Tag Archives: Trey Wingenter

NPB news: March 29, 2025

We had six day games Saturday, with four teams remaining unbeaten in the two-day-old season including the Yomiuri Giants, who pummeled the Swallows behind new guys Trey Cabbage and Takuya Kai, but first a word from the sponsor…

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Through April 1, new paid subscribers will get 2 free months of jballallen.com, with unfettered access to my databases and all paid and free content without those annoying subscription nags.

I am also lining up former NPB players, both imports and Japanese, to take part in live zoom chats with members. So join in for the full ride.

I REGRET this campaign is not available to PayPal users, as it requires page editing skills I haven’t mastered… 

New memberships start are $3.25 a month, billed every two months.

Saturday’s games

Giants 12, Swallows 0: At Tokyo Ugly Dome, two of Yomiuri’s new Giants continued to mash with Takuya Kai getting three hits for the second straight day, including a home run, while Trey Cabbage homered for the second straight game and drove in four as Yuji Akahoshi and four relievers combined on a three-hit shutout. Yakult starter Kojiro Yoshimura allowed seven runs despite facing just 12 batters.

Marines 5, Hawks 4, 10 innings: At Fukuoka (Softbank Subsidiary Name) Dome, Hiromi Oka‘s three-run fifth-inning homer gave newcomer Austin Voth a 3-1 lead that he surrendered on Yuki Yanagita‘s three-run blast in the home half. Neftali Soto tied it for Lotte with a sixth-inning homer, and Oka put the Marines ahead in the 10th with a two-out RBI single and Naoya Masuda worked a 1-2-3 10th for the save.

Continue reading NPB news: March 29, 2025

At the ballpark

Tuesday was my season debut, at the ballpark with a roof that was formerly known as Prince.

Japanese are fond of reminding newcomers that Japan has four seasons, which is fine until we are confronted with the fifth, the early summer rainy season, when a few weeks of petty rain and damp in June and early July precede the typically brutal heat that Japan’s 2020 Olympic Bid Committee euphemistically described as “mild and sunny ” and “an ideal climate for athletes to perform their best.”

If five seasons, or even four, are too many for you, the Seibu Lions’ home stadium might be for you, with its two, deep freeze and steaming hot with just a few weeks of pleasant transition between the two each year. A longtime colleague for another website agreed, “Shitty cold and shitty hot.”

Continue reading At the ballpark