This is a site about Pro Yakyu (Japanese Baseball), not about who the next player to go over to MLB is. It's a community of Pro Yakyu fans who have come together to share their knowledge and opinions with the world. It's a place to follow teams and individuals playing baseball in Japan (and Asia), and to learn about Japanese (and Asian) culture through baseball.
It is my sincere hope that once you learn a bit about what we're about here that you will join the community of contributors.
Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
Founder
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Giants
Yokohama
Yakult
Hiroshima
Daiei
Nippon Ham
Seibu
Kintetsu
Chunichi
Lotte
Orix
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Other than in stolen bases, the Giants bettered their Kansai rivals but still finished a distant second. Hoshino-kantoku commented that the hardest part of Hanshin's transformation is over and that "the look in (the players') eyes has changed."
One major change has been the adoption of a "never say die" attitude. The Tigers have won 9 of their 14 victories coming from behind. Contrast that to winning 21 gyaku-ten victories all last season and you can verify the attidude change. Yokohama's victorious 1998 season was filled with gyaku-ten victories, the "machine gun" offense coming through in the 7th, 8th, and/or 9th. So I value the ability to come back very high, personally.
A warning, though. Only three times in the past 20 years has the open-sen victor won the regular season pennant:
1984 Hankyu (now Orix)
1990 Seibu
1998 Seibu
Furthermore, what sticks in my mind the most, four times in the last 10 years winning open-sen has meant finishing dead last in the regular season:
1992 Lotte
1993 Hiroshima
1994 Yokohama
1995 Hanshin
It was almost considered a curse the first half of the 1990's.