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AssKissinger wrote:Have you read The meaning of Ichiro or this old one about American minor leaguesBall Four
Hanshin's Igawa still wants to go to majors
OSAKA (Kyodo) Hanshin Tigers lefty Kei Igawa, who has set his sights on a move to the major leagues through the posting system, hit a snag Friday in the second round of talks with the Central League club
Hanshin has made Igawa an offer of 250 million yen in annual salary for 2005, but Hashioka has avoided comment on the proposed deal.
The Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters said Monday they have formally signed former Daiei Hawks pitcher Brandon Knight and infielder Erick Almonte, who once played for the New York Yankees.
Both players will get a signing bonus of 10 million yen and an annual salary of 40 million yen for their one-year contracts.
The 29-year-old Knight joined the Hawks in 2003 and went 6-4 in his two years with the Pacific League club.
Almonte, 26, is the younger brother of former Yomiuri Giants pitcher Hector Almonte. Last season, Almonte batted .318 with 17 homers and 74 RBIs with the Colorado Rockies' Triple-A affiliate.
Fukuoka Softbank Hawks manager Sadaharu Oh plans to propose that all 12 Japanese pro baseball teams use a single manufacturer's baseballs for their games, it was learned Thursday.
Oh, who intends to make the proposal at the Jan. 27 managers' meeting in Tokyo, said that in line with the internationalization of the game, such as the proposed World Cup, it would be best if Japan uses one baseball.
If implemented, Oh would like to see the change take place as soon as 2006. Unlike the major leagues, which has one official ball, Japan has a number of baseball manufacturers for balls used during the season.
Looking for help with their pitching, Oakland A's turned East. Joining the team next season will be Keiichi Yabu, formerly of the Japanese League.
"The most attractive thing to me is that Oakland's always in the playoffs, always a contender," Yabu told the Contra Costa Times. "I also had to think about my family, and the San Francisco Bay Area always has been an attractive place to live."
Whether the A's will remain a contender after their trades of starting pitchers Tim Hudson and Mark Mulder is debatable, as is the impact Yabu will have on their new pitching staff. Yabu is being compared to Seattle reliever Shigetoshi Hasegawa and is noted for his ability to command four pitches and his consistency against left- and right-handed hitters.
Just where Yabu fits on the A's new staff won't be determined until the spring. It's conceivable he could start, pitch in a setup role, close in case of an emergency or do all three.
In the meantime, he said he will try to familiarize himself with the American brand of baseball as quickly as he can.
"What I've noticed when I watch is that the strike zone in the United States tends to be wider, which, if you pitch the right way, you can use to your advantage," Yabu said. "But at the same time, hitters in the U.S. tend to be more powerful."
Yabu, 36, pitched 11 seasons for the Hanshin Tigers. Last year he was 6-9 with a 3.02 ERA in 19 starts.
BOSTON (AP) The Boston Red Sox agreed to a minor-league contract Tuesday with first baseman Roberto Petagine, who played in Japan the last six seasons.
Petagine, 33, won three Gold Gloves, two home run titles and one Central League MVP award while playing for the Yakult Swallows from 1999 to 2002 and the Yomiuri Giants the past two years. The Red Sox invited him to spring training.
In parts of five major league seasons, he hit .225 with 10 homers and 43 RBIs in 193 games for Houston, San Diego, the New York Mets and Cincinnati. He originally signed with Houston as a non-drafted free agent in 1990.
In Japan, he hit .317 with 223 homers and 594 RBIs in 756 games.
kamome wrote:Hey Captain, do you think he can crack that elite lineup in Boston? He's 33 and they're putting him in the minor league system.
AssKissinger wrote:Dude, did you forget about the 'Dead Ball' thread![]()
LOS ANGELES -- The Dodgers reached an agreement Wednesday with Japanese third baseman Norihiro Nakamura on a one-year minor league contract and will introduce him at a Dodger Stadium press conference Thursday.
Nakamura trained with the Dodgers last spring while healing from a knee injury and will receive an invitation to Major League Spring Training...the rest...
