Tag Archives: Yoshinobu Yamamoto

NPB news: Aug. 10, 2022

Wednesday was Roki Sasaki Day, and Sasaki looked really really good for the first time in a couple of months, Yoshinobu Yamamoto was terrific, the DeNA BayStars made a move in the standings, and it was also awards day, when there was kind of a surprise.

And if that’s not enough there’s a riddle to boot: Why are the Rakuten Eagles like Nancy Sinatra?

So let’s get walkin’.

Monthly honors for July

The most obvious choice, Munetaka Murakami, won Central League batter of the month, while Yuki Okabayashi of the Dragons was the CL’s July leader in WAR, which counts defense, and whom John E. Gibson said on the podcast was deserving. But the award, seldom won by shortstops, catchers, or No. 2 hitters, is not for the most valuable player but the most valuable hitter, which explains why first basemen and DHs are about 10 times more likely to win as shortstops or catchers.

Hanshin Tigers pitcher Yuki Nishi, who had virtually the same stats as teammates Koyo Aoyagi and Masashi Ito, and Hiroshima’s Masato Morishita, won the CL pitching award. The official announcement doesn’t say whether or not they picked his name out of a hat or not, as I’d suggested on this week’s podcast.

The PL hitter award went to the OPS leader, and I don’t remember the last time a winner was noted for leading the lead in OBP, so good for them. Given the only starting pitcher with a 3-0 record or better, Daiki Tajima, had a 3.16 ERA, it was not a surprise that a reliever with a 0.00 ERA won, although Seibu’s Yoshinobu Mizukami, who was 2-0 with seven holds and one save, trumped the guy I noticed, Orix’s Yoshihisa Hirano, 0-0 with a six saves and two holds but only pitched 7-2/3 innings.

Wednesday’s games

Hawks 4, Marines 3: At Chiba Marine Stadium, Nao Higashihama (7-5) won a duel of no-hit pitchers with Roki Sasaki (6-3). Higashihama allowed a run on two walks and four hits over seven innings. Sasaki’s fastball was really, really good after the Hawks scored three runs off him in the second.

Yuki Yanagita became the first PL hitter this year to homer off him, pulling a curveball down the line to lead off the inning. A couple of straight fastballs put runners on second and third and two straight one-out squeezes made it 3-0, with Sasaki not getting an out the first time and thus setting up the second.

Takashi Ogino doubled in Hisanori Yasuda in the third to make it a 3-1 game. Sasaki struck out 10 over six innings, including five straight at one stretch, and fanned Taisei Makhihara three times. With Sasaki done after 91 pitches, however, Makihara singled in Ukyo Shuto with an eighth-inning insurance run.

The Marines trimmed the lead to two in the home half on Ogino’s leadoff homer against Koya Fujii.

Continue reading NPB news: Aug. 10, 2022

NPB News: July 23, 2022

There were five games on Saturday, because more than half the Yomiuri Giants’ roster is now infected along with 26 others including their manager, coaches, and other staff. So while they technically could probably field a team, that would only be if none of the other people in the organization have been deemed close contacts.

Corona times

Saturday was the fourth day in which Japan set new highs for infections, and indicators suggest this wave still has at least a little more to go before it peaks. Meanwhile, teams are admitting full crowds, and more and more people are following the government’s cover-your-ass guidance that masks outdoors are no longer necessary, which wasn’t really true, but many people would prefer to believe that rather than look at the numbers and draw the obvious conclusion that they are too necessary.

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Prior to the Giants, the Swallows were the hardest team hit by COVID-19, and they missed just two games before resuming play last week in order to receive some serious butt kicking. They’re still without second baseman Tetsuto Yamada, but one by one guys are coming back. But on Saturday, they played like they need more testing, as Shogo Akiyama feasted on their pitching for a second straight day.

Blasts from an artificial past

As part of my delving into the 150 years of Japanese baseball, I’ve discovered some extremely cool stuff about how the game here is constantly looking backward.

In a way, Japanese baseball’s present is largely shaped by an idealized past that closely mirrors the way of the warrior, or bushido, that was itself an effort at social reform based on a romanticized, sanitized version of history.

Saturday’s games

Carp 15, Swallows 3: At Jingu Stadium, Shogo Akiyama got the Carp started with his second home run in two nights, a three-run blast with no outs in a six-run first against Juri Hara (6-4), who retired just one of the eight batters he faced. Four of Hiroshima’s starters, Akiyama, Ryosuke Kikuchi, Shogo Sakakura and Tsubasa Aizawa each reached base their first three times up en route to a 14-0 fourth-inning lead.

