Game Notes: Baseball Returns to Sendai
Summary: I decided to finish up my lingering notes from a game I watched a couple days ago. Rakuten beat Orix 3-1
Last Friday, pro yakyu returned to the Tohoku region, with the Rakuten Golden Eagles playing their first home game of the season in Sendai. The timing was actually not bad, as the game coincided with the opening of the Golden Week holidays. I guess that probably wasn’t unintentional. Anyway, a pretty good crowd was on hand for the game, and they were treated to a brisk, well-pitched match, and a Rakuten win.
The final score was 3-1, but the game could have gone either way. Rakuten starter Masahiro Tanaka went the distance, and was sharp the whole way through. He didn’t get into any remotely threatening situations until his third trip through the Buffaloes lineup. He didn’t have to look back to see a runner on second base until the 7th inning, and it took a Kazuo Matsui throwing error in the 8th for Orix to get a run in.
As good as Tanaka was, I thought Chan Ho Park was a little better. Park was a groundball machine against the Eagles. I didn’t see him elevate a single pitch in the innings I watched, and only a couple balls hit in the air reached the outfield. The only blemish, for me, was that he didn’t generate many swinging strikes.
Rakuten has a fairly punchless lineup so it’ll be interesting to see how Park fares against some of Japan’s better offenses, after the league has had a look at him.
Here are some other miscellaneous observations from my notes the game:
- Mike Hessman made his first appearance since April 12, pinch hitting for catcher Fumihito Suzuki in the 7th. He waved at a couple sliders before making contact with a fastball, popping it to short center.
- This was the first time in a couple weeks that I saw Akinori Iwamura, who’s struggled this year with a sub-.200 batting average. The one noticeable adjustment that he had made was that he’s moved closer to the plate. Earlier in the year, he was way off it.
- T-Okada is an interesting hitter to watch. It’s hard to see from the normal TV angle, but he’s a front-leg hitter. He’s got a way of compressing his strength on his back leg as the pitch is being delivered, then springing forward with this swing and unloading all that energy. It worked pretty well in the 4th, when there was no one on base and he wasn’t trying to do too much, but in the 7th, when he was trying to hit a home run, he struck out.
- It looked like most of the seats in the stadium were occupied, but there was one section on the first base side that was weirdly completely empty. I wonder if that section is closed due to post-quake safety issues.
- One notable attendee was US ambassador to Japan John Roos.
01/05/2011 at 7:41 am Permalink
I recall that Chopper was never much of a groundballer when he was in the big leagues. More of a fly-baller. It’s almost weird seeing him like this. His two-seamer must still have some great stuff left. He’s proven that he can still go for multiple innings (6.2 – 7 – 8), but with his age, he’ll still have to watch out for injuries during summer. Bad luck for him going up against Tanaka “again”. Especially taking into account the sad shape Orix hitters are in.
And I’ve think that I’ve read somewhere that before this match, Hoshino personally told Tanaka to pitch a complete game and win for the sake of the fans at all cost. Great to Tanaka as a man of his word.
01/05/2011 at 9:26 am Permalink
Actually it looks like Park was pretty good at getting grounders at the MLB level as well: http://www.fangraphs.com/statss.aspx?playerid=1267&position=P#battedball
That only covers his lean years. It would be interesting to see how he did with the Dodgers in his heyday.
And yes, Orix’s offense is atrocious right now, though they did score 10 runs yesterday.