Q: Compared to Japanese fans, what did you think about Chicago fans?
Takatsu: This is not only about Chicago fans, but I found the overall "baseball temperature" -- by that I mean the level of interest for the game -- was much higher for Americans. The whole country was very enthusiastic about the game of baseball. As for Chicago fans, because we have two teams in the same town, and considering its history and rivalry, it gave me unbelievable excitement during the crosstown series. It was a great opportunity and very memorable to be in the middle of it. Chicago fans' "baseball temperature" was just unreal. To see those people taking everything so personally, happy when the team was playing good and sad when it was not, I was very moved to find that they all love baseball so much.
Takatsu: Before coming to Chicago, that was one of my biggest worries because I can only eat Japanese foods. But I was glad to find that there were a lot of Japanese restaurants here. Some of them were nice enough to keep the restaurant open after the closing time for me.
NEW YORK (Kyodo) Arn Tellem, the agent of New York Yankees outfielder Hideki Matsui, said Thursday he will begin negotiations for his client on a new contract with the American League club during spring training.
Tellem said he has yet to set a date, but is planning on visiting the team's training site in Tampa to try and strike a new deal for two-time All-Star Matsui, who will be entering the final year of a three-year, $21 million deal signed in December 2002.
Before the 2004 season, Tellem apparently told the 30-year-old Japanese player of his plan to enter contract talks before the current deal expires.
Most Yankees players discuss contract extension after their deals expire, but last March the Yankees signed Mariano Rivera, the club's all-time saves leader, to a two-year contract extension through 2006 after his third year of a four-year contract.
Mulboyne wrote:Mlb.com: Takatsu - Fans 'made a difference'Q: Compared to Japanese fans, what did you think about Chicago fans?
Takatsu: This is not only about Chicago fans, but I found the overall "baseball temperature" -- by that I mean the level of interest for the game -- was much higher for Americans. The whole country was very enthusiastic about the game of baseball. As for Chicago fans, because we have two teams in the same town, and considering its history and rivalry, it gave me unbelievable excitement during the crosstown series. It was a great opportunity and very memorable to be in the middle of it. Chicago fans' "baseball temperature" was just unreal. To see those people taking everything so personally, happy when the team was playing good and sad when it was not, I was very moved to find that they all love baseball so much.
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) The Boston Red Sox signed right-handed reliever Denney Tomori, a 14-year veteran of baseball in Japan, and acquired infielder Alejandro Machado from the Washington Nationals on Tuesday.
Tomori, 37, agreed to a one-year minor-league contract with an invitation to the major-league team's spring training camp. In 360 games with three Japanese teams, he is 18-28 with 30 saves and a 3.96 ERA.
Machado, a 22-year-old switch hitter, was acquired for a player to be named or cash considerations. He has a .291 career batting average in six seasons in the organizations of Atlanta, Kansas City, Milwaukee and Montreal, which is now the Washington Nationals.
Nearly two weeks into spring training, the Yomiuri Giants finally ensured they will have their ace pitcher on the mound this season.
Koji Uehara, holding out in hopes of being allowed to move to the major leagues, has agreed to sign a contract, team representative Hidetoshi Kiyotake said Wednesday.
Uehara, negotiating through an agent, had balked at signing a contract since talks with the team began in November. The two sides met a total of eight times.
The 29-year-old Uehara had hoped the team would allow him to go to the majors through the "posting system," the route taken across the Pacific by Ichiro Suzuki and Kazuhisa Ishii.
The system allows all major league teams to bid on a player, with the highest bidder winning the rights to negotiated a contract.
In Uehara's case, the problem is that the Giants have no intention of ever utilizing the system.
"We repeatedly told him that a transfer through the posting system was not possible," Kiyotake said at the team's camp in Miyazaki.
"As for other methods, Uehara's side presented several proposals, but in the end, they were refused as impractical."
