
Forget the Fans: It's Bean Ball in the Boardrooms
New York Times...registration required
The drama revolves around the future of the financially endangered Kintetsu Buffaloes here in western Japan's largest city. But it has also become a drama about many things at this particular point in Japan's history, including the clash between the old and new, collusive business practices, the role of sports in society and the neglected voices of the ordinary Japanese.
Love this part...
Masayuki Tamaki, a sports critic, said neither Mr. Watanabe nor the other owners had attempted any real reforms to revitalize baseball.
"The baseball teams' presidents are people who are dispatched to the teams from their parent companies for two, three years,'' Mr. Tamaki said. "What they do is spend their time getting autographs to present them as gifts to bar girls.''
Bu this is hopeless...
Suspicions arose immediately. Why would he step down over a minor violation? Was the resignation simply a ploy for Mr. Watanabe to bail out? After all, he will remain the chairman of the Yomiuri Media Group and a subordinate will become the owner of the baseball team.
Mr. Watanabe, it seemed to many, was stepping into a role that may be new to him but is old to Japan: that of shadow shogun.
