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NPB to take more requests

Managers get more review options

Managers were given expanded video review options on Tuesday, when Nippon Professional Baseball rolled out its revised video review program — known as the “Request System” — for 2019 at the NPB managers meeting.

Prior to 2018, video reviews were limited to balls caught against the outfield wall, potential home runs and plays at home plate, and were conducted at the sole discretion of the umps. This didn’t prevent a manager from raising one eyebrow or both, or stepping on the field with a plaintive look to encourage umps to exercise that option.

Last year’s system allowed managers to review only safe and out decisions on the field. Each team is able to request reviews until two requests through nine innings have failed to overturn rulings. Teams are allotted an additional request in extra innings.

In addition to safe-out calls, managers this season will be able to review whether a pitch struck a batter in the head or not, obstruction calls at home plate or takeout slides to prevent a double play.

Hitting a batter in the head with a pitch — a “kikenkyu” or dangerous ball — results in automatic ejection for the pitcher, but now the umpire’s call can be reviewed before the pitcher is kicked out of the game.

No talking back

From this year, NPB intends to enforce its rule that players and managers who dispute the result of a video review will be automatically ejected. In addition any time a player is ejected for that offense, his skipper will also get the heave-ho.

“If a player get thrown out of the game, the manager automatically gets thrown out from this year,” DeNA BayStars manager Alex Ramirez said after the meeting in Tokyo. “That’s one thing that is also very good.”

One less cook seeing to the broth

Although umpires will still go under the stands and stare at tiny screens to examine the video evidence, the umpire who made the call in question will no longer be part of the process.

According to Osamu Ino, NPB’s umpiring technical committee chairman, the umps had wanted someone off the field to handle that duty, but were refused. Video reviews in the majors are handled by Major League Baseball at a remote sight and the umps on the field are then informed of their decision.

A step forward

“Of course, this system is an improvement,” Yakult Swallows manager Junji Ogawa said. “Having it is better than not having it.”

“They’ve expanded the range of things we can review, and I don’t think it will stop there. From now on, we will want more and more reviewable options. But at some point you have to just respect the umpires’ decision and their position.”

Ramirez vowed to be more efficient in requesting reviews, especially after he was “recognized” for his behavior in 2018 and suggested that sometimes he expended requests on plays that really weren’t that close late in games because he felt the need to either use them or lose them.

“It was very new to everybody,” he said. “Sometimes I didn’t know what to expect when requesting. I realize today that I requested the most, 51 times. And 13 times that was correct. I had a 25 percent success rate. So I realized I needed to do better.”

“If we don’t have to (make a request), don’t do it just because.”

NPB’s most famous strike

NPB umpiring technical committee chairman Osamu Ino
Osamu Ino, NPB’s umpiring technical committee chairman was there the day east met west.

End of the experiment

The plan, hatched by Central League president Hiromori Kawashima, was to prove umpires showed no favoritism to Japan’s most powerful franchise. Instead, it demonstrated to the world that Nippon Professional Baseball showed no favoritism towards its umpires when they were attacked on the field.

On June 5, 1997, Mike DiMuro was assaulted on the field after calling an American-style outside strike on Chunichi Dragons slugger Chen Ta-feng (known in Japan as Yasuaki Taiho). DiMuro, who was supposed to spend the season on loan in order to prove umpire neutrality, called it quits.

Although technically, he was recalled for his own safety, it was cover-your-ass story.

“He came out of the game, and then informed us he wouldn’t be back,” former umpire Osamu Ino said.

Masaaki Nagino, the league’s secretary general at the time, said DiMuro was ready to leave and the incident was not the reason he left, but the reason he left at that time.

“He had a tough time, living out of hotels, always on the road, with few people he could speak English with,” Nagino said soon after the incident. “He was ready to go, and nobody blamed him for leaving.”

The zone

A central issue to the DiMuro experiment was his use of the American strike zone that had been altered by umpires in the States, shifted one ball width away from the batter. A pitch not entirely over the inside edge of the plate would not be called a strike in the majors but would be in Japan. On the other side, American umps had become accustomed to calling strikes on pitches within two ball-widths of the outside edge.

This troubled foreign hitters, like Hensley Meulens, and created an opportunity for players willing to exploit it, like Motonobu Tanishige and Hiroki Nomura.

The setup

“I was there,” Ino said. “DiMuro was always in my crew. That day in 1997, I was the second base ump and DiMuro was behind the plate. There was nobody on base, and Yokohama playing Chunichi. Tanishige, the catcher, set a target a little outside, and it was one of those ‘American-style strikes,’ and DiMuro called it.”

“Taiho made a commotion about I thought, ‘What a moron.’ It didn’t enter into Taiho’s head that DiMuro’s strike zone would be like that.”

The sting

“But Tanishige was sharp, so he set a target a little farther outside, and I was thinking, that’s just like Tanishige to do that. The pitcher, Nomura, had really good control, and he threw another outside, more than a ball outside.”DiMuro, of course, couldn’t let it go, and had to teach (Taiho) a lesson. So as soon as I saw the target, I thought, ‘Here we go.'”

But Dragons were not an ordinary team. Their manager, Senichi Hoshino, wore his fierce emotions on his sleeve, could erupt in anger or laughter at the drop of a cap and had a history of getting physical with umpires and players he was angry with.

Another character was coach Ikuo Shimano. Fifteen years earlier, in September 1982, Shimano had been coaching with the Hanshin Tigers when he and a fellow coach assaulted two umpires in a game in Yokohama. *

The ruckus

“Nomura threw it, (DiMuro called a strike and) Taiho shouted and then all of a sudden Hoshino’s there and Shimano’s charging in there,” Ino said. “And they’ve got DiMuro surrounded near the backstop.”

“Because there was nobody on base, I was out in center field and shouted, ‘Wait!’ as I ran in, but I couldn’t get there in time to prevent it. Dimuro was in shock. We took over for him and the game went on.”

It never was much of a melee. DiMuro got away as Ino and the other two umps jawed with Hoshino, who was seen laughing as he went back to the dugout.

The aftermath

Although DiMuro’s departure had been as much about timing as the way he was treated on the field, it caused Japan’s managers some embarrassment to realize their actions put Japanese baseball as a whole in a bad light.

Soon after to show their solidarity for the umpires and the greater good, Kintetsu Buffaloes manager Kyosuke Sasaki and Seibu Lions manager Osamu Higashio pledged not to argue with umpires for an entire series.

That warm-and-fuzzy approach didn’t last however. On July 10, Higashi shoved umpire Koichi Tamba for calling one of his players out on the bases. Tamba tossed Higashio. After the game, the skipper went the umpires room and when Tamba refused to listen, put him in a headlock. The ump suffered a contusion on his left leg, while Higashio was fined 100,000 yen — worth about $890 at the time — and suspended for three days.

*–Local authorities investigated the incident, that forced one of the umpires to miss two weeks of work and the other three. Shimada and fellow coach Takeshi Shibata were prosecuted for assault and fined 50,000 yen each in summary proceedings by the Yokohama District Court. They were fired by the Tigers and both banned indefinitely from baseball. They both indicated their remorse and their suspensions were lifted the following March.