Uehara led the Central League last season with a 2.60 earned run average while posting a 13-5 record with 153 strikeouts and just 23 walks in 163 innings. He missed several starts while on national team duty at the Athens Olympics.
While specific numbers were not released, it is estimated that Uehara will receive a 50 million yen raise to 360 million yen.
"He agreed to the number that the team submitted," Kiyotake said.
Kiyotake also defended Uehara from reports that his insistance of going to the majors was actually a negotiating ploy to jack up his salary.
"It's extremely regrettable that such distortions were made," Kiyotake said. "The amount of salary and the desire to move are unrelated."
Kiyotake said the team realizes Uehara's desire to go the majors will not end after the season and the matter will have to be dealt with again.
He also said the team regrets the anxiety caused by the drawn-out negotiations.
"As one of the team officials, I apologize to the manager, the coaches and the fans for the inconvenience and worry that the long negotiations caused," Kiyotake said.
Uehara, who had paid his own expenses to spring camp, worked out as usual on Wednesday but did not comment on his contract.
On his Web site http://www.kouji19.net, he said his preparations for the season were going well. He also said that during the negotiations there were "many things that were different from the truth" and he did not like the way they progressed.
Uehara's haste in going to the majors is understandable from the perspective that, under the current system, he still needs four years at the earliest to become a free agent.
That would mean he would be 33 when he would finally get the chance to make the jump, a move that he feels he is ready to make today.
Meanwhile, the expansion Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles, leaving behind their new fans in tiny Kumeshima, Okinawa Prefecture, arrived in Hyuga, Miyazaki Prefecture, for the next stage of preparations for their opening season.
The Eagles will train at the former camp of the Kintetsu Buffaloes.
TUCSON, Ariz. - (KRT) - Someone asked me recently if I thought Tadahito Iguchi was a good player, and my first response was, "How would I know?" My second response was, "How would anyone this side of the Pacific Ocean know?"
The second response is the one that matters here because it gets to the heart of how the White Sox deemed Iguchi worthy of a starting job at second base and a two-year, $4.95 million contract. Last week, for the first time, Sox general manager Ken Williams watched in person as Iguchi hit a baseball.
Whether you trust Williams' judgment is a discussion for another day, but the bigger issue is how an appraiser of talent can watch videotape of a Japanese player performing in a Japanese league and be able to tell whether that player has the goods to succeed here.
Converting yen to dollars is one thing, but how do you figure out the conversion rate of a ballplayer coming to America?
For Williams, the answer is football. He played football as well as baseball at Stanford, and one of the requirements of wearing shoulder pads is that you have to sit in darkened rooms and watch tape of opponents. That's where it started for Williams, and he found the habit fit perfectly with baseball....the rest...
TOKYO – In Japan, baseball fans may soon get a way to tell a struggling pitcher to hit the shower that is far more effective than yelling at the TV.
Devotees of the Fukuoka Hawks could soon decide whether to dump a pitcher through an online voting system that would display results on a stadium's center screen.
And the Rakuten Golden Eagles - which debut this year as the first new team to join Japan's pro leagues since 1954 - may allow viewers to watch players off-field in the dugout, the bullpen, or the locker room, simply through a click of the mouse as part of plans to webcast games live.
Such gimmicks may appear to be a minor diversion from the serious business of pro ball. But these attempts to make the game more appealing are bold bids by a new class of team owners to reverse a sharp decline in Japan's national pastime.
The idea of online voting to replace pitchers comes from Masayoshi Son, the president of Softbank, which bought the Hawks in December. He made waves in baseball circles recently by saying that while coaches ought to get the final say in selecting which players to use, they should also con- sider the fans' wishes, which could be conveyed by online polls shown on computers in dugouts.
Whether such a system will be introduced remains uncertain, but the suggestion has created a buzz in the conservative world of Japanese baseball. Shinya Sasaki, a TV baseball commentator and former pro player, scoffs at the plan. "That idea is nonsense," he says....the rest...
Captain Japan wrote:Set to pull a pitcher? Stop yelling at the TV, start voting online.
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