-best 20th save.

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Buffaloes 4, Carp 0

At Osaka‘s Kyocera Dome, Orix’s Yoshinobu Yamamoto (6-5) was the story as he retired the first 21 batters he faced, and then with a 3-0 lead, allowed two no-out singles in the eighth before notching the last three of his 15 strikeouts and leaving after the eighth.

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You’ve got to love Yamamoto, but when you’re a star – even if you’re only 22 – you’re allowed to say, “Yes. I was thinking about throwing a perfect game from the third inning.” Even guys who know they can say that because of their status, however, still want to send the right message to the folks watching, and say something like, “Gosh. No. I was ignoring it the whole time and doing my best not to think about it.”

Carp rookie Haruki Omichi walked two of the first three batters he faced before retiring the next 14 and leaving his first career start after five hitless innings.

Robert Corniel worked a 1-2-3 sixth before the Buffaloes found a way onto the scoreboard against Hiroshima’s bullpen. Masataka Yoshida drew his second walk of the game to lead off the seventh against rookie Daisuke Moriura (2-2). Takahiro Okada found a hole with a ground ball for the game’s first hit. After a sacrifice, Adam Jones drew a pinch-hit walk against Ren Nakata.

Yutaro Sugimoto went down for a 2-2 forkball out of the zone and looped it over the infield for a two-run single. A single and a walk made it 3-0, and the Buffaloes added an unearned run in the eighth after a Yoshida double and an Okada single.

Yamamoto’s fastball has been kind of hit and miss this year, but it was about as good as it gets on Friday but his curve, a pitch he doesn’t throw a lot was dynamite, and the split worked well enough. And that was the game.

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Swallows 1, Hawks 0

At Fukuoka’s PayPay Dome, Yakult’s 41-year-old Masanori Ishikawa (2-1) won a duel with SoftBank’s 29-year-old Shuta Ishikawa (3-5), who allowed one run over eight innings, on Munetaka Murakami’s Japan-best 19th home run. Ishikawa the elder had a devil of a game. He gave up six singles but no walks while striking out six over six innings.

Noboru Shimizu, who lost Thursday’s game when he surrendered a tie-breaking homer to Brandon Laird, loaded the bases after were out in the eighth but escaped on a called third strike. Scott McGough struck out two in a 1-2-3 ninth for his ninth save.

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BayStars 4, Fighters 0

At Sapporo Dome, Tyler Austin hit his 13th home run with a man on in the first off Chihiro Kaneko (0-3, and Haruhiro Hamaguchi (4-4) threw a four-hitter while walking two and hitting one. Nippon Ham loaded the bases with two outs in the ninth before Hamaguchi retired Yuki James Nomura on his 138th pitch.

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Dragons 6, Lions 5

At MetLife Dome, after getting shellacked by the Yakult Swallows in his previous start, Seibu’s Kona Takahashi (5-2) cut his hair, but whatever adjustments he made didn’t help the Lions defense which crashed and burned in a three-run fourth. Takahashi allowed five runs, two earned, in three-plus innings.

Yudai Ono (3-4) allowed three runs over seven innings after being gifted a 5-0 lead. Wataru Takamatsu singled, stole second and scored the opening run on Yohei Oshima’s third-inning single. Oshima stole second went to third on the second of Naomichi Donoue’s four hits and scored on a Shuhei Takahashi sac fly.

A single opened the Dragons’ fourth before two consecutive batters reached on errors, and the next on a fielder’s choice. A Donoue ground single up the middle made it 5-0.

The Lions, however, gave Chunichi a scare. Hotaka Yamakawa hit a mammoth two-run homer, his ninth, in the fifth inning, and doubled and scored in the seventh. Wu Nien-ting and Yamakawa singled in runs in the eighth, and Seiji Kawagoe singled in the ninth but recorded the final out at the plate trying to score the tying run from first on a Takeya Nakamura single. Katsuki Matayoshi hung on to record his seventh save.

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Giants 5, Marines 1

At Chiba’s Zozo Marine Stadium, Yomiuri lefty C.C. Mercedes (2-0) allowed a first-inning run with Brandon Laird singling in Shogo Nakamura with one out, but that was it. He went seven innings, allowed seven hits, a walk and hit a batter while striking out six.

Hiroyuki Nakajima tied it in the fourth, singling in Kazuma Okamoto off Fumiya Motomae, who left after allowing a run over six innings. The wheels came off for Lotte in a four run eighth against Yuta Omine (1-1), on doubles by Seiya Matsubara and Zelous Wheeler and Okamoto’s 17th home run to make it 3-0. Two more singles and right fielder Leonys Martin’s second fumble of the inning made it 4-0.

