The Effects of NPB Players Leaving for MLB, part 4
Time to close out this series with some conclusions. I fear that I may be oversimplifying this a bit, but I’m looking for macro trends with this. These are casual observations, I didn’t do any hard research.Â
Check the three previous installments here: 1, 2, 3.Â
1. Most of the teams that lost a star to MLB took some kind of a hit in the standings. With the exception of Hiroshima, the teams losing the top 10 players listed below took years to replace the production they lost. Some of the teams still haven’t replaced the production they lost. It’s also important to remember that none of these departures happened in a vacuum; there were other things that affected the performance of each team, but overall the lose of these players has hurt their former teams competitively.
2. The only team that really took a popularity hit after losing a star to MLB was the Giants after losing Matsui. I bought walk-up tickets to a Giants game in 2005, which would have been unthinkable a few years earlier. Of course, while the Giants were down, the Tigers and Dragons were both up and have enjoyed competitive success and popularity since the early part of the decade. SoftBank has been less competitive since losing Johjima, but has not suffered at the gate. The team is actually adding 6000 seats to the Yahoo Dome for next season to help meet demand.Â
3. Signing foreign talent to replace departed stars doesn’t seem to work. Teams will often sign foreign players to fill the holes left by departed stars, but when the do so, they’re losing the opportunity to add depth at other positions with those roster spots. I can’t think of an example where a foreign star was a long-term replacement for an MLB bound star. Colby Lewis was great as Hiroki Kuroda’s replacement in 2008, but so was Kevin Hodges a few years ago and he flamed out after a single season.
4. Losing talent to MLB has a trickle-down impact on the smaller market teams. As an example, Hanshin may have been content with their outfield had Shinjo stuck around, but two years after he left they signed Tomoaki Kanemoto away from the Carp to play left field. Kanemoto has gone on to become a legend for the Tigers while the Carp have only recently begun to show signs of life. Hanshin and Yomiuri can spend to fill their holes, while smaller market teams like Hiroshima cannot.
5. On the positive side, stars moving to MLB has opened up (or could potentially open) spots for younger players, in a league where there is no rule 5 draft and blocked prospects and depth guys are seldom traded. We haven’t seen too many cases of prospects jumping in and filling the shoes of the top 10 guys I’ve listed below, but others have stepped in for 11-26.
Overall, I don’t think this trend is killing NPB. Attendance is stable, and Japan Series television ratings were up this year (mostly because the Giants played in it). Many of the players who have made the leap to MLB have actually been pretty successful, which has greatly improved the credibility of NPB overseas. On the downside, the loss of star players has hurt the competitive depth of the affected teams, and led many to question the viability of the league. I seeing the loss of these star players as an “Oakland A’s-ing” of the league — the A’s have gotten by with smart management, an ability to exploit market inefficiencies and a willingness to continually reinvent the team on the field. The A’s style doesn’t translate to the Japanese game completely, but the underlying principles of thrift and creativity are important for a group of teams that generally is not going to compete with MLB financially.