Masato Morishita (8-5) allowed three runs over six innings to pick up the win. In addition to Akiyama’s third homer, Tsubasa Aizawa hit his third and Yakult’s Munetaka Murakami his 33rd.

Tigers 3, BayStars 1: At Koshien Stadium, Takumu Nakano doubled and scored in the first off Shota Imanaga (4-3), singled and scored in the third, and Masashi Ito (7-2) allowed a run over seven innings as Hanshin replaced DeNA in third place, a game back of the Carp. Suguru Iwazaki earned his 21st save.

Marines 7, Fighters 6: At Sapporo Dome, back-to-back fifth-inning solo homers by Lotte’s Seiya Inoue and Brandon Laird overturned a 5-4 deficit. On Fighters bullpen day, side-arm lefty Ryusei Kawano left after allowing a run on four hits and no walks over three innings, before the Marines clawed their way back.

Marines leadoff man Takashi Ogino reached base five times and drove in three runs, while career minor leaguer Kenta Chatani, starting at third, singled, doubled, tripled, walked, scored one run and drove in three.

The Fighters batted around in a four-run first, and Yuma Imagawa, whose RBI single started that, homered in the second against Lotte’s Fumiya Motomae.

Buffaloes 5, Hawks 0: At Osaka Dome, Yoshinobu Yamamoto (10-5) struck out nine over eight innings and never had more than one runner on base at a time. Shuta Ishikawa (3-5) had one of his games where his command deserted him. He walked three, hit two and gave up five runs on eight hits over five innings.

Yutaro Sugimoto singled in Ryoichi Adachi in the first. After a hit batsman and a one-out walk in the second, Shuhei Fukuda doubled in one run and Keita Nakagawa singled in two more.

Lions 3 Eagles 3, 12 innings: At Seibu Dome, the Lions, wearing the ugliest uniforms I’ve seen this side of the Pacific, came from two down in the seventh when Masahiro Tanaka loaded the bases on two walks and a single. Seiji Kawagoe’s two-out two-run single tied it, and Shuta Tonosaki scored on a wild pitch.

Kaima Taira blew the lead in the eighth when rookie Atsuki Muto took him deep with no outs for his first career home run.

The Eagles took a two-run fourth-inning lead off Kona Takahashi after there were two outs. Hiroaki Shimauchi hit his seventh home run, Eigoro Mogi singled, stole second, went to third on a throwing error from catcher Tomoya Mori and came home on a Takero Okajima single.

Sunday’s starting pitchers

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

Hiromi Ito (7-7, 2.96) vs Enny Romero (7-4, 2.39)

Lions vs Eagles: Seibu Dome 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Katsunori Hirai (5-4, 1.70) vs Wataru Karashima (2-2, 2.44)

Buffaloes vs Hawks: Osaka Dome 1 pm, 12 midnight EDT

Daiki Tajima (6-3, 2.26) vs Nao Higashihama (6-4, 2.51)

Swallows vs Carp: Jingu Stadium 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Cy Sneed (4-3, 3.89) vs Allen Kuri (4-6, 3.30)

Tigers vs BayStars: Koshien Stadium 6 pm, 5 am EDT

Joe Gunkel (4-5, 2.65) vs Haruhiro Hamaguchi (4-3, 2.80)

Active roster moves 7/23/2022

Deactivated players can be re-activated from 8/2

Central League

Activated

SwallowsOF9Yasutaka Shiomi

Dectivated

SwallowsIF60Ryusei Takeoka
GiantsP26Nobutaka Imamura
BayStarsP20Yuya Sakamoto
BayStarsIF6Keito Mori

Pacific League

Activated

BuffaloesP26Atsushi Nomi
MarinesP49Fumiya Motomae
MarinesC22Tatsuhiro Tamura
MarinesIF57Ryusei Ogawa
HawksP21Tsuyoshi Wada
FightersP70Conner Menez
FightersIF23Ryo Watanabe
FightersIF31Yuto Takahama

Dectivated

BuffaloesOF14Joe McCarthy
HawksP40Kazuki Sugiyama
FightersC64Yua Tamiya
FightersIF38Kazunari Ishii
LionsP12Yutaro Watanabe

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