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Interleague

Starting pitchers

Fighters vs BayStars: Sapporo Dome 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Takahide Ikeda (2-6, 2.92) vs Masaya Kyoyama (0-2, 8.27)

Eagles vs Tigers: Rakuten Seimei Park Miyagi 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Masahiro Tanaka (2-3, 2.77) vs Masashi Ito (3-3, 2.70)

Lions vs Dragons: MetLife Dome 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Tatsuya Imai (3-2, 2.53) vs Yuichiro Okano (-)

Marines vs Giants: Zozo Marine Stadium 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Manabu Mima (3-3, 4.76) vs Shosei Togo (5-3, 4.42)

Buffaloes vs Carp: Kyocera Dome (Osaka) 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Daiki Tajima (2-4, 4.72) vs Masato Morishita (3-3, 2.11)

Hawks vs Swallows: PayPay Dome 2 pm, 1 am EDT

Nick Martinez (5-1, 2.13) vs Yasuhiro Ogawa (5-1, 3.41)

Active roster moves 6/11/2021

Deactivated players can be re-activated from 6/21

Central League

Activated

GiantsP90Natsuki Toda
GiantsIF6Hayato Sakamoto
TigersIF33Kento Itohara
CarpIF69Ryutaro Hatsuki

Dectivated

GiantsP15Angel Sanchez
GiantsIF29Naoki Yoshikawa
TigersP44Raul Alcantara
CarpIF6Tomohiro Abe
SwallowsP54Cy Sneed

Pacific League

Activated

HawksIF00Hikaru Kawase
FightersP39Ryo Akiyoshi
FightersP49Katsuhiko Kumon

Dectivated

HawksIF23Ukyo Shuto
MarinesP17Roki Sasaki
LionsP27Tetsuya Utsumi
EaglesP57Ryota Takinaka
FightersP58Masaki Tanigawa
BuffaloesP26Atsushi Nomi

He’s not the 1st

When Nippon Ham’s Hiromi Ito pitched against the Yomiuri Giants on Sunday, June 6, the announcers talked about the right-hander’s roots as the first Fighters’ top draft pick from Hokkaido. The remarkable thing is that Ito is not the first pro ballplayer from his village in Hokkaido, where all-star reliever Koki Morita grew up.

Morita, who died of cancer at the age of 45, was a classmate of Ito’s father when they were children, and like the younger Ito, Morita was signed after being selected in the first round of NPB’s draft. But unlike Ito, he wasn’t the Taiyo Whales’ (currently the DeNA BayStars) first pick in 1987.

The NPB draft is a strange animal that is constantly evolving and regressing. Since it was introduced in the mid-1960s to rob amateurs of their negotiating rights, one principle has been a guiding factor — that it should not become an engine of competitive balance.

From the mid-1990s until 2006, elite college and corporate league players were free to sell their services to the highest bidders but other than that period, teams have been given an equal shot at signing any player in a given round through a lottery that has nothing to do with the waiver order.

NPB under the table

The way this works now in the first round, and the way it has often worked in the first and other rounds in the past has been to have each team secretly nominate its pick for that round. These are then announced. The rights to each player chosen by more than one team are assigned by lot, with a representative from each team, often the manager, going up to the front of the room and picking a card out of a box.

You can’t always get what you want…

Teams that fail to get their man, then secretly nominate alternate selections, and the rights of players named by more than one team are again assigned by lottery.

I had this discussion with John E. Gibson a couple of weeks ago on the podcast, when I said it was hard for me to say “Hayato Sakamoto was the Giants’ first pick in the 2006 draft,” because the Giants weren’t going after him. Their target that year was Naomichi Donoue, who has never been much more than a utility infielder for the Chunichi Dragons. Sakamoto was their first-round signing, but he wasn’t their first pick. We know this because they said he wasn’t.

Morita’s case has long fascinated me because, like Sakamoto, he wasn’t the first pick, and in Morita’s case, the club could have done much, much worse had they gotten who they wished for, Kazushige Nagashima, the dreadful son of Giants legend Shigeo Nagashima.

One night I watched Kazushige on TV, and he politely told the story about how his preference was to play in Yokohama for the Whales rather than in Tokyo for the Swallows.

Be careful what you wish for

The table below lists the most fortunate draft “failures” in the last 40 years. Hikaru Takano was a useful pitcher for a time. But Hisanobu Watanabe was an ace for a championship team. It may be too early to pronounce Kotaro Kiyomiya a failure, but I’ll bet the Fighters would happily trade him and a half dozen other players to get Munetaka Murakami.

YearTeamSignedWanted
1982YomiuriMasaki SaitoDaisuke Araki (Yak)
1983SeibuHisanobu WatanabeHikaru Takano (Yak)
1987HanshinKoji NodaKen Kawashima (Hir)
1987TaiyoKoki MoritaKazushige Nagashima (Yak)
2005OrixTakahiro OkadaTakanobu Tsujiuchi (Yom)
2006YomiuriHayato SakamotoNaomichi Donoue
2010RakutenTakahiro ShiomiYuki Saito (Nip)
2010YakultTetsuto YamadaTakahiro Shiomi, Yuki Saito
2017YakultMunetaka MurakamiKotaro Kiyomiya (Nip)

With that I’ll leave you with this catchy Sammy Davis Jr. tune.