Below is a list of all the players I looked at, ranked in order of how much I think their departure affected their previous team and the league. For me, there are really about three or four classes: Matsui and Johjima, Iwamura through Iguchi, and everyone else. You can possibly put Matsui, Kobayashi and Yabuta in their own class as well, as guys who were quickly replaced but did leave a gap in their absences.Â
Rank | Player | Team | Year | Record Before | Record After | Impact |
1 | Hideki Matsui | Yomiuri | 2003 | 86-52-2 | 71-66-3 | High |
2 | Kenji Johjima | Daiei/SoftBank | 2006 | 89-45-2 | 75-56-5 | High |
3 | Akinori Iwamura | Yakult | 2007 | 70-73-3 | 60-84-0 | High |
4 | Kosuke Fukudome | Chunichi | 2008 | 78-64-2 | 71-68-5 | High |
5 | Daisuke Matsuzaka | Seibu | 2007 | 80-54-2 | 66-76-2 | Medium |
6 | Ichiro | Orix | 2001 | 64-67-4 | 70-66-4 | Medium |
7 | Hiroki Kuroda | Hiroshima | 2008 | 60-82-2 | 69-70-5 | Medium |
8 | Kei Igawa | Hanshin | 2007 | 84-58-4 | 74-66-4 | Medium |
9 | Kazuhisa Ishii | Yakult | 2002 | 78-56-6 | 72-64-2 | Medium |
10 | Tadahito Iguchi | Daiei/Softbank | 2005 | 77-52-4 | 89-45-2 | Medium |
11 | Kazuo Matsui | Seibu | 2004 | 77-61-2 | 74-58-1 | Low |
12 | Masahide Kobayashi | Lotte | 2008 | 76-61-7 | 73-70-1 | Low |
13 | Yasuhiko Yabuta | Lotte | 2008 | 76-61-7 | 73-70-1 | Low |
14 | Takashi Saito | Yokohama | 2006 | 69-70-7 | 58-84-4 | Low |
15 | Hideki Okajima | Nippon Ham | 2007 | 82-54-0 | 79-60-5 | Low |
16 | Akinori Otsuka | Chunichi | 2004 | 73-66-1 | 79-56-3 | Low |
17 | Shingo Takatsu | Yakult | 2004 | 71-66-3 | 72-62-2 | Low |
18 | Tsuyoshi Shinjyo | Hanshin | 2001 | 57-78-1 | 57-80-3 | Low |
19 | Keiichi Yabu | Hanshin | 2005 | 66-70-2 | 87-54-5 | Low |
20 | So Taguchi | Orix | 2002 | 70-66-4 | 50-87-3 | Low |
21 | Satoru Komiyama | Yokohama | 2002 | 69-67-4 | 49-86-5 | Low |
22 | Kazuo Fukumori | Rakuten | 2008 | 67-75-2 | 65-76-3 | Low |
23 | Norihiro Nakamura | Kintetsu | 2005 | 61-70-2 | 62-70-4 | Low |
24 | Shinji Mori* | Seibu | 2006 | 67-69-0 | 80-54-2 | Low |
25 | Yusaku Iriki* | Nippon Ham | 2006 | 62-71-3 | 82-54-0 | Low |
26 | Masumi Kuwata | Yomiuri | 2007 | 65-79-2 | 80-63-1 | Low |
* I forgot about both these guys when compiling the original lists. Mori was successfully posted and signed with Tampa Bay, but got hurt in his first spring training and was never heard from again. Iriki played in the Mets and Blue Jays organizations, but got busted for PED usage and never reached the Majors. He resurfaced with Yokohama in 2008, but retired after the season.
** I left out Yukinaga Maeda as well.
04/01/2009 at 9:52 am Permalink
It’s a interesting subject and I enjoyed the series. I think you’d really have to take a good look at attendance and profit margins to really get the full picture. I’m guessing that kind of information isn’t readily available, and if it is, it’s probably not very accurate.
I’d be curious to know if hardcore NPB fans, who watch the games and follow the league closely, feel like the level of play has decreased. My guess is the answer is no. If anything, it’s given opportunities to players that probably should be playing high level baseball…people who would otherwise be playing for industrial league teams or working blue collar jobs.
04/01/2009 at 5:34 pm Permalink
It’s a interesting subject and I enjoyed the series. I think you’d really have to take a good look at attendance and profit margins to really get the full picture. I’m guessing that kind of information isn’t readily available, and if it is, it’s probably not very accurate.
I think you’d also have to look at the other changes the team made on the field. None of these moves happened in a vacuum, and even when Matsui left the Giants, that was coupled with several veterans suddenly aging, the manager leaving, and several replacement stars not panning out.
I’d be curious to know if hardcore NPB fans, who watch the games and follow the league closely, feel like the level of play has decreased. My guess is the answer is no. If anything, it’s given opportunities to players that probably should be playing high level baseball…people who would otherwise be playing for industrial league teams or working blue collar jobs.
This topic comes up in Weekly Baseball’s fan surveys that the run in every issue. I’ll have to dig one of ’em up and see what the results were. I’ve been watching the league for years and my casual observation is that the league is better balanced than it was when I first started watching.